Jacki McInnes explained

Jacki McInnes
Birth Place:Durban, South Africa
Nationality:South African

Jacki McInnes (born 1966) is a South African artist living and working in Johannesburg. Her art tends towards a style of binary interrogation: migrancy versus xenophobia, material aspirations versus poverty, the survival strategies of newly urbanised populations, and the complexities associated with the lived realities of late-capitalism. Current work, in particular, explores the contradictions inherent in present-day human thought and behaviour, especially regarding the disconnect between material aspiration, rampant consumerism, wasteful practices, and their disastrous effect on our planet and ultimate future.[1]

Career

Education

McInnes received her BA (FA) cum laude in 2001, also winning the UNISA Fine Art Faculty Medal in that year. She went on to complete an MFA at the Michaelis School of the Arts, University of Cape Town in 2004.[2]

Since completing her studies, McInnes has won numerous awards and has been an artist-in-residence in Switzerland, Brazil and Germany.

Exhibitions

Solo Exhibitions:

Selected Group Exhibitions:

Works

House 38: Hazardous Objects

McInnes' work consists of exact replicas of industrial and consumer cast-offs collected by informal recyclers living in downtown Johannesburg, recreated in beaten lead.[4] McInnes turns the focus from these objects to the lives of the people behind them.[5]

In his essay Recycling the Apocalypse Michael Titlestad takes McInnes' House 38 series of work as a departure point for a treatise on end-time psychology. By examining the strategies of Johannesburg's informal recyclers, Titlestad suggests that the Judeo-Christian understanding of a rectilinear eschatology is flawed. He posits instead endless cycles of existence. "The world is already apocalyptic, just not all at the same time."[6] Michael Titlestad carries his argument forward in an extended essay, entitled The Logic of the Apocalypse: A Clerical Rejoinder, published by Safundi: The Journal of South African and American Studies in February 2013.[7]

The Vocabulary of Ambiguity – for her

This show uses the starting point of the decision to abort a pregnancy and from there explores the reproductive role of women in society. McInnes uses salt, lead, and found materials to create mixed media works addressing the issues.[8]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Jacki McInnes: artist's website. Jacki McInnes. 8 December 2012.
  2. Web site: Jacki McInnes. Spier Contemporary 2010. 17 April 2012. 3 January 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190103110559/http://www.spiercontemporary.co.za/artists-detail/jacki-mcinnes. dead.
  3. Web site: Biography. Jacki McInnes. 17 April 2012. 3 January 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190103110607/http://www.jackimcinnes.net/Biography.aspx. dead.
  4. Web site: Jacki McInnes: Recent Work from her Residency in Brazil. David Krut Projects. 17 April 2012. https://archive.today/20130628234738/http://davidkrutprojects.com/13469/jacki-mcinnes-recent-work-from-her-residency-in-brazil. 28 June 2013. dead.
  5. Web site: Jacki McInnes & John Hodgkiss. Ecotopian States. 17 April 2012. https://archive.today/20130703053118/http://www.ecotopianstates.net/Artists/JackiAndJohn.aspx. 3 July 2013. dead.
  6. Evan Calder Williams quoted by Michael Titlestad. Recycling the Apocalypse. Art South Africa, Vol 10, Issue 4, Winter 2012.
  7. Michael Titlestad. The Logic of the Apocalypse: A Clerical Rejoinder. Safundi: The Journal of South African and American Studies, 14:1, 93–110.
  8. Web site: Gurney. Kim. Jacki McInnes at Bell-Roberts. ArtThrob. 17 April 2012.