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DESIGN>ART is the latest addition to the DESIGN> stable of publications. Launched in collaboration with the Johannesburg Art Gallery, DESIGN>ART focuses on the promotion of the arts and its relationship to design from South Africa, the African continent and beyond. Spanning 21 articles and 231 pages, DESIGN>ART is structured to cover four areas – Spotlight, Collections, Pop and Patrons – featuring seminal current exhibitions, corporate art collections, popular culture, automotive art, film and music, among others, ensuring a great read for all art lovers and design enthusiasts alike.Access our website at www.designmagazine.co.za

TRANSCRIPT

Page 2: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

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Page 3: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

Rich aroma.Refined taste.

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Page 4: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

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Page 5: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

CONTENTSSPOTLIGHT

16 > Removing the masks of racism, prejudice and stereotypes.

38 > The making of 1910-2010: From Pierneef to Gugulective

56 > SPace: Currencies in contemporary African art

68 > Of consumption and consequence

78 > Mthethwa’s lens bares the colourful truth of his subjects

96 > Arnaldo Pomodoro and Edoardo Villa: A sculptural dialogue

104 > A view from the South

5 >

Page 6: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

114 > Atelier 1731: Disintegration of visual memory

COLLECTIONS

124 > Everard Read leaps into the future with CIRCA on Jellicoe

134 > Standard Bank Gallery’s commitment to cultural heritage

146 > UNISA Art Gallery

153 > Arts at the North-West University

POP

162 > Art in motion: The Dwelling Lab

174 > World Premiere of Jeff Koons’ BMW Art Car

6 >

Page 7: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

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189 > South African film wins at Tribeca

192 > Life, Above All: SA film a hit at Cannes

196 > SA’s ‘zef’ trio thrash music scene

PATRONS

205 > Investing in the rebirth of Braamfontein

215 > Sanlam Private Investments is committed to investing in art

222 > PricewaterhouseCoopers: Creating sustainable value

227 > SCAW Metals Group – a global footprint with African roots

31341 SPI art ad portrait version p.indd 1 5/25/10 12:48:00 PM

7 >

Page 9: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

PUBLISHER >

Cameron Bramley

[email protected]

EDITOR >

Jacques Lange

[email protected]

CONTRIBUTORS >

Janine Erasmus, Bev Hermanson, Riason Naidoo,

Nosimilo Ramela, Nicky Rehbock, Stacey Rowan,

Suné Stassen, Nosimilo Ramela

SALES TEAM >

Geri Adolphe, Rachel Harper, Chene Madzvamuse,

Jeff Malan

PRODUCTION ASSISTANT >

Charl Lamprecht

ADMINISTRATION & ACCOUNTS >

Claudia Madurai & Michelle Swart

CREATIVE DIRECTOR >

Jacques Lange

DESIGN & LAYOUT >

Bluprint Design

Cover image by Anri Theron

PUBLISHED BY >

DESIGN>INFORMATION

Tel: +27(0) 82 882 8124

Fax: +27 (0) 86 678 8448

www.designmagazine.co.za

© 2010 DESIGN>INFORMATION

ISSN 1814-7240

DESIGN>ART is produced by DESIGN>INFORMATION. No material may be reproduced in part or whole without the

express permission of the publisher. No responsibility will be accepted for unsolicited material. The publisher accepts no

liability of whatsoever nature arising out of or in connection with the contents of this publication. The publisher does not

give any warranty as to the completeness or accuracy of its contents. The views and opinions expressed in DESIGN>ART

are not necessarily those of the publisher, its endorsers, sponsors or contributors.

CREDITS

9 >

Page 10: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

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Page 12: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

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Page 13: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

13 >

Publishing DESIGN>ART is an idea that has been a

brewing in my mind for many years. Puzzled by the

artificial barriers that often separate the design

and art industries, we introduced art and craft into

the editorial content of our stable of design publi-

cations in 2008. Yet, I felt that this was not good

enough because it still did not put art and design

on an equal footing. And so the DESIGN>ART idea

kept on brewing … slowly.

As with most things, I needed an exceptional reason

or profound experience to make DESIGN>ART a real-

ity. My profound experience came on a Monday in

the latter months of 2009 at the Johannesburg Art

Gallery (JAG) when Antoinette Murdoch, the director

and chief curator, walked me through the amazing

collection of time-chilled art. I was fired-up by her

passion to pull wonders out of the City’s cash-

wrapped priorities to fix the ailing building, restore

the invaluable collection and implement new projects

that would give joy and intellectual stimulation to

the new demographic of art lovers that that live

around JAG.

That fateful day was a turning point. DESIGN>ART

was born with a roar in its throat, sounding out

those who fear the run-down Joubert Park precinct

where JAG is located, which for some is heaven and

home.

DESIGN> has since become a befitting media partner

of JAG and we have collaboratively developed a solid

and inclusive strategy that promotes JAG’s activities

and rejuvenation programmes through our online

resources as it celebrates its centenary of collecting

art in 2010 and the centenary of the landmark build-

ing designed by Edwin Lutyens in 2011. And so JAG

no longer has any borders and all people, paupers,

pompous and the passionate are welcome. Where

else in Joburg could we walk amongst an art collec-

tion that is that old, worth a billion Rand, housed in

such a humble, humming and vibrant place? Perhaps

the Tate. Mmm.

But, DESIGN>ART is not just about JAG. It’s about

promoting art and its close relationship to design

from all over South Africa, the African continent

and the world. This launch edition, spanning 21 arti-

cles and more than 231 pages, is merely a glimpse

of what we are planning for the future. I thank all

who have contributed and supported our efforts in

launching this insightful and eloquently designed

launch edition. Art this way >

Cameron Bramley

Publisher

PUBLISHER’S NOTE

Page 15: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

15 >

EDITOR’S FOREWORD

This launch edition of DESIGN>ART has been a

work of passion for the publishing team and we have

been working on it for the past nine months. During

this time we grappled with many questions: Does

the arts community need yet another magazine and

how will it be different from others in the market-

place? How do we satisfy the requirements of the

current readers of the DESIGN> stable of publica-

tions who expressed a specific need for more editorial

featuring the fine arts? How do we bridge the tradi-

tional gaps between design and art? More important-

ly, to whom and how should we pitch the editorial

angles and writing style to satisfy the unique require-

ments of our diverse readership?

Our response: Listen to our current readers. Let the art

speak for itself. Allow contributing writers to use the

tone that they are most comfortable with. Don’t get

bogged down by conventions set by other publica-

tions – we are not interested in competing with others.

Make art life and make it live.

And so, DESIGN>ART became a reality. The 21 articles

in this edition are structured to cover four areas:

Spotlight, Collections, Pop and Patrons.

Spotlight features current seminal exhibitions in-

cluding Without Masks: Contemporary Afro-Cuban

Art, 1910-2010: From Pierneef to Gugulective,

SPace: Currencies in Contemporary African Art and

eight others. We also look how the Everard Read

Gallery recently expanded its facilities to accom-

modate the requirements of the 21st century.

Under the Collections theme, we focus on three

South African collections: Standard Bank, UNISA

and North-West University.

Our Pop section focuses on popular culture. In this

section we address automotive art, film and music.

The highlight is surely the feature on Die And-

woord, which poses confronting questions related

to stereotypical cultural categorisation and the

emergence of the ‘Zef-movement’.

In the Patrons section we acknowledge companies

that support the arts in a big way. These companies

– of which four are featured – are not directly involved

in the arts, yet they commit substantial portions of

their CSR budgets to benefit cultural development.

We wish you a great read. >

Jacques Lange

Editor

FOREWORD

Page 16: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

16 >

Juan

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By Stacey Rowan

In May 1994, Nelson Mandela, in

his historic inauguration speech as

president stated: “We enter into

a covenant that we shall build a

society in which all South Africans,

both black and white, will be able

to walk tall, without any fear in their

hearts, assured of their inalienable

right to human dignity – a rainbow

nation at peace with itself and the

world.”

