Alfredo Jaar: The Rwanda Project on show at Zeitz MOCAA

Reflections on genocide, injustice and engaging with trauma as an outsider

Alfredo Jaar: The Rwanda Project, is a solo exhibition by Chilean-born, New York-based artist Alfredo Jaar at Zeitz MOCAA. Largely derived from investigations and photojournalistic field research in the aftermath of the Rwandan genocide of 1994, this exhibition seeks to investigate how one can engage with trauma as an outsider and also serves as a critique to the world’s indifference and a lack of global visibility to the atrocities in Rwanda at that time.

Alfredo Jaar, The Rwanda Project, 1995. Courtesy of Goodman Gallery Johannesburg/Cape Town and the artist, New York, Photo credit: Dillon Marsh, Zeitz MOCAA

Alfredo Jaar, The Rwanda Project, 1995. Courtesy of Goodman Gallery Johannesburg/Cape Town and the artist, New York, Photo credit: Dillon Marsh, Zeitz MOCAA

Images have the ability to evoke strong emotions from us. Photography as a medium creates a relationship between the photographer as an observer, the subject of the photograph and the viewer of the image that reminds us to consider the ways in which we see and perceive any given image. Alfredo Jaar’s multidisciplinary practice challenges the medium and the ways we consume images, news media and its facilitation of a voyeuristic gaze. Jaar asks the viewer to consider what is not immediately visible and the possible ways in which an image can live beyond its moment of creation and outside of its frame.

Presenting poignant images, video works and arresting installations, Jaar examines the politics of the image, offering a critique that exposes and frames the mechanics of the ways in which photographs circulate and are consumed. Reflecting on the historical nature of the photograph as representation of fact, these works challenge us as viewers with regards to the way that we absorb and understand the function of images. Utilizing various forms of presentation in the gallery, there is a slowing down of thought that attempts to highlight the complexity of memory and trauma.

Through this experience, Jaar reminds us of our connectedness, our shared experience of trauma and the room for mourning and healing that can occur in the post traumatic space. An affirmation of the power of the image as a means by which we can draw closer to one another through the aura left behind by what is seemingly absent and still able to remind us of what it is to be human. The exhibition is accompanied by a series of public programmes. The exhibition is made possible with support from Goodman Gallery.

Alfredo Jaar, The Rwanda Project, 1995. Courtesy of Goodman Gallery Johannesburg/Cape Town and the artist, New York, Photo credit: Dillon Marsh, Zeitz MOCAA

Jaar asks the viewer
to consider what is not
immediately visible and
the possible ways in which
an image can live
beyond its moment of
creation and outside
of its frame.

Alfredo Jaar, The Rwanda Project, 1995. Courtesy of Goodman Gallery Johannesburg/Cape Town and the artist, New York, Photo credit: Dillon Marsh, Zeitz MOCAA

Listen to the Zeitz MOCAA Art Audio Tour for this exhibition:

Alfredo Jaar, The Rwanda Project, 1995. Courtesy of Goodman Gallery Johannesburg/Cape Town and the artist, New York, Photo credit: Dillon Marsh, Zeitz MOCAA

Alfredo Jaar, The Rwanda Project, 1995. Courtesy of Goodman Gallery Johannesburg/Cape Town and the artist, New York, Photo credit: Dillon Marsh, Zeitz MOCAA

Alfredo Jaar, The Rwanda Project, 1995. Courtesy of Goodman Gallery Johannesburg/Cape Town and the artist, New York, Photo credit: Dillon Marsh, Zeitz MOCAA

Alfredo Jaar, The Rwanda Project, 1995. Courtesy of Goodman Gallery Johannesburg/Cape Town and the artist, New York, Photo credit: Dillon Marsh, Zeitz MOCAA

Alfredo Jaar, The Rwanda Project, 1995. Courtesy of Goodman Gallery Johannesburg/Cape Town and the artist, New York, Photo credit: Dillon Marsh, Zeitz MOCAA

CREDITS

This exhibition opened on 19 November 2020 and runs until 27 February 2022

Image credit: Alfredo Jaar, The Rwanda Project, 1995. Courtesy of Goodman Gallery Johannesburg/Cape Town and the artist, New York, Photo credit: Dillon Marsh, Zeitz MOCAA