The South African artist William Kentridge rose to international prominence in the 1990s, and his first retrospective in 2001-2002 convinced many (including myself) that he must be considered among the very greatest of contemporary artists. He was best known for his so-called ‘stone-age’ animations, a series of films of around seven minutes in length, which Kentridge made by himself laboriously by photographing some large charcoal drawing, then erasing some bit and re-drawing it, photographing it again, and repeating the process for half a year to produce the film. The animation was jerky, and the process of erasing left smudges that became trails of passage as people, animals, and machines moved within the frame. The retrospective also exhibited Kentridge’s sculptures, usually small constructions of collaged bits and sometimes incorporating industrial artifacts like scissors or coffee pots. Kentridge abandoned painting very early in his career in favor of mostly large charcoal drawings, and later also produced prints and even tapestries. This century also has revealed Kentridge to be among the most intelligent and verbally articulate of artists in numerous writings and interviews in exhibition catalogs, and many lectures associated with his exhibitions. By 2014 he had published two volumes of conversations on his thought and work, one with the art writer Angela Breidbach, the other with the anthropologist Rosalind C. Morris, and a volume of his Charles Eliot Norton lectures of 2012, the same lecture series that had produced Stravinsky’s Poetics of Music, Octavio Paz’s Children of the Mire, and Frank Stella’s Working Space.
In these volumes presents his artistic practices, whether resulting in drawings, animations, or sculptures, as always arising from and elaborating a fundamental impulse to draw, conceived as the marking of a surface (Kentridge (2014), p. 20) in the service of producing a maximally meaningful figure which expresses something of the artist’s inner life (Kentridge and Morris (2014), pp. 74-6) , but which also accrues to itself an indeterminate range of meanings and significances from the latent contexts of the practice of drawing and the latent geographical, social, cultural, political, and even cosmic contexts evoked by the figure (Kentridge (2014b), p. 18). Kentridge has said that an early reading of the philosopher Hans-Georg Gadamer’s Truth and Method made the concept of play something essential for him (Kentridge (2006), p. 65, and also p. 11); on Gadamer’s famous account of the ontology of play as an intersubjective activity wherein the participants, having chosen to play in one particular way (e.g. chess and not other board games) are separated from the prosaic world of non-play and yet have their own distinctive seriousness, encounter each other in a to-and-fro of actions, and wherein the distinction between believing and believing in what you do and not-believing cannot be determinately made out. Artistic vision, whether exercised in making or perceiving works of art, has a three-fold character: one sees something physical (the charcoal), one sees a figure (the tree), and one is aware of oneself seeing both, and so unable to decide what one is really and simply seeing. Art-making and the artist’s artistic seeing occur in a conceptual place called ‘the studio’, which also includes sufficient space for the artist to walk as a part of art-making. For Kentridge this walking is crucially done in making the animations, which involve the artist himself marking a surface, then walking back to view it from a distance and/or photograph it, then walking back to the drawing to change or correct it, and so on for the many months required to make an animation. The studio is also ‘a safe place for stupidity’ (Kentridge (2014), p.128) wherein the artist may play ideas (Kentridge prefers bad ideas to good ones), fragmentary materials, and procedures in the service of creating something sufficiently rich, open-ended, and meaningful to meet Kentridge’s sense of artistic achievement. (For a more extended account of Kentridge’s artistic practice, particularly with regard to his conception of drawing as an artistic medium, see the first chapter in my book Logro, Fracaso, Aspiración: Tres Intentos de Entender el Arte Contemporáneo).
Kentridge has recently published a further volume of his poetics, A Natural History of the Studio, based upon his six Slade Lectures at Oxford in 2024. This volume largely re-iterates his earlier artistic conception, but on some key points generalizes it or develops it through further metaphoric conceptualizations. These elaborations seem to arise in response to a shift in his artistic practice towards the creation of theatrical pieces involving dancers, actors, and musicians. In the first lecture he re-states something of his poetics together with autobiographical points, and then largely devotes each of the following five chapters to accounts of particular theatrical pieces and the ways in which each piece successively led him to re-thinkings and elaborations of his artistic conceptions.
He re-iterates his understanding of drawing under the metaphor of a membrane, and now in two senses: first as a place where a figuration arises as it were from without, and impulses arise from within; then as a place where indeterminately many heterogenous contexts and associations are invoked and the artist and his agency transform them in the guidance of techniques and an idiosyncratic grammar that is only ever discovered in the process of working (Kentridge (2025), pp. 22 and 29). Kentridge now gives additional emphasis to the conception of the artist’s materials as fragments produced elsewhere, and the process of artistic making as fundamentally a collage of such fragments (e.g. p. 32 and p. 91f). The walking indigenous to the studio is now not so much the to-and-fro between close and distant views of the drawing, but a kind of contemplative prelude to drawing wherein the artist plays with the fragments and hopes that new connections will arise (p. 74). Earlier remarks and pieces by Kentridge suggested that he oriented his work to the exempla of Vladimir Tatlin, Max Beckmann, and Dziga-Vertov.
Now he places himself under the aegis of the Zurich Dadaists as inaugurating the idea and practice of a visual art ‘beyond’ painting, and one that seeks to make work at the limits of meaning and coherence (pp. 74 and 138).
On two points in particular Kentridge’s thinking has shifted markedly. While he retains a general conception of the studio as a safe place for stupidity, he insists upon three kinds of if not stupidity, but of ignorance that come to view in artistic making: First, there is “a deliberately constructed ignorance” whereby one does not know the facts about the subject of one’s work. Second, there is a ‘complicit’ ignorance where one has remained satisfied with “predictable images” of one’s subject. Third, there is “an inability or an unwillingness to put pieces together” with regard to orienting oneself and understanding one’s subject (pp. 142-44; Kentridge’s example here of the three kinds of ignorances relates to a letter written by the Baptist minister John Chilembwe in 1915 on behalf of his countrymen in Nyasaland (later Malawi) refusing to participate in the (European) First World War). So the artistic process is now also a process of coming-to-know, forced upon the artist by the pressures of trying to find the grammar and techniques appropriate to the fragments treated as artistic materials. The second point concerns what Kentridge had earlier thought of as a utopian dimension of his artistic practice. In his earlier accounts he considered this utopian dimension only with regard to the technique in film of showing a sequence in reverse; the techniques secreted the sense of something being undone, and so restoring something of the fuller sense of possibilities inherent in its inchoate state. Now he says that there is “a glimpse of utopia” “in the working space, the rehearsal room” “of how things could be, of an equality in the contribution to the project--of a human contact away from the hierarchies within which all life outside the rehearsal room was lived” (p. 203). And this is part of an encompassing ‘optimism’ inherent in the very process of making an artwork (p. 189), as it bears within itself ‘a confidence in the future’ (p.191).
Kentridge’s poetics seems to me the richest and most fertile re-conceptualizations of conditions and practice of contemporary visual art. One wonders whether, despite Kentridge’s enormous prestige, it will be adopted more generally in a contemporary artworld dominated by the models of Marcel Duchamp’s readymades and mirthless wit, and Andy Warhol’s po-faced embrace of commercial production and fetishization of celebrity.
References:
Hans-Georg Gadamer, Truth and Method (1975)
William Kentridge, thinking aloud: Conversations with Angela Breidbach (2006)
--Six Drawing Lessons (2014)
--A Natural History of the Studio (2025)
William Kentridge and Rosalind C. Morris, That which is not Drawn: Conversations (2014)
John Rapko, Logro, Fracaso, Aspiración: Tres Intentos de Entender el Arte Contemporáneo (2014)