Robert A. Hamblin: Difference between revisions
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| nationality = South African |
| nationality = South African |
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| occupation = Artist, painter, photographer, author, gender activist. |
| occupation = Artist, painter, photographer, author, gender activist. |
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| notable_works = |
| notable_works = interseXion, Robert. A Queer and Crooked Memoir 2021 |
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Robert. A Queer and Crooked Memoir 2021 |
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SA Kanna nomination Award (“when you feeling like a lady) |
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| birth_date = {{Birth year|1969}} |
| birth_date = {{Birth year|1969}} |
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== Early life and career == |
== Early life and career == |
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Robert A. Hamblin was born in [[Hillbrow|Hillbrow,]] [[Johannesburg]] in 1969. He completed High School in [[Alberton, Gauteng|Alberton]], [[Gauteng|Gauteng Province]] (Johannesburg region) in 1986, working as a freelance darkroom assistant and photographer for the final two years of his schooling. |
Robert A. Hamblin was born in [[Hillbrow|Hillbrow,]] [[Johannesburg]] in 1969. He completed High School in [[Alberton, Gauteng|Alberton]], [[Gauteng|Gauteng Province]] (Johannesburg region) in 1986, working as a freelance [[darkroom]] assistant and photographer for the final two years of his schooling. |
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After school he worked as a commercial photographer, first for South African newspaper [[Beeld]] and then |
After school he worked as a commercial photographer, first for South African newspaper [[Beeld]] and then for [[Die Transvaler]] and [[Rapport (newspaper)|Rapport.]] He then turned to freelance commercial photography, specialising in television and the performing arts. These subjects were to influence him strongly and became the inspiration for much of his early [[fine art]] work. Hamblin’s later work is more focused on gender and identity. |
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Hamblin pursued a career in fine art photography, with his first exhibition in 1993. After many photography exhibitions, he turned to painting with his work |
Hamblin pursued a career in fine art photography, with his first exhibition in 1993. After many photography exhibitions, he turned to painting with his work continuing to contribute to the debate around [[Body politic|body politics]] in a [[History of South Africa (1994–present)|post-apartheid]] era. |
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In his mid-thirties, Hamblin [[Gender transitioning|transitioned gender]] from female to male. In 2007 he helped found the African organisation Gender DynamiX<ref>{{Cite web|title=Gender DynamiX I Transgender and Gender Non Confirming Rights|url=https://www.genderdynamix.org.za/|access-date=2021-07-29|website=GDXhome|language=en}}</ref>, an organisation concerned with the rights of trans people, holding the position of Deputy Director responsible for Advocacy and media liaison from 2009 - 2011<ref>{{Cite web|title=GDXStory2005-2015_Sankofa.pdf|url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1WUOzfwd7sxQnPW-a3nazcrs6YUFEKt_H/view?usp=embed_facebook|access-date=2021-08-05|website=Google Docs}}</ref>. |
In his mid-thirties, Hamblin [[Gender transitioning|transitioned gender]] from female to male. In 2007 he helped found the African organisation Gender DynamiX<ref>{{Cite web|title=Gender DynamiX I Transgender and Gender Non Confirming Rights|url=https://www.genderdynamix.org.za/|access-date=2021-07-29|website=GDXhome|language=en}}</ref>, an organisation concerned with the rights of trans people, holding the position of Deputy Director responsible for Advocacy and media liaison from 2009 - 2011<ref>{{Cite web|title=GDXStory2005-2015_Sankofa.pdf|url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1WUOzfwd7sxQnPW-a3nazcrs6YUFEKt_H/view?usp=embed_facebook|access-date=2021-08-05|website=Google Docs}}</ref>. Today he continues both his art work and activism and released his first book in June 2021. |
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== Work == |
== Work == |
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=== Author === |
=== Author === |
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Hamblin published his first book |
Hamblin published his first book ''Robert: A Queer and Crooked Memoir for the Not So Straight and Narrow'' (ISBN:9781928420972; Epub ISBN: 9781928420989) in June 2021, through NB Publishers<ref>{{Cite web|title=NB Publishers {{!}} Robert|url=http://http/%3A%2F%2Fwww.nb.co.za%2Fen%2Fview-book%3Fid%3D9781928420972|access-date=2021-08-03|website=http}}</ref> and Melinda Ferguson Books. |
