b. 1982, South Africa

Mary Sibande Biography

Engaging with South African history, artist Mary Sibande explores ideas around race, gender, and labour through her art making.

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Using sculpture and photography, Sibande's art practice revolves around her alter ego, Sophie, who takes on a myriad of personas.

Sophie is typically a life-sized fibreglass figure that Sibande creates using casts of her own face and body. The artist dresses Sophie in period costumes, which began as a maid's uniform and later evolved to include elaborate gowns. In a roundtable conversation for her 2019 solo exhibition, I came apart at the seams, at Somerset House, London, the artist explained that she chose a 'Western name' for Sophie as a reminder of the history in South Africa that led Black children to have Western names.

Colour is a potent symbol in Mary Sibande's artworks. Through the colours blue, purple, and red, the artist imagines Sophie as a maid, a mysterious and empowered woman, and a powerful priestess, respectively.

Long Live the Dead Queen

'Long Live the Dead Queen' (2008–2013) is Mary Sibande's first body of work featuring Sophie. It derives from her family history: both the artist's grandmother and mother worked as domestic servants.

Sophie, dressed in a blue maid's uniform—the colour associated with servitude in Apartheid South Africa—adopts different personas as she imagines different narratives. She appear as a lady holding up a parasol in a sea of blue tulle in I'm A Lady (2009). In Silent Symphony (2010), she is depicted as an orchestra conductor, with her massive train opening behind her like theatre curtains.

Long Live the Dead Queen is also the title of Sibande's 2009 solo exhibition at Gallery MOMO in Johannesburg. Receiving critical acclaim, the exhibition led to her breakthrough in the art world.

Sophie the Soldier

Mary Sibande has also dressed Sophie in a turquoise army uniform, drawing from her father's service in the military. Sophie the Soldier appears in multiples, their arms raised or tense from holding invisible rifles. They stand on flat, black bases reminiscent of toy soldiers in such works as Lovers in Tango (2011), where a group of soldiers confronts Sophie the Maid.

The Purple Shall Govern

In the 'The Purple Shall Govern' series (2013–2017), Sophie is dressed in purple and surrounded by soft, purple-tentacled sculptures. Sibande's use of the colour purple is inspired by its association with anti-Apartheid demonstrations in South Africa, when in 1989 police shot purple dye through water cannons to mark the protesters. In the aftermath of what was dubbed the Purple March, graffiti proclaiming 'The Purple Shall Govern' appeared on a city hall.

Clad in purple, Sophie seems as though she is becoming one with the tentacles, transforming into a supernatural being. The photographic print Admiration of the Purple Figure (2013) shows Sophie surrounded by the tentacle creatures, who seem to rise up to her in admiration.

Red also emerges as a recurring colour in 'Purple Shall Govern', bringing to the work its association with urgency, anger, and passion. In Right Now! (2015), Sophie appears to send off a pack of red dogs. This work was inspired by the then-pregnant Sibande's desire to 'fix the world before my child comes', as the artist told Somerset House in 2017.

In the Midst of Chaos There is Also Opportunity

Since 2017, red has been the dominant colour in Sibande's ongoing series, 'In the Midst of Chaos There is Also Opportunity'. Sophie becomes a powerful priestess in this body of work, a figure 'between what has been and what could be'. In The Domba Dance (2019), Sophie holds a heart in the air while two dogs—one with four heads—stand vigilant on either side of her.

Solo Exhibitions

Mary Sibande has exhibited internationally, holding solo exhibitions such as Unhand Me, Demon!, Kavi Gupta, Chicago (2021); I came apart at the seams, Somerset House, London (2019); Right Now!, Woordfees Festival, Stellenbosch, South Africa (2016); Mary Sibande and Sophie Ntombikayise Take Central Court, Spencer Museum of Art, University of Kansas (2013). The Purple Shall Govern, a solo exhibition of her eponymous series, toured South Africa and France between 2013 and 2014.

Group Exhibitions

Selected group exhibitions include To Reclaim, Kavi Gupta, Chicago (2019); Like Life: Sculpture, Color, and the Body (1300–Now), The Met Breuer, New York (2018); South Africa: The Art of a Nation, British Museum, London (2016); ReSignifications: Imagining the Black Body and Re-Staging Histories, Museo Bardini, Florence (2015); Where do I end you and you begin? Edinburgh Festival of Arts, Scotland (2014).

International Biennials and Festivals

Sibande has also presented her works in international biennials and festivals, among them BredaPhoto 2020, Netherlands (2020); the Lahore Biennale (2020); Havana Biennale (2019 and 2015); Dakar Biennale (2018); Beijing Biennale (2015); Lyon Biennale (2013); and the Venice Biennale (2011), where she represented South Africa.

Sherry Paik | Ocula | 2021

Mary Sibande
featured artworks

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Turn, Turn, Turn, Turn by Mary Sibande contemporary artwork photography, print
Mary Sibande Turn, Turn, Turn, Turn, 2019 Inkjet on Hahnemühle Photo Rag, Daisec mount
200 x 135.9 cm
Kavi Gupta Request Price & Availability
A Terrible Beauty is Born by Mary Sibande contemporary artwork print
Mary Sibande A Terrible Beauty is Born, 2013 Archival digital print
110 x 320 cm
Kavi Gupta Request Price & Availability
The Domba Dance by Mary Sibande contemporary artwork sculpture
Mary Sibande The Domba Dance, 2019 Life-size fibreglass, bronze, cotton fabric, fibreglass and silicone
400 x 250 x 300 cm
Kavi Gupta Request Price & Availability
Living Memory by Mary Sibande contemporary artwork print
Mary Sibande Living Memory, 2011 Archival digital print
126 x 87 cm
Kavi Gupta Request Price & Availability
Admiration of the Purple Figure by Mary Sibande contemporary artwork print
Mary Sibande Admiration of the Purple Figure, 2013 Archival digital print
150 x 110.5 cm
Kavi Gupta Request Price & Availability
They Don’t Make Them Like They Used To by Mary Sibande contemporary artwork print
Mary Sibande They Don’t Make Them Like They Used To, 2008 Archival digital print
104.5 x 69.5 cm
Sold
Kavi Gupta
Right Now! by Mary Sibande contemporary artwork print
Mary Sibande Right Now!, 2015 Archival digital print, mounted on Dibond, and floated in black frame
101.3 x 235.3 x 3.8 cm
Kavi Gupta Request Price & Availability
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