Christine
Sefolosha (Swiss; b. 1955)
"Sefolosha
paints bone, fur, flesh, and spirit enmeshed in the same plane. Bird
is mammal is reptile is ghost. Sefoloshas work evokes myth, metaphor,
and ancient stories casting her as griot of her own timeless tribe.
A sense of distant, lost time saturates the images: yet any tangible
reference to such is utterly absent and unnamed. In her symbolic language,
shapes become luminous apparitions, whispering something personal and
private. Sefoloshas images feel like communications, messages
sent to the artist from another plane, a mystic view beyond the apparent.
--From Phantoms, a book about Christine Sefoloshas
art by Leslie Umberger, Senior Curator of Exhibitions and Collections
at the John Michael Kohler Arts Center in Sheboygan, Wisconsin.
Christine Sefolosha was born in 1955 into a German-Swiss family, which
had settled in French-speaking Montreaux. She began drawing as a child,
often during bouts of chronic insomnia. Shortly after leaving high school
in Neuchâtel, she married a white South African; in 1975, she
moved with him and their baby to South Africa, where they settled in
Johannesburg. Here she took up painting and drawing and attracted by
their music, she began to move among black people. In 1983, she divorced
her husband to marry a black musician called Sefolosha. The couple lived
in Kensington, the black section of the city, but apartheid soon drove
them out of the country. They returned to Montreaux but shortly afterwards,
both her parents died, and her husband returned to his homeland. By
1986, she was living alone with her three children in her childhood
home. She began to paint and draw anew, inspired by her years in Africa,
which she described as an experience which wont let you
go and which made me want to give voice to everything about existence
which is suspended, transitory, subject to chance.
When Sefolosha works, she loves to crouch on the ground, stretching
across large sheets of thick paper to apply somber pigments with her
hands, using vigorous, splashing gestures. She learned to mix her paints
with dirt and tar, creating a synthesis of sophistication and crudity,
which is reminiscent of the work of the Paleolithic cave painters of
Lascaux or Altamira. Her typical figures are wild animalswolves
and birds of prey, hybrid creatures of the earth, sea and sky with bristling
antlers, wings and claws, usually shown leaping or writhing in conditions
of stress and anxiety. Now and again, she will depict a vulnerable young
creature curled up in sleep. Recently, Sefolosha adopted a more diaphanous
style, applying pale watercolors to delicate Japanese paper, while still
exhibiting the spontaneity that imparts life in her indeterminate and
visionary imaginings.
--Roger Cardinal
Christine Sefolosha has work in many private and public collections,
Including the Collection de lArt Brut in Lausanne, Switzerland
and the Musee de Cite de Creation in Begles, France.