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Splinter and Loss: Reading Clare Loveday’s Johannesburg Etude No. 2


William Fourie

Abstract

An intricate subjectivity, born of a sense of surveillance, occupation and navigation, can be heard folded into the experience of Johannesburg’s materiality in the works of Clare Loveday. The interpolation of subjectivity into the materiality of the city is perhaps nowhere more evident than in Loveday’s Johannesburg Etude No. 2 (2015). In this article, I present a close reading of the etude as an ‘urban imaginary’ (Huyssen, 2008), which describes a representation of the city as the consolidation of material fact and subjective experience. This heuristic allows me to consider the etude not only as a mimetic representation of the structures and infrastructures of the city, nor merely as a subjective experience of the unfolding quotidian in an undifferentiated conurbation. Rather, Huyssen’s term allows me to think of the etude as a juncture of these two perspectives. To produce such a reading, I ground my analysis of the etude in the urban geography of Johannesburg. Particularly, I consider how the etude resounds Johannesburg’s unregulated sprawling and decentralisation, which produces urban splintering. I argue that the work does not only manifest this splintering, but, through the process of musical disaggregation, also engenders a concomitant sense of loss. Splintering and loss thus form the two tropes of the urban imaginary: the material reality of the city and the subjectivity that encounters it.


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print ISSN: 2223-635X