Macula
2019
An ongoing series of digital collagesÂ

Love Begins
Three Goblin Art
almost home

pixel skylines

ellievsbear
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Mike Driver

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Cosimo Galluzzi
Show & Tell
Noah Kahan
ojovivo

Product Placement
Monterey Bay Aquarium
YOU ARE THE REASON
official daine visual archive
Game of Thrones Daily
DEAR READER
Jules of Nature

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia
seen from Iraq

seen from Canada
seen from Mexico

seen from Australia

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from Netherlands

seen from Netherlands

seen from United States
seen from Egypt
seen from Australia
seen from Iraq
seen from United States
seen from Venezuela

seen from South Africa

seen from United States
@edemontbron
Macula
2019
An ongoing series of digital collagesÂ

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Somewhere Over the Rainbow (short preview)
2015
HD video, played on loop.Â
Somewhere Over The Rainbow (short) is a prelude to an 8-minute film released in November 2015. Co-written by French visual artist Emmanuel de Montbron and South African actor and vocalist Brendan Murray, the film forms part of a broader Art project entitled The Dept. of Some Affairs, conceived as a fictional, grotesque and paranoid bureaucracy believing to be under constant threat of invasion by so-called purple aliens.
A full-length video link is available on request.
The Dept. of Some Affairs (Vol. I)
2015
Mixed-media installation, Michaelis School of Fine Art.Â
(Full catalogue of the exhibition available here)
The works selected for this exhibition have clandestinely – if not miraculously – made their way through the murky waters of bureaucracy. The artist – a French national – is persona non grata in South Africa. In bureaucratic terms, this means he has been declared an “undesirable” person, in accordance with Section 7(1)(g) read with section 30(1); Regulations 27(1) and 39(1).
How did this happen? The answer, if it exists at all, is probably stuck under a dusty pile of files, in a non-descript room, at the end of a long corridor, in a large administrative edifice inaccessible to the public. Or maybe it isn’t; who knows?
In South Africa, The Department of Home Affairs (DHA) is a “notoriously inefficient state bureaucracy charged with managing immigration as well as domestic identity documentation” (Hoag, 2014: 411), and an obligatory point of passage for everyone living in the country. This common “bureaucratic experience” is nevertheless the visible aspect of a much broader and complex system, the inner workings of which are highly opaque.
Bureaucracies embody a strange and terrifying paradox: the inscrutability of power. In South Africa, the DHA is a case in point. As a government bureaucracy, it perfectly illustrates Veena Das’ definition of the state as “a form of regulation that oscillates between a rational mode and a magical mode of being” (Das, 2004: 162).
Indeed, though bureaucracies theoretically represent rationality and order, their opacity and arbitrariness renders them as illegible – “magic” – entities. What happens within the bureaucratic realm is therefore always invariably imagined, fantasized. From an outsider’s perspective, bureaucracy is as much a fiction as it is a reality.
The works presented here are an attempt to materialize this mysterious bureaucratic “magic”. They form part of a broader project entitled The Department of Some Affairs, conceived as the inner psychic realm of an imaginary bureaucracy, cut-off from the world, paranoid, xenophobic, and hallucinatory. The work engages with the ambiguities and complexities of bureaucratic alienation, through the staging of an immersive space, at once alienating and alienated.
In this dark and mysterious bureaucratic world, it has become increasingly difficult to distinguish between rational bureaucrats and the invasive “aliens” they are precisely trying to eliminate.
References
Das, V. 2004. The signature of the state: the paradox of illegibility. In Life and words. Descent into the ordinary. V. Das. Berkeley: University of California Press. 162–183. Hoag, C. 2014. Dereliction at the South African Department of Home Affairs: time for the anthropology of bureaucracy. Critique of Anthropology. 34(4): 410-428.
Tropics
2014 - 2015
Altered found slides, projected on wall. (Variable sizes).
The starting point of this series is the found image, specifically 35mm colour slides found in local antique shops or via online adverts in Cape Town. After physically manipulating, bleaching and/or superimposing a selection of found slides, I re-created a series of multiple-exposed transparencies.
This particular selection is about the hallucinatory perception of being in two places at once. It is about the potential for trivial "everyday" subjects and scenes to become exotic as if they were unknown territories at the limits (or "tropics") of the real.Â
Special edition of Duratrans lambda prints mounted in aluminum lightboxes, available on request.
Total Eclipse (The Sun), 2013
Screenprint on the Daily Sun.
Total Eclipse (The Moon), 2013
Digital lithograph, glass, steel.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
E. Azcarraga, Matamoros, Mexico (U.S Border)
2012
Bleach on photographic paper - 16 frames. 90 x 160 cm.
While virtually “travelling” in north-eastern Mexico along the US border via Google’s online platform Street View, I spotted holes and various vandalisms inflicted physically on the border wall.
Photographed by the Google car in Mexico, the holes through the wall ironically open up a glimpse of the American landscape beyond the border, a landscape that is usually hidden behind the brick wall, and yet always present in the minds of those who risk their lives for the American Dream.
The work consists of a series of 16 close-ups of a Street View image of the vandalized border wall which have been re-photographed using an analog camera. Using bleach, the original vandalism is literally re-enacted on the surface of the prints, which are then framed in a way that suggests a brick wall.