A few months ago, Amita Makan would not have imagined herself embarking on the rare and notable journey of self discovery and exploration of her heritage.
A chance meeting with South Africa-based journalist and sociologist, Hyderabadi, Vidya Bhandarker propelled a burning desire, inspiration and urge for Port Elizabeth-born Makan to trace her lineage using her profession of art.
The long and tortuous journey of her ancestors over a century ago has become an incredible and constant source of inspiration to her work, and journey to trace her lineage.
A fourth-generation South African Indian, Makan turns the gallery walls at the SANAVA gallery in Pretoria into a time and direction pointing compass of some sort.
She deliberately used her mixed media work titled “Journey” — a painted pair of ornate Indian ladies’ sandals, over which she embroidered excerpts of the Freedom Charter across it and used embroidery as a statement to express both her political identity and personal heritage.
At one level, her work acts as a tribute to those pioneers, including her great grandfather, who left India to the unknown lands of Africa.
“‘Journey’ is an allegory of my ancestry, my caste, of migration and mobility; and the long journey travelled by my family and other South Africans of Indian descent,” she says.
“The very fact that I am able to pursue my love to create art is due to the sacrifices made by my ancestors.”
As a black South African woman of Indian ancestry living in post-apartheid South Africa, Makan feels working on the piece gave her an opportunity to contemplate her multi-layered identity within the context of the 150 years of Indians’ presence in South Africa.
“It is an opportunity to reflect on our Indian ancestors, their arrival during the time of colonialism, and the discrimination and hardship they faced under apartheid. Despite their difficulties they endured over a century and a half, they remained resilient. They were determined to make South Africa their home.”
Amita’s great grandfather Makan Bhana arrived in South Africa in 1901 with a little bag; his indigenous language, and shoe making tools. He made his way to Port Elizabeth, a British colony at the time, and was required by law to obtain a permit to repair shoes and boots. By 1914, he had established retail and wholesale businesses in clothing and shoes in South End, a mixed residential area founded on prime land in Port Elizabeth. Their businesses and homes were bulldozed and razed to the ground under the Group Areas Act and the residents were relocated to far flung, barren, racially segregated areas. The entire community history spanning generations was erased.
Looking at the body of Makan’s work — that include a series called ‘Evanescence’, portraits of her late mother, a traditional Indian woman who wore saris — there is an interesting projection of the inventory of her life experiences as a black South African woman of Indian origin.
The 42-year-old Pretoria based artist belongs to that privileged generation of South African Indians that were able to attend university, yet her respect for her tradition and heritage is sacrosanct.
Growing up under apartheid, her first formal introduction to art was through a one year course she took in Fine Art and History of Art at Rhodes University, after which she completed a Masters Degree in International Relations and Political Science.
“My love of art is almost instinctive. I loved painting and drawing as a child, but my exposure to art was very limited. Art was not offered as a subject at the government schools. The galleries and best libraries were located in the former white suburbs, “she says.
Despite having travelled widely, stayed in Switzerland for some time, and being exposed to different European painting techniques and styles, Makan has gone back to her roots of using embroidery and stitching.
“My embroidered works are also conceptually rooted.” The canvas, or rather the fabric, she uses often has symbolic value, it is perhaps only the subject matter, composition, materials and the style that make the work contemporary.
“I love the repetitive, almost meditative, act of stitching. I embroider in the manner similar to that in which I paint, but often using my own photographs and old family photographs,” says Makan.
Although, she learnt embroidery at primary school and took it up again in 2008 to do a portrait of her Alzheimers ailing mother, Makan traces her love for embroidery and stitching to her ancestors.
“Embroidery is an integral part of my great grandparents’ Gujerati culture. My Gujerati female ancestors would have embroidered. My paternal great grandfather was from the Shudra or shoe making caste. He used stitches to fashion cow hides into sandals and shoes.”
As Makan continues her search for self-identity, it might be tempting to pigeon-hole her as an artist of Indian descent; but here is a versatile artist who has drawn incredible inspiration and experience from the global society to fashion her own cumulative and complex identity.
“I am a product of historical, cultural and political processes. Some of my works are personal narratives and others are collective.”
As her artistic journey continues, one day Makan sees herself documenting through her painting and embroidery, a wider series of South Africans, including those of Indian descent, and the contributions they have made to South Africa’s freedom and to the development of democracy.
Her journey might be long and arduous like that of her ancestors, but the first steps have been huge.