
Goodman Gallery presents _Epilogue–_Mikhael Subotzky’s first solo exhibition in London. Epilogue continues the artist’s critical engagement with the instability of images and the politics of representation.
The centrepiece of the exhibition is a new film, titled Epilogue: Disordered and Flatulent (2022), which is the third in a trilogy of films following Moses and Griffiths (2007) and WYE (2012). Accompanying it are a series of paintings and sticky-tape transfers that were products of the film’s animation process, before evolving on their own terms.
Chapter one sees a reworking of Rembrandt’s The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Tulp which intuitively leads to the Dutch ships sailing out of the ‘Dead Man’s Stomach’ and towards The Cape of Good Hope. Chapter two, titled The Dutch Gangster is based on dual representations of the ‘real’ and ‘fake’ Jan van Riebeeck, one of which, erroneously attributed and depicting another man, found its way on to the apartheid currency as he was canonised as the ‘father of the nation’ by the white nationalist agenda.
Chapter three, titled ‘George Fading’ is a short interlude based on a photograph Subotzky took of his father walking into the sea during the early stages of motor neurone disease, and an account of his later funeral. The final chapter is the ‘Chorale’, in the style of a traditional cantata, where the film’s themes are brought together and recapitulated and its images are reorganised into a summary and provocation.
Epilogue features Hermanus van Wyk, an important collaborator in Subotzky’s work since 2005. The complexity of their relationship that reflects a history of fraught class and race relations in South Africa is engaged in their conversation. Hermanus has made a journey with Subotzky, from an initial chance encounter and documentary photograph to playing a role in WYE (2012) as a fictional character loosely based on himself. In Epilogue Hermanus tells his own story in excerpts from a three day conversation with Subotzky that was filmed in the winter of 2021 and are interspersed throughout the chapters of the film. In tandem with Subotzky’s personal narrative and placed within the charged historical context that the film addresses, these words form a powerful meditation on father figures, laced with violence, pain, and just a hint of the possibility of redemption.
Mikhael Subotzky’s (b. 1981, Cape Town, South Africa) film, video and photographic works are concerned with the structures of narrative and representation, as well as the relationship between social storytelling and the formal contingencies of image making.




Goodman Gallery holds the reputation as a pre-eminent art gallery on the African continent, platforming art that confronts entrenched power structures and champions social change.

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