Russel Hlongwane
Ifu Elimnyama (The Dark Cloud)
Artist | Russel Hlongwane |
Year | 2019 |
Duration | 6:35 min |
Technical info | color, sound, two-channel video installation, format 4:3 |
Contact | |
About the video
The young uMalanje rubs his body with rust-colored mud. Barefoot, he enters a new sphere, a place in another world. Noise interference and digital noise accompany his mission. Timidly he touches the metallic structures, which lie piled on top of each other like timeless and masterless remnants of a long-gone culture. One learns of a dark cloud, the Dark Cloud, a powerful instance that has been contaminated. So much so that the symbiosis of knowledge and orientation has been thrown off course, and Inkanyamba, the mystical snake of the sky, can no longer locate its GPS signal. A powerful voice that lays over the scenario tells this story. It refers to the sunken city of Mapungubwe, a flourishing metropolis from 1220 that was to experience its demise just 70 years later. Step by step, uMalanje explores this place. He has traveled through time and space to warn the city's inhabitants. Against the Internet, a futuristic power that can store supposedly free knowledge in the cloud but cannot protect it from corruption and monetization.
The cinematic work of South African cultural producer Russel Hlongwane expects a lot from its recipients. The narration winds around concepts such as Inkanyamba and Mapungubwe, which are central to Zulu culture and South African history. Even a glossary can be found about his work, consisting of Zulu culture vocabulary and new words created especially for this work. The timeless narrative, which seems to come equally from the past and the present, is like a transcendental journey. One traverses Zulu religious traditions and encounters contemporary concepts of digitalized knowledge. Like uMalanje, one can draw on this experience in which global and temporal systems seem obsolete. Hlongwane does not allow for a dominant narrative. He challenges us to understand knowledge independently of time and space, to question the Western self-attribution of digital supremacy, and to refuse the egocentric attribution of skills to specific cultures. (Riccarda Hessling)
Credits
installation with "Ikhubalo" (intelezi, imeyile), "Cartographing a Suspended Universe" (motherboards)
Lanuage is Zulu with English subtitles