It’s been 16 years since the end of

apartheid yet, many sceptics still

speculate about how long it would

take South Africa to achieve the

metaphoric ideals that Mandela

so profoundly summarised. With

racism and stereotypes prevailing

in the minds of many, there are still

a myriad of difficulties that need to

be addressed. Failure to discuss

and educate people about these

Page 18: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

18 >

matters, pretending that they do not exist,

and sweeping matters under the carpet,

will result in the perpetuation of prejudice,

othering and prohibiting the actualisation

of the country’s rainbow ideals.

Making its international debut at the Jo-

hannesburg Art Gallery (JAG), the Without Masks: Contemporary Afro-Cuban Art exhi-

bition aims to address some of these so-

cietal disjoints by removing the artificial

masks that often hide constructive debates.

The exhibition explores two main themes

that link the histories and cultures of Cuba

and Africa. Firstly, it removes the mask on

the ongoing issue of race within contempo-

rary Cuban society and secondly, it removes

the mask on African religious beliefs and

practices which thrive in Cuba today, having

been brought to the island by African slaves.

Without Masks: Contemporary Afro-Cuban Art, running from May to August, was ini-

tiated in late 2007. The exhibition is the

flagship of an engaging and jam-packed

programme of shows that JAG is staging

during the next two months in celebration

of the world converging in South Africa

for the 2010 FIFA World Cup. Considering

that it is the first time that the World Cup

is being held on African soil, the Without

Masks exhibition’s themes of prejudice,

racial stereotypes, racial discrimination

and racism are very relevant. By selecting Without Masks as its flagship show, JAG

made a brave choice and broke ranks with

many other local cultural institutions and

galleries who opted to focus on more pop-

ular curatorial themes such as soccer.

DESIGN>ART secured an inclusive inter-

view with the renowned Cuban poet, art

critic and curator, Orlando Hernández, and

Antoinette Murdoch, director of JAG.

Hernández believes, as the title denotes,

that this exhibition is about removing our

masks, showing our faces and discussing

issues that are clearly existent in our society,

but that are silenced or insufficiently dis-

seminated.

Without Masks includes artworks that

reflect controversial and conflicting aspects

of the Cuban national reality – a supposedly

egalitarian society – that has been silenced

or ignored for a long time. Problems related

to race, stereotypes and religion continue

to affect the black and mulatto population

of Cuba even to this day and indirectly affect

the country’s society and culture. The same

can be said about South Africans, and

Africans alike.

The exhibition, which aims to show how

Cuba’s art landscape is influenced by its

African heritage, also strives to fulfill its

moral and political obligations to facilitate

reflection, mediation and discussion of

the problems related to issues that per-

petuate othering. The purpose of the ex-

hibition is to create a broader understand-

ing whilst making a concerted contribution

to finding future solutions to address

these very issues.

“With this exhibition, it was important for

the viewers of the artworks to engage

with the message that the colour of skin is

Page 19: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

19 >

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Page 20: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

20 >

Page 21: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

21 >

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Page 22: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

22 >

Page 23: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

23 >

less important than the colour of cul-

ture. In life, nothing should be related

to a skin colour. From my point of view,

you can be a white woman who does

things or make things that places or

contextualises you in the framework

of Afro-Cuban culture. No matter what

race or skin colour you are, you can

be in the Afro-Cuban culture,” says

Hernández.

Not only did South Africans, and Afri-

cans, especially the black population,

experience the wrath of the apart-

heid era, but other countries like Cuba

also suffered under racial segregation

and racial discrimination. “Racism

during the apartheid era was the most

shocking situation in South Africa.

Racism still exists today in South Afri-

ca and in Cuba. There is a stereotype

implanted in the minds of people that

black people have big buttocks and

just play on drums. People do not

realise that they are still perceiving

the black population as a stereotype.

The theme of the artworks [included

in Without Masks] is not about eth-

nicity, it’s about politics. There is a

relationship, a commonality, between

South Africa and Cuba in terms of

shared politics and racial issues,”

says Hernández.

With the themes being of a controver-

sial nature, it should not to be assumed

that the exhibition focuses on black

African empowerment. Hernández

explains: “Funnily enough, many of

the artworks in the exhibition were

created by white people. The artworks

do not represent, nor are they a rep-

resentation of a ‘black movement’.

It’s about everyone, blacks and whites,

being a part of the Afro-Cuban culture.

With people, it’s about a closeness,”

adds Hernández.

These themes have also been broad-

ened to encompass other unusual

aspects such as the artistic represen-

tation of the political-military presence

of Cuba in wars in Africa, the incorpo-

ration of new African figures and ritual

traditions in our religious practices.

Not only do the themes connect Cuba

with South Africa, but there are other

distinct commonalities between these

two places that are evident in the

works on display. “The artworks ad-

dress themes of racism, religion and

the Angolan war, among others. South

Africans and Cuban soldiers fought

side by side in the Angolan war. It is

something that the people of South

Africa and the people of Cuba have

in common,” says Murdoch.

Supported and financed by South

African-born businessman and art

collector, Chris von Christierson, the

exhibition was created from the idea

that a collection of Cuban art would TOP:

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Page 24: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

24 >

Page 25: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

25 >

Robe

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.show the traces of Africa in Cuba’s

culture. We cannot understand Cubans

without taking into account their

African roots and influences. African-

based religious systems and rites

have had a profound impact on Cuban

music, linguistics, art and literature.

The works shown in Without Masks

all demonstrate some distinct inter-

section of the Cuban experience with

African cultural beliefs.

The 26 contemporary Afro-Cuban

artists represented in the exhibition

reveal the diversity of Cuba’s culture,

whilst they each capture their own

point of view that reflect their own

rich experiences. The artists come from

various generations and movements

expressing the widespread landscape

of Afro-Cuban art. “Our interest when

selecting the artworks, focused be-

yond the aesthetic, favouring the

originality and profoundness of the

discourse of sociological, historical,

anthropological, religious, ethical

and political nature contained in the

works,” says Hernández. With only

three female artists presented, the

exhibition is male dominated. The

80 artworks in total, created between

1980 and 2009, showcase an array of

styles and media including drawing,

painting, printmaking, photography,

mixed-media, sculpture and video.

“Another aspect of the artworks is

that they represent a concept of a

nation. The exhibition had to be cre-

ated with an understanding of the

overall message: the idea of building

a nation or a national culture. When

people accept other people, it’s these

little matters that build a certain kind

of nation.” According to Hernández,

“it’s about counting everyone in a

nation.”

“The artworks shown in this exhibi-

tion provoke reflection on the matters

of stereotyping, racism and prejudice.

They teach people and help them to

discover different aspects of the sub-

ject matter. Some of the artworks

are more direct than others in their

teachings. In addition, I feel that art

is not only about having a high-level

cultural engagement for the elite

only, but it’s about having all types

of cultural exchanges available for

everyone. In this exhibition I tried to

break the ‘false’ limits between one

kind of art and another and I tried to

break the limits between different

levels of culture like popular culture

and high-level culture,” explains

Hernández. Whether internationally

well-known or practically unknown,

some of the artists included in the

exhibition are highly educated, whilst

others are self-taught. The artists all

have different backgrounds and come

from different generations, resulting

in a vibrant and multi-dimensional

representation of the exhibition’s

themes.

Page 26: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

26 >

The collection, according to Hernández,

can be considered as a ‘work in progress’

in the sense that in the future it may also

include works of more artists from differ-

ent generations who either currently or

previously focused on the theme. “The

collection will still grow in the future as

the concept of the collection grows,” adds

Hernández.

“The Johannesburg Art Gallery is the per-

fect venue for launching this travelling

exhibition because the patron of the col-

lection, Chris von Christierson, who now

lives in the UK, was born in Johannesburg.

It’s often difficult to find a venue that can

accommodate such a large exhibition, so

we were happy to bring the exhibition to

JAG at a time when the world’s eyes are

focused on Africa,” says Hernández.

“All of our current exhibitions come from,

and have, different angles. Between the

four shows that the Gallery is presenting

during this soccer season, the Without

Masks exhibition is a representation of

issues that we as South Africans, and Af-

ricans, need to address. It is specifically

relevant because it is the first time that

Africa is hosting the FIFA World Cup and

we hope that large numbers of foreign

tourists will come and view the exhibi-

tion and engage with the messages that

it addresses,” says Murdoch.

To facilitate active engagement, JAG de-

veloped a multi-dimensional education

program for Without Masks that consists

of debates, panel discussions, walkabouts,

seminars, workshops and an interactive

publication that guides the experiences

of young visitors in an entertaining and

informative manner.

Apart from the Without Masks exhibition,

the Johannesburg Art Gallery is running

several other exhibitions to coincide with

the FIFA World Cup.

I am not me, the horse is not mine, by

William Kentridge, is an eight-projection

installation that takes the short story,

The Nose, written by Nikolai Gogolin

1837, as the basis for looking at the formal

inventiveness of the different strains of

Russian modernism. This work, one of

the exhibitions running at JAG, will be

showcased for the first time in Johannes-

burg from 2 May to the 1 August.

Another exhibition that will be running at

the gallery from June to August is Borders,

an exhibition of selected works from the

Barmako Photographic Biennale 2009.

This exhibition explores the natural and

artificial lines traced across the earth.

Kader Attia, Jodi Bieber, Zanele Muholi,

Riason Naidoo and Dinkies Sithole are

some of the artists featured.

Deep play, running from the 6 June to 4

September, by the acclaimed German film-

maker, Harun Farocki, makes use of football

as a metaphor for life. This ‘laboratory of

football’ exhibits the most advanced

Page 27: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

27 >

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Page 28: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

28 >

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Page 29: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

29 >

technology in the production and presen-

tation of moving images.

Over and above these temporary exhibi-

tions, JAG is also showing a small selec-

tion of its most valuable works drawn

from its permanent collection.

INSIGHTS ON JAG

Located on the corner of Klein and King

George Streets in Joubert Park, in the

buzzing central business district of Jo-

hannesburg, JAG is one of the biggest

galleries in Africa and home to some of

the most prized artworks in the world.

The gallery comprises 15 exhibition

halls and sculpture gardens. It houses

a collection of more than 9 000 artworks

(one the largest collections on the Con-

tinent), including 17th century Dutch

and Flemish paintings, 18th and 19th

century British and European art, 19th

century South African works, and a

large collection of 20th century and

contemporary works by local and inter-

national artists. These include works by

Salvador Dali, Alexander Calder, Pablo

Picasso, James Rosenquist, Donald Judd,

Andy Warhol, George Pemba, Gerard

Sekoto, William Kentridge and Diane

Victor, to name just a few. Additionally,

the JAG collection includes a print cabinet

containing more than 3 000 works span-

ning from the 15th century to the present,

including works by Albrecht Dürer,

Rembrandt Van Rijn (43 original etchings),

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Honoré Daumier, Francisco Goya y

Lucientes, James Whistler and Henri

de Toulouse-Lautrec.

Reflecting on the current positioning

of JAG, Murdoch says that apart from

presenting professional exhibitions,

the vision of JAG is to locate its activi-

ties within the area of Joubert Park

and its immediate surroundings.

“In the past, the Gallery has never really

been in touch with its surroundings

and it’s ever-evolving demographics.

For a long time, JAG catered mainly to

the needs of the ‘cultural elite’, most

of whom are white and economically

privileged. Currently, we are seeing a

new demographic emerging which con-

sist of younger black people from the

working class visiting JAG on a regular

basis. For many of them, JAG has become

is a haven of tranquility and intellec-

tual stimulation situated in an area that

can be described as hectic and constant-

ly changing. As a result, we are explor-

ing new ways to accommodate the

expectations of both the new and

younger visitors, as well as those of the

long-standing patrons. Many of the tra-

ditional patrons believe that the Joubert

Park area has become run-down and

unsafe to visit which is an issue that

we have been addressing through our

revised programmes and operational

priorities,” says Murdoch.

Another challenge that that JAG is cur-

rently facing is that a big part of the

building (a listed historical monument)

requires urgent restoration. “Finding

finances to restore the building and to

maintain it is difficult. Our lack of funding

is extremely challenging. Even though

we receive core funding from the City of

Johannesburg to maintain our core ac-

tivities, there is a continual quest for

finding additional funding to maintain

the facility as a world-class cultural insti-

tution. Keeping up with high museum

standards and making sure that the valu-

able artworks that JAG holds are well-kept

costs an enormous amount of money,

and therefore we constantly have to

engage in fundraising activities.”

The limited financial support that JAG

receives from the municipal government

is obviously due to the City government’s

prioritisation of social developmental

requirements such as housing, health

care and education. Yet, there seems

to be lack of political foresight to also

consider substantial investment in cul-

tural development and heritage preser-

vation. “If people wanted to learn more

about their cultural heritage and wanted

to understand it more, they would be

more open to donating sponsorships

and helping the Gallery to achieve its

goals and objectives,” adds Murdoch.

Education itself and within exhibitions is

an integral component of JAG’s activities

and its institutional vision. The JAG René

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team perceives the Gallery as a learn-

ing environment in which curiosity,

discovery and contemplation are

encouraged. JAG aims to provide

all visitors with inspiring and em-

powering experiences through

tours, exhibitions and educational

programmes. “Cultural education

is very important to us. It is important

to teach people that they can come

to the Gallery and enjoy what we

have on offer on many levels. Citi-

zens of Johannesburg, even though

they are living near the Gallery or

have access to it, often don’t both-

er to visit JAG and therefore they

miss out on what we can offer

them. There is an urgent need to

create a culture of art appreciation

in the city, a need to teach our

young people to have a love for

galleries and art, and specifically a

need to foster a love for the Johan-

nesburg Art Gallery.” <

Kader Attia, Rochers Carrés, 2009. © courtesy Kader Attia et galerie Christian Nagel (Berlin & Cologne).

Harun Farocki, Deep Play at DHC ART Montreal. © Richard-Max Tremblay.

William Kentridge, I am not me, the horse is not mine, 2008. Video stills from installation.

33 >

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By Riason Naidoo

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The South African National Gallery’s initial schedule

for 2010 was looking like those of many other art

and cultural institutions: it was about football. We

also received numerous requests to show foreign

artists and exhibitions. With a store of a few thousand

artworks, we cleared the schedule and decided to

use the opportunity of the World Cup to turn the fo-

cus in on ourselves; that is to give visitors to the

National Gallery, both foreign and local, a reflection

of our own art stories.

With a modest budget, made available by revising the

annual budget, we set about conceptualising the

show late last year. The exhibition should acknowl-

edge some important artists and developments in

local art history such as the early articulations of

a modern art movement, DRUM magazine, Polly

Street, Rorkes Drift, Resistance Art under apartheid,

and the rise of South Africa’s energetic contemporary

art scene, the subject of much recent attention

abroad.

The exhibition should also be nationally repre-

sentative, acknowledging works by artists beyond

the Cape, recognising privileged racial access to

art education and training opportunities, and

highlighting different aesthetic value systems.

With this in mind (and with limited time available) Joe

Dolby – curator of works on paper – and I, travelled

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41 >

around the country visiting collections at the begin-

ning of February. We visited the big municipal collec-

tions as well as university, corporate, and some sig-

nificant private collections. We also looked to the

main commercial galleries in Cape Town and Johan-

nesburg for oversights in our contemporary col-

lection.

We scheduled the three major exhibitions, occupying

the 12 gallery rooms, to all close at the end of Feb-

ruary. The gallery closed its doors from 1 March

to 15 April; allowing for the simultaneous de-

installation of all shows, arrival and unpacking of

loans, re-painting of the whole gallery, and the

curation of this extensive exhibition occupying

LEFT: Avant Car Guard, The Poor Man’s Picasso, 2009.

Acrylic on canvas. Private Collection.

CENTRE: Cyril Coetzee (1959 –), Ship of Fools, 1994. Oil on

canvas. Durban Art Gallery.

RIGHT: Dorothy Kay (1886-1964), Annie Mavata, 1956. Oil

on Board. Pretoria Art Museum.

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LEFT: Vedant Nanackchand (1955 –), The Purple Shall Govern, 1991. Screenprint. Iziko South African National Gallery.

RIGHT: View of the 1910-2010: From Pierneef to Gugulective exhibition showing the juxtaposition of narratives. Momberg’s

Maquette for the Gandhi Memorial Statue is featured in the foreground with Pierneef’s Union Buildings behind it.

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44 >

the whole gallery – the first time, I’m told, the whole

gallery has been used for one show – chronologically

and thematically integrating the loans and the

permanent collection.

As we know, art does not exist in isolation so the

intention was to simultaneously reflect on important

moments as well as attitudes of different eras.

Tretchikoff’s figure of the Herb Seller (1948) – the

first time a Tretchikoff has been shown at the National

Gallery – is set against a brick wall plastered with

United Party and National Party election posters.

The emergence of black photographers in DRUM

magazine in the 1950s, documenting first hand

LEFT: Maggie Laubser (1886 – 1973), Portrait of a Woman

in a Pink Blouse, 1936. Oil on cardboard. Sanlam Art

Collection.

CENTRE: Duke Ketye (1943 –) The Plight of Soweto

Platforms. Pastel and Charcoal on paper. Johannesburg

Art Gallery.

RIGHT: Simon Mnguni (1885 - 1956), Portrait of a

Zulu Induna. Watercolour and black ink on paper. The

Campbell Smith Collection.

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45 >

experiences in their communities around the country,

allow for more complex revelations in the representa-

tion of black people than the ethnographic and ‘ob-

jective’, ‘scientific’ studies of the early 20th century.

This is reflected in the humiliating treatment of black

prisoners for trivial offences at the Old Fort prison

in Johannesburg, captured by Bob Gosani (1954),

to GR Naidoo’s festive depiction of a dancing couple

in the musical Mkhumbane in Durban (1960).

Harold Rubin, Gerard Sekoto, Gavin Jantjes and

Harold Strachan offer very different takes on the

Sharpeville massacre; as do the reflections of Colin

Richards, Tyronne Appollis, Paul Stopforth and Derek

Bauer on Steve Biko’s murder.

Archival posters from the Community Arts Project

(CAP), housed the University of Western Cape, pro-

vide context to the activism of the violent 1980s

prior to Mandela’s release. Photography also plays

a very important documentary role at this time as

illustrated by the range from the Afrapix collective.

Jackson Nkumanda’s charming work entitled The

Presidential Inauguration (1994) and Progress

Matubaku’s Something for Growth (1995) share

the same room as Joe Ratcliff’s Vlakplaas (1999)

and works by key artists such as Penny Siopis, Clive

Van den Berg, Johannes Segogela and Noria Mabasa.

While the intention of the show is to also showcase

prominent artists and some iconic works of art in

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46 >

the permanent collection, such as Jane Alexander’s

Butcher Boys (1985/86) and Ronald Harrison’s

controversial work for its time entitled Black Christ

(1962), a work for which he was arrested and tortured

– depicting Albert Luthuli as the Christ figure on

the cross and Hendrik Verwoed as a soldier – many

of the loans are intended to open a window on some

less known artists and pieces. Moses Tladi’s No.1

Crown Mines, was most likely the first time a

black artist exhibited at the National Gallery in a

group show in 1930, the same year the gallery

opened. Jabulani Ntuli’s minutely detailed pencil

drawings from the 1940s, offers remarkable in-

sight into Zulu traditional life and customs of the

period. And Lucas Sithole’s evocative sculpture

entitled Waiting too Long (undated) hauntingly

echoes the pathos of the era.

Recognising the perils of nationalism, and its mani-

festations, the idea was to also be critical of South

Africa in the now. I am reminded of the graffiti paint-

ed on a wall on the corner of Hunter and Cavendish

streets in Yeoville, Johannesburg. It quotes from

Nelson Mandela’s 1994 inauguration speech, “Never,

never and never again shall it be that this beautiful

land will again experience the oppression of one

by another.” Fourteen years later, the xenophobic

attacks left many bodies in its wake and thousands

mentally scarred. With this in mind, a selection

from the exhibition US was included – curated by

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47 >

Bettina Malcomess and Simon Njami – featuring

a handful of mainly young South African artists,

including Gugulective, commenting on the issue

and bringing the making of art in this country full

circle.

At the same time this opportunity to focus on local

art also coincides with a new vision for the National

Gallery, one that aims to be more inclusive in the

audiences we appeal to, more critical in the selec-

tion of our exhibitions and in the work that we

acquire, more diverse in the composition and views

of the people that make up our committees, and

more representative of a multicultural society in

Africa.

LEFT: Helmut Starcke (1935 –), Clio, the Muse of History,

2001. Acrylic. Iziko South African National Gallery.

CENTRE: Derek Bauer (1955 –), Steve Biko – In

Memoriam, 1987. Pen and ink. Iziko South African

National Gallery.

RIGHT: Durant Sihlali (1935 –), Peace Wall, 1993. Oil on

canvas. BHP Billiton.

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TOP LEFT: View of the 1910-2010: From Pierneef to Gugulective

exhibition showing iconic South African sculptures by Anton van

Wouw in the foreground.

TOP RIGHT: Zanele Muholi, Katlego Moshiloane and Nosipho

Lavuta, ext 2, Lakeside, Johannesburg, 2007. Lamda Print. Michael

Stevenson Gallery.

LEFT: Moses Tladi (1897-1959), No.1 Crown Mines, c.1930. Oil on

canvas board. Private collection.

RIGHT: View of the 1910-2010: From Pierneef to Gugulective

exhibition showing Ronald Harrison’s controversial work for its time,

entitled Black Christ (1962).

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Part of this challenge of how to broaden our audi-

ences and invite communities to take ownership

of the National Gallery also relates to our pro-

gramming: the exhibitions and artworks that we

show. Portrait of Ali Bhai (c.1950s) by Ebrahim

Badsha and later works by Faiza Galdhari and

Chris Ledochowski speak of, and to, the local

Muslim communities. The Sun and the Moon (2007),

by First People Pomegranate Quilters from the

[Nieu] Bethesda Community Arts Centre in the Karoo,

strikes up a conversation with Young Women’s

Initiation (1996), a work by San artist Dada

Coex’ae Qgam, and Walter Battiss’s work Beautiful

Bitch Suzie (c.1972). Photographs by Santu Mofokeng

and Guy Tillim, an astonishingly overt painting by

LEFT: Enos Makhubedu (1938 –), African

Herder, 1974. Oil on board. The Campbell

Smith Collection.

RIGHT: Lucas Sithole 91931 – 1994), Bitch

with puppies. Oil and enamel paint on

board. The Campbell Smith Collection.

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Trevor Makhoba and a video piece by Churchill

Madikida open up dialogue on Xhosa and Zulu

initiations, acknowledging indigenous rites and

practices.

There is also no one clear narrative of history. So

juxtapositions, multiple layers and narratives,

and visual connections are the threads of the ex-

hibition. In the introductory room for example, we

have Robert Goodman’s Cape Town City Hall (1917),

Frans Oerder’s Ladies in the Garden (c. 1900) and

Pierneef’s Union Buildings (1938) adjacent to An-

ton Momberg’s Maquette for the Gandhi Memorial

Statue (1992), Willie Bester’s 1913 Land Act (1995)

and superb watercolour portraits by Gerard Bhengu

and Simon Mnguni. At the same time well known

artists like Gavin Younge and Sue Williamson

share limited hanging space with fairly obscure

names like Richard Baholo and Vedant Nanack-

chand. Geometric abstract patterns in Ndebele

beadworks and Zulu earplugs gossip with Kevin

Atkinson’s large abstract, White African Land-

scape (1982). Deborah Bell’s Lover’s in the Cinema

(1985) evocatively articulates a universal theme,

something that we can all identify with. Zanele

Maholi and Pierre Fouche express homosexual

desires with works that are visually echoed by

Tracey Rose’s iconic work, The Kiss (2001).

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Works by Brett Murray (Xhosa, 2002) and Sthembiso

Sibisi (Going Home, 2005) use humour to poign-

antly reflect on the local condition. Stuart Bird’s

tongue-in-cheek Zuma Biscuits (2007) encapsu-

lates the moment preceding the 2008 national

elections, a time of internal power struggles in the

ruling party.

