Site specific drawing as worldmaking practice
🗓️ Wednesday, 24 June — 5:10pm
- 6:30pm
(80 mins)
Presenters
Abstract
This research paper locates site-specific drawing as a methodological approach to artistic worldmaking. It proposes that drawings created in dialogue with place become more than representation; they function as modes of inquiry, translation, and spatial extension. The research is grounded in a practice-led methodology, where drawing operates as both a research tool and outcome. Simultaneously, the site is approached not only as a subject, but as a collaborator and repository of knowledge.
Indigenous practices such as indigo making inform this research as living systems of knowledge, shaped and reshaped through making. These traditions lend a language of reading, cultivating, and preserving that underpins a methodology grounded in ecological interdependence and cultural resonance. Through presence, witnessing, and material engagement, the artist draws from and with the environment, allowing space, microbes, and the sensory to participate in the act of making. The drawings metabolize pigment, light, and invisible matter, embodying both the seen and the sensed.
This paper argues for an expanded understanding of artistic worldmaking, where place is not simply occupied but emerges as co-creator. It gestures toward a theory of knowledge production rooted in adaptation, ecological harmony, and material understanding. In this view, site-specific drawing becomes a generative mode of imagining otherwise. Worldmaking is evident through drawing as situated, durational, and entangled with context. In doing so, it contributes to broader theories of artistic worldmaking grounded in African epistemologies of seeing, sensing, and being.
The site-specific drawings were created at the Ancient Indigo Dying Pits of Kano State in northern Nigeria. A site where centuries-old textile practices continue to inform material understanding and cultural heritage.
Indigenous practices such as indigo making inform this research as living systems of knowledge, shaped and reshaped through making. These traditions lend a language of reading, cultivating, and preserving that underpins a methodology grounded in ecological interdependence and cultural resonance. Through presence, witnessing, and material engagement, the artist draws from and with the environment, allowing space, microbes, and the sensory to participate in the act of making. The drawings metabolize pigment, light, and invisible matter, embodying both the seen and the sensed.
This paper argues for an expanded understanding of artistic worldmaking, where place is not simply occupied but emerges as co-creator. It gestures toward a theory of knowledge production rooted in adaptation, ecological harmony, and material understanding. In this view, site-specific drawing becomes a generative mode of imagining otherwise. Worldmaking is evident through drawing as situated, durational, and entangled with context. In doing so, it contributes to broader theories of artistic worldmaking grounded in African epistemologies of seeing, sensing, and being.
The site-specific drawings were created at the Ancient Indigo Dying Pits of Kano State in northern Nigeria. A site where centuries-old textile practices continue to inform material understanding and cultural heritage.
Biography
Since joining the University of Witwatersrand, Dhlamini has lectured in the undergraduate and postgraduate programs of the Department of Fine Arts. Her artistic practice delves into visual, tactile, and discursive investigations of indigenous cultural practices, with her work constantly engaging in conversations with both her past and present visual landscapes. She is currently pursuing a PhD in the Faculty of Arts, Design and Media at Birmingham City University.