Loading...
Loading...
We use strictly necessary cookies to run ShowSeeker, and — only with your consent — optional cookies for analytics and session replay that help us improve the app. Read our Privacy Policy

The two South African artists speak frankly about their work, their studio practice, their inspirations, and the challenges of success.
William Kentridge and Marlene Dumas – two of the most celebrated names in international contemporary art – come face to face in a series of frank, witty and intense discussions about their work and practice. The film follows them from the gentle ambience of a dinner conversation, to their studios – where we are given insight into the way that each artist works – to some of their finished works and installations. What emerges is how very differently these two highly successful South African artists approach image making. Dumas’ method is deeply intuitive – she often works on the floor as though embracing her paintings, pouring and dabbing paint to produce her remarkable portraits. Kentridge is intensely systematic, alternating gestural mark making with the repetitive action of drawing-filming-erasing for his animated films.

Naqoyqatsi

Looking for Richard

Feminists: What Were They Thinking?

Fuck

All the Beauty and the Bloodshed

Frida

Love, Marilyn

Marina Abramović: The Artist Is Present

Audrey

To Be Takei

Rivers and Tides

In the Realms of the Unreal