Remembering Medu, the South African art collective that fought apartheid
- Judy Seidman
Four decades later, post-apartheid South Africa barely recalls the Medu Art Ensemble's contributions to the liberation struggle. But that could be changing.
The collective was formed by South African cultural activists exiled after the and it worked with artists back home, Botswana citizens, and some from other countries. Medu used the creative arts â visual image, theatre, music and literature â to to South Africaâs liberation struggle. In 1982 Medu brought several thousand cultural activists to Gaborone for a entitled Culture and Resistance, proclaiming that
Culture is a weapon of Struggle.
A Pan Africanist and anti-colonial enterprise, Medu engaged with international including the work of German theatre-maker , Vietnamese resistance , the Mexican and who spoke back to dictatorship.
On 14 June 1985 the South African military targeted Medu members in Botswana in a cross-border raid. They killed 14 people and destroyed the art-making collective.
Almost lost to history
Four decades later, post-apartheid South Africa barely recalls Meduâs contributions. All thatâs been remembered until now have been Meduâs iconic posters (âSmash Bantu Educationâ, âYou have touched a rockâ, âThe people shall governâ) and the individual creative work of celebrated Medu writers , and . Of musicians and . Of visual artist .
But whatâs been lacking is a record of the intense debates, contested cultural theory, collective understanding and shared perceptions that infused these works.
In 2019 a breakthrough came when the Meduâs posters. This was followed by a book in the form of a entitled The People Shall Govern: Medu Art Ensemble and the Anti-apartheid Poster 1979-1985.
Here, as an artist who was a member of Medu, I offer a critical perspective on the narrative that emerges from this exhibition and catalogue.
The Chicago show
Doubts inevitably arise when African artworks are displayed in art institutions in foreign metropoles, far from the communities and struggles that birthed them. In Medu we believed our work must inspire resistance and envisage future liberation. What do these posters say to viewers when hung on sterile gallery walls in Chicago or London?
The curators of the Medu exhibit were and , who previously researched Pan Africanist cultural struggles and took these challenges seriously.
As no broad narrative or comprehensive collection of Meduâs work exists, they contacted surviving Medu members, unearthed hidden histories and sought out post-apartheid cultural discourse. They wrote texts for the gallery walls and displayed paraphernalia that included magazines like and , political buttons, T-shirts, music and film clips. They organised public lectures and discussions.
The catalogue
The catalogue was published a year after the exhibition closed. Without the showâs objects and framing activities, the text weaves a narrative about Medu through seven essays, juxtaposed with poster images.
The catalogue arranges posters by theme: political resistance, music, womenâs struggles, June 16th 1976, workers, and struggle heroes. This foregrounds imagery and slogans over creative interpretation and vision. Clenched fists read as clichĂŠ or symbol, rather than lived experience of the struggle. Posters for murdered comrades become âheroic depictions of activists and freedom fightersâ, not cherished memories of real people.
In the text, a brief overview of Meduâs history is followed by South African poet laureate Mongane Seroteâs own experience of shaping Medu as a cultural project of the exiled ANC. While this story forms a core part of Meduâs history, it skips over other contributions to Meduâs dynamic mix. Like vibrant debates with -aligned cultural activists in Gaborone, Medu membersâ underground work with the ANCâs military wing, and cross-fertilisation with groups creating struggle art inside South Africa.
Ming and Byrd discuss the aesthetics of Medu graphics, finding similarities with early Soviet art. But Medu consciously traced its aesthetic roots to Pan Africanist and African diasporic cultural theory and practice. We looked to social philosopher Frantz Fanon and African writers and . To pre-colonial and anti-colonial African art. To the art of Mozambiqueâs and South Africaâs .
A chapter from South African curator views Medu through the cultural gaze of post-1990 South Africa. Gule maintains that Meduâs slogan, âart is a weapon of struggleâ, has been âreduced to a blunt tool for propagandaâ. He argues that âweaponising art degenerates into crass sloganeeringâ as artistic vision buckled under ANC compromises, white privilege and the commercial art market. Gule concludes todayâs generation must fashion their own, different, rebellious culture.
By contrast, South African author and scholar holds that Meduâs democratic discourse and praxis bred hope and belief, emerging from and inspiring Southern Africaâs liberation struggle. He concludes that âMeduâs struggle cannot be solely framed through its historical placement in the 1970s and 1980s. The idea and spirit that inform it also predate and exceed it.â
The final essay, Collecting the Posters, by South African collector and gallerist , gives yet another perspective. Siebrits was conscripted into the apartheid army in 1988 and deployed to military intelligence: âOne of our unitâs main tasks was to destroy âsubversive enemy propaganda postersâ.â After 1994, he hunted these now rare posters to place them into todayâs art world âby purchase from private collections and book dealers and while travelling to Botswanaâ. He does not explain that these posters were personal copies saved by Medu member , whose wife Jeannette Curtis Schoon and 6-year-old daughter Katryn were by a 1984 letter bomb in Angola. Siebrits bought the posters from their surviving son, exhibiting them in his Johannesburg gallery before donating them to the Art Institute of Chicago. This traumatic history of the posters speaks sharply to Meduâs meaning then and now.
The catalogue and the exhibition aim to provide and prompt ânew scholarship on Meduâs courageous and consequential workâ. The first steps towards reclaiming Meduâs legacy have been taken.
There is still a long road ahead.![]()
, Research associate, History Workshop, . This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .