“There is nothing original under the sun,” muses Xabiso Vili. This is why the 30-year-old Johannesburger prefers to focus on authenticity instead. He pursues this goal through storytelling, the unifying thread of a diverse creative output, and through his postgraduate studies in applied theatre at Wits University.
The Future Africa grant recipient has produced two collections of poetry, Eating My Skin and Laughing In My Father’s Voice, and a one-man show, Black Boi Be.
It’s Vili’s work in the augmented reality field that has taken him from his upbringing in the rural Eastern Cape to the likes of Vancouver and Paris. He had to pinch himself when, wandering through the latter’s crowded suburbs, he heard his own voice booming from the historic Church of St Eustache, a feature of his projection-mapping installation.
Vili is busy working on a 360-degree visual poetry album, which will become his first virtual reality film.
“Believe in your voice and its authenticity.”