
I explore memory, technology, and personal history through a blend of digital photography and animation. This project is rooted in my childhood memories, using a 2000s TV screen (CRT) to evoke nostalgia and the emotional resonance of past experiences.
Inspiration of this work came when I was placed on the opposite end of a depot in Polokwane. The conversion of displacement emerged from here and it made me think about displacement in my own family. Using texts from the trucks passing by they become a symbol of the animation and displacement. The video tells a journey through various cities and emotional landscapes. From map pathways to shifting colours representing familial bonds, these elements narrate the experience of travel and separation of urban migration. Something that exist for many generations in mine from my parents to my parents. Effects of the past that place gaps then affect the dynamics of families.
The installation creates an intimate space encapsulating a living room. Encouraging a personal connection with the work. the installation evokes presence and absence, resonating with the themes of the animations.
In conversation with Francinah Monyemangene, Abey Dikgale, Mokgadi Monyemangene and Victor Monyemangene.



