For local art groupies, Ed Young’s Bruce Gordon

[Torino] (2005) may have special significance recall-

ing the conceptual piece from 2003, where a bar

owner (a found object) was purchased by the Nation-

al Gallery and the acquisition number tattooed on

the artwork (or bar owner’s arm). This particular

piece on exhibition is the suit made for the artwork,

which it (he) wore when it was loaned to the Triennale

in Torino. The artwork recalls three weeks of non-stop

parties, alcohol and meeting lots of women.

Of course no art show is ever complete without

audience engagement and the critics’ responses.

Miles Keylock in Cape Town described it as an ex-

hibition built “on relationships, on contrasts and

on ‘coming together, elaborating that its ‘nothing

short of a revolution”. In what may have been a

response to Keylock’s piece, the Art Times head-

lined its front cover with Lloyd Pollock’s review a

little more than a week later entitled “SANG’s repu-

tation trashed for 2010 show” exposing great divides

in Cape Town’s art circles, between the estab-

lished and emerging voices, between the old and

the new and providing a wonderful opportunity

for attention and debate.

Maybe you should check it out for yourself. <

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Riason Naidoo is

curator of the exhibition

1910-2010: From Pierneef

to Gugulective and the

newly appointed director

of the South African

National Gallery.

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art makes a differenceArt breaks rules. It surprises, engages and provokes debate. It makes us think for ourselves. This is what makes art so special, and it’s why we can’t live without it. That’s why we’re proud of our role in supporting artists through the Sasol New Signatures Collection.

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16584 Sasol ArtAD Diary.indd 1 2010/05/07 12:41 PMProcess CyanProcess MagentaProcess YellowProcess Black

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Mary Sibande, The Reign, 2010. Mixed media installation. Dimensions variable.

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Alluding to and embodying two notions, space and pace, the

SPace: Currencies in contemporary African art exhibition

signifies sites or contexts and tempos or energies that

are part of our societal make-up. Space is wherein ideas

are negotiated and meaning produced through various

human activities and social practices, while pace refers

to speed, the rate at which change or advancement of

such activities and practices takes place in society. Cur-

rencies refer not only to movement fluidity or rhythm but

also to currency of an economic nature.

By Stacey Rowan

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SPace: Currencies in contemporary African art, held

at the Museum Africa in Newtown from May to July, is

hosted by the City of Johannesburg, with support from

Operations 2010 offices and the Directorate for Arts,

Culture and Heritage. The exhibition, is one of the many

cultural events held during the month-long FIFA

World Cup, creates a setting where soccer, culture and

the barriers between different groups of people are

explored on various levels.

“Coinciding with the soccer event, the exhibition creates

a wider audience comprising South African and inter-

national art audiences and a wider soccer fan audience,”

says Melissa Mboweni, curator.

“Art should be promoted and should form part of our

world. This is an important opportunity to showcase

African contemporary art to a massive global audience.

SPace shows the City of Johannesburg’s vision. It has

been an amasingly fun journey. This exhibition is some-

thing very special,” says Craig Mark, project director

of SPace.

The curators, Thembinkosi Goniwe and Melissa Mbo-

weni, acknowledge that while the cultural interactions

and interventions alluded to in the exhibition title

are not new to Africa as many dialogues have taken

place in and about the continent. It is their hope that

this exhibition provides the visiting audience with

new opportunities to dialogue with art, and to appre-

ciate and reflect on social issues and human experi-

ences that are irreducible to ideology and instruments

of bondage and misery. The artworks shown in SPace

TOP: Gugulective, sisNtuthu, 2009.

Performance.

CENTRE: Abdul Razaq Awofeso, The Lost Tribe,

2010. Installation. Dimensions variable.

Photograph by John Hodgkiss.

BOTTOM: Billie Zangewa, Troyeville Sundays,

2006. Silk tapestry. 61 x 51 cm.

David Koloane, Flashlights, 2010.

Mixed media on paper. 105 x 107 cm.

Photograph by John Hodgkiss.

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TOP: Gugulective, sisNtuthu, 2009.

Performance.

CENTRE: Abdul Razaq Awofeso, The Lost Tribe,

2010. Installation. Dimensions variable.

Photograph by John Hodgkiss.

BOTTOM: Billie Zangewa, Troyeville Sundays,

2006. Silk tapestry. 61 x 51 cm.

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60 >

also provide moments for engaging with profound human qualities such

as intimacy, beauty and pleasure.

One of the themes represented in the exhibition is play. Just as an art-

ist’s attitude play within his or her artwork, so do the players play in the

sporting game of soccer. “In this exhibition, soccer meets culture in a

sense that the play theme in the artworks is replicated within the play

actions in the game of soccer,” says Mboweni.

Other themes revealed in the exhibition are movement and migration –

the movement from one African city to another African city. “The differ-

ent artworks represent the different cultures within the city and the tran-

sitional movement from one cultural city to another. These cities are

transitional places with constant changes. There is a constant change of

intensity between different cities,” explains Mboweni.

In order to create a narrative-like flow throughout the gallery, the team

had to consider the physical space for the set up of the artwork. The

floor levels, the in-between floor levels and the floor plans all had to be

taken into consideration to create this story-like flow. “The exhibition

seeks to create a narrative, a story. It is about finding your way through

this space at a view.”

Getting the gallery to where it is now in terms of function and appear-

ance, required the construction of new walls, the installation of dry wall-

ing and new lighting, in order to create darker and lighter spaces. “Set-

ting up the gallery was a manic period. We sometimes felt we did not

have enough time, and sometimes artworks would just arrive. However,

we did have our calm moments when everything was set up and lit up.

At those moments we knew we were onto something,” says Mboweni.

To accompany the exhibition, respected writers have written essays, poems

and articles dealing with issues about Africa and the curatorial concept,

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TOP LEFT: Peterson Kamwathi Waweru, Untitled (ECK), 2008 – 2009. Charcoal and pastel on paper. 150 x 240 cm.

TOP RIGHT: Godfried Donkor, Red Madonna with rainbow, 2010. Oil and gold leaf on canvas. 153 x 210 cm.

BOTTOM LEFT: Willem Boshoff, Auxesis, 2009. Plastic ornaments and symbols, glass, wood. 197 x 120 cm.

BOTTOM RIGHT: Avant Car Guard, Resistance Art in South Africa, 2009. Enamel paint, industrial foam, epoxy, bought objects.

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forming a rich, informative and interesting catalogue. The catalogue

includes texts by Simon Njami, Abebe Zegeye, Elvira Dyangani Osse,

Bogani Madondo, Bettina Malcomess, Jimmy Ogonga, and Raphael

Chikukwa.

The exhibition seeks to reflect the ideas, experiences and practices

of the contemporary African artists it showcases, revealing the creative

and intellectual ways in which they engage and reflect on a variety of

personal, social, cultural and political matters. Participating artists

come from various parts of African and include Berni Searle, Willem

Boshoff, Gabrielle Goliath, Mary Sibande, Alison Kearnery, Zen Marie,

Nandipha Mntambo, David Koloane, Berry Bickle, Godfried Donkor,

Barthelemy Toguo, James Muriuki, Arlene Wandera, Nathalie Bikoro,

Miriam Syowia Kyambi, Kudzanai Chiurai, Imad Mansour, Hassan

Echair, Abdul Razaq Awofeso. Mary Sibande, Elias Sime, Dominique

Zinkpe, Peterson Kamwathi Waweru, Steven Bandoma, Billie

Zangewa.

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Included in the exhibition are pieces from the series Dying to be men

by 29 year-old Joburger, Kudzanai Chiurai. Having started painting at

the age of 11, he went on to obtain a BA in Fine Arts from the Univer-

sity of Pretoria and at the young age, his artworks have been shown

locally and internationally.

“It’s great to be a part of this exhibition and it was nice to be invited

to participate with a lot of other interesting artists. When I heard about

the SPace exhibition and the way they used the words ‘space’ and

‘pace’ in the title I knew that my work is linked to the exhibition’s

meaning,” says Chiurai.