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== Awards == |
== Awards == |
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* Fellowship Award at the Houston Centre for Photography in Texas (The Binary Farm). |
* Fellowship Award at the Houston Centre for Photography in Texas<ref>{{Cite web|title=Houston Center for Photography – Dedicated to the art of photography|url=https://hcponline.org/|access-date=2021-08-10|language=en-US}}</ref> (The Binary Farm). |
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* South Africa Kanna nomination Award. [[Klein Karoo Nasionale Kunstefees|Klein Karoo National Arts Festival]] (“when you feeling like a lady) |
* South Africa Kanna nomination Award. [[Klein Karoo Nasionale Kunstefees|Klein Karoo National Arts Festival]] (“when you feeling like a lady) |
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== External Links == |
== External Links == |
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Website https://www.roberthamblin.com/ |
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Revision as of 09:44, 10 August 2021
Robert A. Hamblin | |
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Born | 1969 |
Nationality | South African |
Occupation(s) | Artist, painter, photographer, author, gender activist. |
Notable work | interseXion, Robert. A Queer and Crooked Memoir 2021 |
Awards | Houston Centre for Photography Fellowship (The Binary Farm), SA Kanna nomination Award (“when you feeling like a lady) |
Robert A. Hamblin (born 1969) is a South African born artist, painter, photographer, author and gender activist. His work is concerned with gender and the body politic. InterseXion, his multidisciplinary exhibition, a seven year collaboration with South African transgender sex workers, was staged at Iziko South African National Gallery in 2017. His memoir, Robert. A Queer and Crooked Memoir (ISBN: 9781928420972), was published[1] in June 2021.
Early life and career
Robert A. Hamblin was born in Hillbrow, Johannesburg in 1969. He completed High School in Alberton, Gauteng Province (Johannesburg region) in 1986, working as a freelance darkroom assistant and photographer for the final two years of his schooling.
After school he worked as a commercial photographer, first for South African newspaper Beeld and then for Die Transvaler and Rapport. He then turned to freelance commercial photography, specialising in television and the performing arts. These subjects were to influence him strongly and became the inspiration for much of his early fine art work. Hamblin’s later work is more focused on gender and identity.
Hamblin pursued a career in fine art photography, with his first exhibition in 1993. After many photography exhibitions, he turned to painting with his work continuing to contribute to the debate around body politics in a post-apartheid era.
In his mid-thirties, Hamblin transitioned gender from female to male. In 2007 he helped found the African organisation Gender DynamiX[2], an organisation concerned with the rights of trans people, holding the position of Deputy Director responsible for Advocacy and media liaison from 2009 - 2011[3]. Today he continues both his art work and activism and released his first book in June 2021.
Work
Artist
Hamblin has no formal art training or tertiary education other than twenty years of mentorship with 1953 Académie Ranson abstract painter Nel Erasmus. His art work focuses on issues of queer masculinity as a transgender person and he has exhibited both in South Africa and internationally.
Hamblin's photography experience in television and the performing arts became strong influences on his work and were a source of inspiration for his early fine art paintings. His later work focuses more on gender and identity.
Photographer
Hamblin was a keen photographer from an early age. He bought his first camera and darkroom equipment by photographing male athletes at school and selling the photos to the girls. He began his commercial career as a newspaper editorial photographer for South African newspapers Beeld, Die Transvaler and Rapport from 1986 to 1991. At the age of 21 he started his freelance career as a commercial photographer in the theatre, television and editorial media where he worked from 1991 – 2010. Concurrently he developed multiple fine art bodies of photography works which were exhibited at South African galleries and art festivals.
Hamblin's first exhibition in 1993 was a study of well-known South African women including Nobel Laureate Nadine Gordimer, international opera singer, Mimi Coertse, actress and director Janet Suzman and author Doris Lessing.
