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Seedtimes
Exhibition 8–29 March 2018
Event photograph from the launch of Omar Badsha’s book ‘Seedtimes’ on A4’s top floor. At the front, audience members are seated in rows. In the middle, the panellists Omar Bash, Imraan Coovadia and Ari Sitas are seated in conversation. At the back, a row of framed monochrome photographs line the white wall behind the panellists.
Launch: Omar Badsha’s Seedtimes, March 8, 2018. Image courtesy of A4 Arts Foundation.
Title Seedtimes Dates 8–29 March 2018 Location Top Floor Tagline Book launch and exhibition of Seedtimes by Omar Badsha. Credits

Panel:
Omar Badsha
Imraan Coovadia
Ari Sitas

Partners:
Book Lounge
South African History Online

On the occasion of the launch of Seedtimes at A4, Omar Badsha (O.B.) was joined in conversation by Ari Sitas (A.S.)and Imraan Coovadia (I.C.). Below are fragments from their discussion:

O.B. I am always fascinated...a lot of my work is around certain themes – themes of rituals, performances, and I love this interplay between performer and audience. And you see it there; you see it in a lot of the photographs.

This is a moment: I was walking to my office through this area, an area that I grew up in, and I noticed this man long before he got to that spot, and I followed him because he was very dignified, very unusual, and he... There is a series of pictures of him. I have of him at the edge of the crowd, and he slowly making himself to this... And I followed him, and I then stood back, and I concentrated on him, but this was the moment.

You have an instinct for things when you are walking in the street; you become incredibly attuned to what is happening, and then you try and extract out of it one or frame something that, out which you can create new meaning for yourself. So that picture, that moment, was part of the sequence, and I then, like all of us photographers, we edit it, we put it together in a narrative.

A.S. Can I say one little thing and then leave it with you?

This epoch, it’s high apartheid, there’s a tentative crowd, who’ve got a distance, there is a cop watching the performer – you don’t know what violence may be unleashed, there is the peculiar moment, in history, we’re talking about history, where something is unfolding – look at the faces, everybody wants to be part of the performance, but they are three meters away... Here, what is this cop doing? Watching the performer – what would he say? What is he saying? What will he be saying?

So all of a sudden, this...

O.B. Tension

A.S. This tension... And if you look at all these slogans above, ‘Was Christ Really Crucified’ [audience laugh], and then all of a sudden you are… There’s Durban – I mean, there’s history – and that’s what makes all these things paintings – not just snatches. Anyway, that’s my two bits.

Monochrome event photograph from the launch of Omar Badsha’s book ‘Seedtimes’ on A4’s top floor. At the back, Badsha’s monochrome photographs ‘Street performance, Victoria street, Kwazulu-Natal’ and ‘Migrant worker, Dalton road Hostel, Kwazulu-Natal’ are mounted on the wall. At the front, Badsha stand making a gesture with his right hand.
Launch: Omar Badsha’s Seedtimes, March 8, 2018. Image courtesy of A4 Arts Foundation.
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