He explains that Dying to be men is a contemporary photography series

which mocks and ridicules public figures. In the eight extraordinary

artworks shown in this exhibition, each piece depicts a man wearing

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67 >

over-the-top attire and sporting exaggerated facial expres-

sions. Each image is a representation of a political figure,

each with a masculine and powerful undertone. “The im-

ages are done in a very theatrical way. Some of the images

hold true to reality, they can be seen as reality. Some

people really do see our political figures in this way. The

artworks are futuristic in themselves. One of the images

depicts a teacher with a gun. Will this not be the case in the

future where teachers will need to carry guns because of

the violence in schools?”

Some of the artists in the exhibition that Chiurai admires

include Abdul Razaq Awofeso, who presented an instal-

lation, The Lost Tribe 2010, and Mary Sibande, who pre-

sented a mixed media installation, The Reign 2010.

“The SPace: Currencies in contemporary African art exhi-

bition is of a continental class and has a world class brand.

Audiences will see parts of art they would have never

expected to see. Hopefully the news of the exhibition

will travel, just as our ambition for this event has,” con-

cludes Mboweni. <

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In June, acclaimed South African artist, Robert Slingsby,

exhibited an evocative body of work titled CC – Unlimited

power, at the UCT Irma Stern Museum, in Cape Town.

Two years in the making, it deals with the current and pro-

vocative subject of environmental or ‘green’ consciousness.

This powerful exhibition communicates its point readily.

Using the motor vehicle and bones – representing our carbon

fuelled economy – as icons and painted on massive canvases,

the point is driven home predominantly in the colour red.

Artist’s statement

“Cubic Capacity Credit Crunch Climate Change Christ Consciousness

Credit Card Conspicuous Consumption Carbon Credit Coca Cola

Closed Circuit Cellular Communication Communist China Catholic

Church Child Care Country Club Conscription Campaign Concentra-

tion Camp Cosmic Calamity Colonial Conquest Convicted Criminal

Crime Control Central Control Critical Care Classified Content Cor-

porate Corruption Crack Cocaine Cash Commodity Cloud Cover

Collision Course Computer Crash Carbon Copy Currency Converter

Closed Corporation Company Costs Competition Commission

Calorie Counter, etc.”

“CC – Unlimited power is my response to the credit crunch. It con-

stitutes two years of work and a refinement of how I view the causal

factors. It was through this process that I identified most to have c.c.

as an abbreviation. In conjunction with the cc footprint, characteristic

FAR LEFT: Slingsby conducting a walkabout at the Irma Stern Museum.

Featured is the sculpture, Car-bon(e), 2010. Forged mild steel & stainless steel.

LEFT: Apathy of entitlement, 2010. Acrylic on canvas. 149 x 170 cm.

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Conspicuous consumption, 2009. Acrylic on canvas and crushed glass. 300 x 167 cm.

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Blind rage at Rooiwal. Acrylic on canvas.

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of and underlying all my art, is my passion

for the Richtersveld, its ancient rock art & the

remnants of a genus of humanity that live

there; the fundamental inspiration in my work

for over thirty years,” explains Slingsby.

“I chose to use the motorcar as a powerful

metaphor for the 20th century. It represents

democracy, the open road and freedom whilst

its consequences entail devastating effects

on the earths’ ecosystems, its species and

marginalised people through the consump-

tion of carbon based fossil fuels. This relation-

ship is represented by the Car-bon(e) whilst

the marginalised community of the Richters-

veld demonstrate the impact in a narrative

manner. Concurrently, drawing from the sche-

matic and geometric rock engravings of the

Richtersveld, I have woven this linear abstrac-

tion into the paintings, using objects familiar

and particular to the region.”

“Historically, cathedrals have adorned our

skylines as manifestations of great architec-

ture. This has [recently] been replaced by the

soccer stadium. It is through this observation

that I painted the Green Point stadium, titled

Conspicuous consumption as a representa-

tive of the unlimited power of FIFA and soccer,

thus further representing the cc’s shaping our

lives. The significance of these stadiums on

land which continues to experience the mar-

ginalisation of its most ancient people is

the juxtaposition between car/carbon and

church/stadium.”

Understanding Slingsby

“To understand Robert Slingsby’s exhibi-

tion CC – Unlimited power one does not have

to traverse the desolately beautiful spaces

of the Richtersveld in the Northern Cape.

But being there certainly illuminates and

elucidates the pulling power of the place

where the ancient Nama rock engravings or

petroglyphs provide an indelible reminder

of a once united, spiritually anointed com-

munity. Today, throughout the Richters-

veld, the polarities of ruin and renewal are

present in equal force,” says acclaimed art

critic and author, Hazel Friedman.

Friedman did however take a journey to the

Richtersveld. She says: “I have journeyed to

this parched earth with Slingsby, on one of

his scores of pilgrimages to the jagged lunar-

like landscape that lures him like a ‘rusted

blade to magnetite’. and which serves as

the chief source of his inspiration. The

Garies Orange River snaking through the

Richtersveld and into the pyramidal moun-

tains of Namibia is Slingsby’s River Jordan,

his site of baptism and spiritual crossing. It

is a space where earth, sky and spirit align.

And its kloofs serve as Slingsby’s dictionary,

the rocks as his syntax, while the geometric

signs and symbols engraved into their skins

have become the personal alphabet of his

visual dialect. For over thirty years he has

made it his mission to record and transcribe

the shamanistic markings of the ancient

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TOP: Mechanical factor, 2008. Acrylic on canvas. 210 x 170 cm.

ABOVE: CC Back fire. Acrylic on canvas. 205 x 167 cm.

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Nama community who still inhabit this region.”

“The Southern African tradition of ancient art-

making – whether on cave walls or rocks – has pro-

vided us with a legacy that should be cherished, a

legacy driven as much by an empathy and interac-

tion with the spirit world as with the desire to

manifest and make, literally, their mark,” says

Slingsby.

“A profound humanism informs Slingsby’s work.

He remains committed to the welfare of the prog-

eny of the ancient rock engravers who still inhabit

the region, most of them in abject poverty. The legacy

Slingby wishes to impart is to preserve and celebrate

an ancient art form in danger of extinction, as well

as to assist a community marginalised by the greed

of the multinational gem industry and the vagaries

of apartheid racial politics – the residue of which

remain in the Richetersveld, ” says Friedman.

Drawing on these inspirations Slingsby addresses

critical issues that face all citizens of the world today.

Friedman says: “As a South African artist Slingsby

feels an overwhelming responsibility to understand

the geography, history and alchemy that informs

not only the art of the petroglyphs but all aspects

of Nama culture – both material and spiritual. To

Slingsby, magic still resides in the misshapen

sometimes makeshift relics of this ancient com-

munity.”

Slinsby says: “I have needed to take these discarded

masterpieces, to document them, sleep next to them

and revisit their shamanistic sites.”

In the process, Slingsby has acquired an intimate

and extensive knowledge of the petroglyphs’ geomet-

ric markings. Since the 1980s he has obsessively

incorporated them into his iconography in an effort

to uphold their alchemic properties, pay homage to

their makers and advocate for the restoration of

these ancestral lands into the hands of the Nama,

whose forefathers the Khoisan first inhabited this

part of the world.

”CC – Unlimited power follows this quest,” says

Friedman. “The derivations of the exhibition title

are numerous and unavoidably current within the

lexicon of a world recession, global warming and

the ubiquitous presence of economics-speak: credit

crunch, closed corporations, climate change, carbon

copy, conspicuous consumption; continuity check,

credit card, cubic capacity, critical condition...the

list continues.”

“And indeed Slingsby’s iconography, although

rooted in the petroglyphs produced by the ancient

Nama, is utterly contemporary in its literal and semio-

logical referencing. CC – Unlimited power, like his

previous exhibitions, evokes the sense both of an

archaeological and burial site, where the residue

– bones, stones and skeletons – of an ancient com-

munity are constantly being unearthed. Simulta-

neously it serves as the locus for a convergence

between the past present and future. The past is

evoked through Slingsby’s arduous documentation

of the Richtersveld’s neglected history in works

such as Blind Rage at Rooiwal; the present through

the grandiosity of 2010 soccer stadiums, as evoked

through Conspicuous Consumption; and the future

through his depiction of carbon footprint-free

modes of transport and alternative energy sources

in Give a dog a bone.”