In 1995 he took time off to care for his father who was dying of AIDS. This experience strongly shaped his later work, significantly The Inner Room[4], a focus on the vulnerability of masculine bodies. Millennium Man[5] was his next exhibition, taking a closer look at the confrontation between men and perceived notions of masculinity in a world that has become increasingly 'feminised’.
His last body of photographic work, interseXion, was a collaboration with black transgender sex workers which took seven years to produce, culminating in a solo exhibition at The Iziko South African National Gallery in Cape Town[6].
Author
Hamblin published his first book Robert: A Queer and Crooked Memoir for the Not So Straight and Narrow (ISBN:9781928420972; Epub ISBN: 9781928420989) in June 2021, through NB Publishers[7] and Melinda Ferguson Books.
Awards
- Fellowship Award at the Houston Centre for Photography in Texas[8] (The Binary Farm).
- South Africa Kanna nomination Award. Klein Karoo National Arts Festival (“when you feeling like a lady)
Gender Activist
Hamblin transitioned from queer female in apartheid era South Africa to transgender male after the fall of the apartheid government. From 2007-2009 he was an instrumental founding member of the African organisation Gender DynamiX[9] holding the position of Deputy Director responsible for Advocacy and media liaison from 2009-2011.
After moving to Cape Town in 2010, he continued campaigning for transgender rights and in 2011 was a co-founder of a support group for transgendered sex-workers at a Cape Town non-profit organisation called SWEAT. During this time he developed his interest in gender theory within the context of human rights.
Exhibitions
Solo
- 2018 InterseXion South African National Gallery, Cape Town
- 2017 InterseXion Lizamore & Associates Gallery, Johannesburg
- 2017 InterseXion Johannesburg Art Fair, Johannesburg
- 2017 InterseXion University of Free State Gallery, Bloemfontein
- 2017 The Colony University of Stellenbosch Art Museum Cape Town
- 2016 Threshold International Young Photographers Festival, Daegu, South Korea
- 2015 Daughter Language Lizamore & Associates Gallery, Johannesburg
- 2014 The Colony , University of Johannesburg Gallery, Johannesburg
- 2013 “..When You’re Feeling Like a Lady..” University of Cape Town Centre African Studies Gallery,
- African Gender Institute
- 2013 “..When You’re Feeling Like a Lady..”
- 2013 The Colony Aardklop National arts festival, Potchefstroom
- 2006 The Binary Farm Klein Karoo National Arts Festival, Cape Town
- 2006 The Binary Farm Aardklop National Arts festival, Potchefstroom
- 2000 The Post Christian Open Window Art Academy, Pretoria
- 2000 The Post Christian Aardklop National Arts festival, Potchefstroom
- 1998 Millennium Man Aardklop National Arts festival, Potchefstroom
- 1998 Millennium Man Klein Karoo National Arts Festival, Cape Town
- 1998 Millennium Man Graphiti Gallery, Johannesburg
- 1996 In a Different Light Private Studio, Johannesburg
Group
- 2021 Abstrakt,[10] Nel[11] on Long Street Gallery, Cape Town
- 2020 Paintings (Beyond Exhibition), Dawid Ras Gallery[12], Johannesburg
- 2016 Daughter Language[13] (DF Group 1 Exhibition), Erdmann Contemporary Group, Cape Town
- 2015 InterseXion (Queer in Africa Conference), The District Six Museum Homecoming Centre, Cape Town (Collaboration with The Sistaaz Hood)
- 2015 Daughter Language[14] (Lizamore & Assoc artist), Cape Town Art Fair
- 2015 Daughter Language (Break the Spell exhibition), Gallery University of Stellenbosch, Oude Libertas Gallery Stellenbosch, Cape Town
- 2014 “when you feeling like a lady” (Nomad bodies exhibition), Antwerp University College of Artesis, Royal Academy of Fine Arts, Belgium.
- 2013 The Moral Monkeys (group exhibition), Dstreet Gallery, Stellenbosch, South Africa
- 2013 Nomad Bodies[15], Wintertuin Gallery, University College of Artesis, Royal Academy of Fine Arts, Antwerp
- 2013 Tom Waits for No Man, KKNK & venues nationwide, South Africa
- 2013 Five Photographers, Dawid's Choice Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
- 2010 Swallow Your Pride[16], Blank Projects, South Africa
- 2008 Legacy of Men, Johannesburg Art Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
- 2006 Binary Farm (with Neo Ntsoma and Jurgen Schadaberg), University of Johannesburg Gallery
- 2006 Round Table, ArtSpace, Johannesburg, South Africa
- 2006 Father (video), Out in Africa Film Festival & Hamburg LGBT Film Festival, nationwide, South Africa and Hamburg, Germany
- 2006 The Best of KKNK, Gordon Froud Contemporary, Johannesburg, South Africa
- 2004 Gender, (HCP fellowship award), Houston Centre of Photography, Rice University, USA
- 2003 Inner Room (group), Aluvert, Johannesburg, South Africa
- 2002 Time Shift with Nel Erasmus, ArtSpace, Johannesburg, South Africa
Collections
- University of Johannesburg
- Rand Merchant Bank, South Africa
- Sasol Corporate Collection
- William Humphreys art Gallery, Kimberly, South Africa
- Private Collectors - South Africa, Switzerland, Italy, France
Publications
- New Museum/MIT Press “Representation and Its Limits” Critical Anthology on Trans Cultural Production & the Politics of Visibility -2017
- How poverty and gender inequality weave across a human body[17] - Lucinda Jolly Business Day, /
- Art that explores fatherhood and transracial adoption - Dr. Richardt Strydom Mail and Guardian,
- Amsterdam University Press: “Queer Visual Activism in South Africa” - Dr. Tessa Lewin,
- Wasafari Journal - “Prosody for a Queer Alphabet: Contemporary Performance Art Practices in South Africa”, Dr. Roelof Petrus van Wyk,
- The Journalist: Thabo Thwala - “Intersexion: an exhibition steeped in transgender sex work”,
- Cape Times - Confines of a Man,
- Eyemazing Susan Annual Pictorial Vol.II - Lucie Award Winner,
- Unisa Press “(Dis)Engaging the Gaze – Moving Images and the Lives of Trans Sex Workers” Dr. Ernst van der Wal,
- Stellenbosch University Publications - Body of/in Work: Volatile Images and the Representation of Trans Sex Workers Dr. Ernst van der Wal
External Links
Website https://www.roberthamblin.com/
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References
- ^ "NB Publishers | Robert". http. Retrieved 2021-08-10.
- ^ "Gender DynamiX I Transgender and Gender Non Confirming Rights". GDXhome. Retrieved 2021-07-29.
- ^ "GDXStory2005-2015_Sankofa.pdf". Google Docs. Retrieved 2021-08-05.
- ^ "The Inner Room 2003". Robert Hamblin. Retrieved 2021-08-05.
- ^ "Millenium Man 1998". Robert Hamblin. Retrieved 2021-08-05.
- ^ "InterseXion | Iziko". www.iziko.org.za. Retrieved 2021-08-05.
- ^ "NB Publishers | Robert". http. Retrieved 2021-08-03.
- ^ "Houston Center for Photography – Dedicated to the art of photography". Retrieved 2021-08-10.
- ^ "Gender DynamiX I Transgender and Gender Non Confirming Rights". GDXhome. Retrieved 2021-08-05.
- ^ philip (2021-02-26). "Abstrakt Group Exhibition at Nel Gallery". mapmyway. Retrieved 2021-08-03.
- ^ "Nel". www.nelart.co.za. Retrieved 2021-08-03.
- ^ "Robert Hamblin". www.dawidras.com. Retrieved 2021-08-03.
- ^ "On Photography, Painting & Sculpture - Group Show". Contemporary And (in German). Retrieved 2021-08-03.
- ^ "Art that explores fatherhood and transracial adoption". The Mail & Guardian. 2015-07-02. Retrieved 2021-08-03.
- ^ "Nomad bodies 2014". Elfriede Dreyer. Retrieved 2021-08-03.
- ^ ArtFacts. "Swallow My Pride | Exhibition". ArtFacts. Retrieved 2021-08-06.
- ^ "How poverty and gender inequality weave across a human body". BusinessLIVE. Retrieved 2021-08-05.