”CC – Unlimited power is a huge show in scale

and ambition, rendered in his characteristically

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Butter side up, 2008. Acrylic on canvas. 200 x 120 cm.

In ten minutes, 2008. Acrylic on canvas. 200 x 120 cm.

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Give a dog a bone, 2009. Acrylic on canvas. 205 x 167 cm.

psychedelic palette with meticulous detail to minutia.

And it speaks as eloquently of a planet irreparably

compromised by gluttonous consumption, as it does

about an ancient community displaced and dissipat-

ed by multinational avarice and political indiffer-

ence,” concludes Friedman. <

Sources: Artist’s statement by Robert Slingsby and the exhibi-

tion catalogue, Of consumption and consequence by Hazel

Friedman.

The Midas touch, part of the Official Art Poster Edition 2010

FIFA World Cup South Africa™. 70 x 100 cm.

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ABOVE: Zwelethu Mthethwa, Untitled (from the Sugar Cane Series), 2003. Chromogenic print.

TOP RIGHT: Zwelethu Mthethwa, Untitled (from the Interiors Series), 1995 – 2005. Chromogenic print.

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By Suné Stassen

Storytelling is part of the African psyche and

mode of existence. In this article we get a glimpse

into the life and extraordinary work of acclaimed

South African socio-historical photographer and

fine artist of note, Zwelethu Mthethwa. His work

has received critical international acclaim and

his fine art portraiture is of substantial socio-

historical value.

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Having had a pretty normal childhood – spend-

ing his early life in KwaZulu Natal – Zwelethu

Mthethwa started going to the movies every

Saturday from the age of six. He recollects:

“When I grew up, we didn’t have real cinemas.

We had a hall. Our neighbour had a projector

and he was the projectionist. The hall had very

high windows and my dad had a very high lad-

der, so the neighbour would borrow the ladder

from my dad every Saturday to block the win-

dows so that light didn’t pour into the room.

Because of that I could go in and out for free,

so that’s how it started.”

This was about the same time that he also de-

veloped a fascination with comic books and

illustration. Already projecting the characteris-

tics of a young entrepreneur with an intense

intrigue into the world of photography, he

bought himself a Kodak Instamatic camera at

the age of 12 and started taking portraits of

people in the neighbourhood. He would later

Zwelethu Mthethwa, Untitled (from the Interiors Series), 1995 – 2005. Chromogenic print.

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sell these to the sitters for extra pocket money.

At age 15, he was given a Yashica medium-format

camera, which further fueled his desire to take

more and more pictures.

He always aspired to study Fine Arts at the Uni-

versity of Cape Town (UCT) but the realities of

South Africa in the 70s and 80s provided him

with limited opportunities. With the apartheid

system in full force, Mthethwa needed special

permission to attend UCT.

In 1987, he was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship

and was fortunate to expand on his education

while attending the Rochester Institute of Tech-

nology in the United States where he obtained

a Masters in Imaging Arts.

After his participation in the second Johannes-

burg Biennale, curated by Okwui Enwezor, he

was invited to partake in many more biennales,

which firmly introduced Mthethwa to the world

stage.

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CONTEXT

Enwezor writes in his prologue of the mono-

graph, Zwelethu Mthethwa (published by the

Aperture Foundation, New York, 2010), that

“South Africa’s often-told story is always framed

by the experience of apartheid.” Mthethwa ex-

plains that “traces of apartheid are still surfacing

in my work simply because democracy is a com-

plex process with no definite endpoint, the real

meaning of which is continually being negoti-

ated between the past, the present and the

future. It’s impossible to eradicate the deep-

seated imbalances of the past within such a

short space of time…our first democratic election

was only in 1994.”

Mthethwa gives us an interesting take on the

history of South African photography, espe-

cially if one takes black and white photography

and places it in the midst of apartheid where

black people were the washed out subjects of

their own dompas (permit/ID document).

Mthethwa explains, “…the photographs were

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highly underexposed and they used strong

flash bulbs that deleted all the details that we

[blacks] have on our faces. You were just left

with the nose, eyes and the mouth. And most

of the eyes would be shut because of the

strong light. So, those pictures were ethno-

graphic in a sense because it was the only

record that you had. You had to have a permit

or ‘dompas’ to exist in a specific zone. This was

your passport to the city, nothing more. For

most, this was the only photo they would ever

see of themselves and that was the nature of

black and white photography during the 70s

and 80s.”

Mthethwa believes that documentary photog-

raphy at this time failed to give the subjects –

specifically blacks – any kind of voice and hu-

manity. Early photojournalists mostly used

black and white photography as their preferred

medium. They often depicted their sitters with-

in the context of poverty and such photographs

were frequently used for propaganda.

FAR LEFT: Zwelethu Mthethwa,

Untitled (from the Coal Miners

Series), 2008. Chromogenic print.

LEFT: Zwelethu Mthethwa, Untitled

(from the Sugar Cane Series), 2003.

Chromogenic print.

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In hindsight, Mthethwa made a conscious decision

to focus on colour photography as his preferred

medium. He says, “It is so easy to make poverty

beautiful. It is so easy to idealise things.”

In certain situations black and white photogra-

phy exaggerates the reality of an impoverished

background. In anthropology this is traditionally

the preferred medium which obviously also de-

nies the sitter being placed in a modern context.

Mthethwa believes that through the introduc-

tion of colour, one can justify the now and give

the subject matter worth within a contemporary

context. For him, colour photography also adds

a different aesthetic language because it pro-

vides a tactile quality and an emotional com-

plexity.

Another aspect that characterises Mthethwa’s

work is scale. The typical format for documen-

tary photography is 8x10 inches, yet he is

known for his large-format photographs, some

of which are about 6x4 feet and this poses a

new challenge to the viewer. It is impossible to

ABOVE: Zwelethu Mthethwa, Untitled (from the Common

Ground Series), 2008. Chromogenic print.

RIGHT: Zwelethu Mthethwa, Untitled (from the Interiors

Series), 1995 – 2005. Chromogenic print.

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ignore the gaze of a subject at such a scale and

Mthethwa therefore ensures that his subjects

transform into more than just passive images.

They become more interactive experiences

with a definite two-way conversation between

subject and viewer. The scale emphasises inti-

mate details that cannot otherwise be ob-

served in a book, for instance. On this large

scale the image has to be mounted on a wall,

which results in the viewer being physically

pulled into the picture plane, moving backwards

and forwards while engaging with the image.

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ENGAGEMENT

Mthethwa always first asks permission before

engaging in conversation with prospective sitters.

He gives them the opportunity to suggest how

they would like to be presented, which could in-

clude their dress, the setting and backdrop and

even the pose. In some cases they choose their

church uniforms while others choose their

‘Sunday best’. Some even ask Mthethwa to return

a bit later so that they can have time to wash up

before the photographs are taken. This is a very

engaging way to include the sitter in the crea-

tive process and, at the same time, give them

a voice.

One can thus suggest that Mthethwa’s work

empowers his subjects and gives them a sense

of ownership over their own images. He fur-

thermore enhances their relationship through

handing them countless photographs so that

they can see how they are depicted. This develops

a strong collaborative bond and trust between

the subject and the photographer, resulting in

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87 >

the photographs portraying the sitter’s humility

and story more than that of the photographer’s

interpretation.

Looking closely at Mthethwa’s photographic

projects over the years, the settings become

important semiotic references. He would

choose locations that portray a vast variety of

informal settings and follow the same process

of engagement with stakeholders as he would

engage with sitters. For instance, for the series

he did of mineworkers, he first approached the

mining companies to ask permission to photo-

graph their staff. Once he had been given permis-

sion, the relationship building became more of

a reality because he wasn’t invading their pri-

vate space and was always accompanied by a

mining representative. It was therefore seen as

a more ‘official act’. With the series focusing on

sugar cane labourers set in the rolling hills of

KwaZulu-Natal, Mthethwa first met with the farm

owners to explain his intentions before com-

mencing with the project. Then the usual process

with the individuals unfolded.

LEFT: Zwelethu Mthethwa, Untitled (from the

Churches Series), 2006. Chromogenic print.

ABOVE: Zwelethu Mthethwa, Untitled

(from the Interiors Series), 1995 – 2005.

Chromogenic print.

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PORTRAYING POVERTY

Much of Mthethwa’s work focuses on the eco-

nomically less-privileged echelons of society

such as migrant labourers and the poor living

in rural and informal urban settlements. On the

point of ‘beautifying poverty’, Bronwyn Law-

Viljoen’s review of Mthethwa’s 2004 exhibition,

Sugar Cane Series at Jack Shainman in New

York, provides an interesting look at the way

that he negotiates these kinds of issues. “With

this series Mthethwa interrupts work quite lit-

erally, taking up time. These men are caught in

their working garb, between lines of sugarcane,

against the backdrop of the rolling hills of

northern KwaZulu Natal. They had no time to

negotiate appointments or to dress up for pho-

tographs.”

“But Mthethwa tells me, this series also had

very little to do with the dignity of the working

class. Here is an interruption that is both spa-

tial and conceptual, acquiesced to the photog-

rapher who has seen the barrier of cane

against the landscape, and the man whose

glowering expression cuts off any sentimental

attachment to the natural environment,” says

Law-Viljoen.

ABOVE: Zwelethu Mthethwa, Untitled (from the Quartz Miners Series), 2008. Chromogenic print.

RIGHT: Zwelethu Mthethwa, Untitled (from the Sugar Cane Series), 2003. Chromogenic print.

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With the chosen title, Interrupting Mythologies,

Mthethwa never shows us the sugarcane men

at work. He purposely put a halt to the swing

of the machete, almost to suggest a break in

history and the mythologies of these rolling

hills and harsh realities of the sugarcane fields.

During the process Mthethwa was surprised to

find that being a ‘black photographer’, and be-

ing from the same background of KwaZulu-Natal,

did not put him on an equal playing field, and

the men quickly made their class and econom-

ic differences evident, which quickly shifted

the political and social grounds of the issues.

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NEW WORK: Is it our goal …? and other related issues

In his most recent exhibition, Is it our goal …?

and other related issues at CIRCA on Jellicoe,

Johannesburg, which ran 3 to 30 Jun 2010,

Mthethwa not only exhibited photographs but

also a captivating collection of intimate pastel

drawings.

In her preamble to the exhibition’s catalogues,

Alexandra Dodd quotes Chinua Achebe, a long-

time supporter of Mthethwa’s work: “The great

thing about being human is our ability to face

adversity down by refusing to be defined by it,

refusing to be no more than its agent or its vic-

tims ... I could have dwelt on the harsh humili-

ations of colonial rule or the more dramatic

protests against it. But I am also fascinated by

that middle ground … where the human spirit

resists an abridgment of its humanity.”

Achebe’s statement contextualises this exhibi-

tion by highlighting the acknowledgement that

the artist takes the middle ground in engaging

with complex socio-economic issues and the

periphery of society by not idealising these –

he remains objective rather than becoming a

RIGHT: Zwelethu Mthethwa,

The Family’s prized

possession, 2009. Pastel on

cotton paper. 107 x 210 cm.

FAR RIGHT: Zwelethu

Mthethwa, Begging for

more, 2010. Pastel on cotton

paper. 107 x 156 cm.

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commentator. And that is exactly the essence

of Mthethwa’s impressive oeuvre: he documents

rather than critiques. His work provides an

honest reflection of reality, which leaves view-

ers to interpret at their own peril and context,

and the artist only being a mediator, rather

than a dictator of interpretation.

Dodd writes in the exhibition’s catalogue that

as a young boy growing up in Umlazi on the

undulating hilly outskirts of Durban, Mthethwa

remembers: “guys coming from the hostels

into the township. They looked very different;

more traditional and rural…And they sang

songs which were weird to me; traditional

songs I wasn’t really familiar with. They danced

differently, they spoke a different dialect and

they always travelled in a group, so the dogs

would bark when they passed by, creating a

spectacle. As kids we were drawn to that noise,

so we’d go there and check them out. Even as

a kid, I was attracted to that idea of ‘us and

them’. It’s the same thing with the culture at

the outskirts of the city today.” He continues:

“People come looking for jobs mainly, but city

people always look at them with suspicion and

say they’re different to us.” Mthethwa remains

drawn to outsider communities, fascinated by

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the dissonance between people’s damning pre-

conceptions and the realities of life within these

communities.

“The assumption about people who live in in-

formal settlements is that they are dirty, that

there’s a large criminal element there, but

when you get there, you find that people don’t

match up to your initial suspicions. Once you

step inside, their houses look spectacular –

they might be poor, but that doesn’t mean that

they are not house-proud. I try to focus on the

elements that are positive. It’s about looking at

poverty very carefully and trying to avoid mak-

ing sweeping statements.”

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Dodd continues: “As an African documenting

the world in which he is intensely absorbed,

Mthethwa’s images are not about disorder,

plague, collapse, war or desperation. Never ig-

noring the landscape and environment, he

documents domestic life and the harsh reali-

ties of labour, keying into the rhythms of mod-

ern South African life and the lives of those in

our neighbouring states connected to this coun-

try via the currents of labour and migrancy that

flow across our increasingly fluid borders. His

images of families, relationships and people in-

teracting with their environments document

both urban and rural realities, capturing a range

of different aspects of life in South Africa.”

“His work addresses the economic and political

realities of present-day South Africa in a manner

that does not conceal the hardships of working-

class life, but also infuses one with a sense of

the almost zany hopefulness of a new nation in

a phase of rapid growth and metamorphosis. In

this sense, his works militate against what cura-

tor Okwui Enwezor refers to as ‘Afropessimism’,

grappling instead with the compelling imme-

diacies of post-apartheid life in South Africa.”

FAR LEFT: Zwelethu Mthethwa,

MaDlamini out bound to the Meat

Market, 2010. Pastel on cotton

paper. 107 x 150 cm.

TOP LEFT: Zwelethu Mthethwa, The

Couple in the Next Room, 2009.

Pastel on cotton paper. 107 x 150 cm.

LEFT: Zwelethu Mthethwa, Born

Free, 2010. Pastel on cotton paper.

107 x 155 cm.

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94 >

FINAL WORDS

Contemplating on contemporary photography

in South Africa Mthethwa says: “The onus is

on artists to be honest and to do their research

thoroughly. To do the right thing would be to

be sensitive and understand the context that

our communities have developed from. This, I

believe, is the case with any country in the

world.” He concludes: “I see a fascinating rela-

tionship between Africa and the West, with

similarities in terms of how new communities

are formed and the relationship between the

rural and the urban. Out of this, there are many

stories that still need to be told to the world.” <

Zwelethu Mthethwa, Red Wall, 2009. Pastel on cotton paper. 108 x 180 cm.

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portfolio: www.kevinshenton.com

Art Books and Exhibition CataloguesDesign and Production

083 777 5865

Hermanus, South Africae-mail: [email protected]: 0828502053

Atelier Titia Ballot Drawings and hand printed etchings on archival paper

Page 96: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

By Stacey Rowan

96 >

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Art, as a vehicle for the expression of emotions, senses and ideas,

seeks to not only evoke discussion and debate, but also dialogue

– dialogue between artworks and dialogue between artworks and

viewers. At the Arnaldo Pomodoro & Edoardo Villa: A sculptural Dialogue exhibition, a dialogue initially develops on a surface

level as a result of the many stylistic similarities and parallels

which can be drawn between Pomodoro and Villa’s work, but the

dialogue intensifies as the subtext is revealed and a ‘confrontation’

occurs when viewers approach the substantive core underlying

these powerful and imposing structures.

The NIROX Foundation in association with the Embassy of Italy

and the SMAC Gallery presents this sculptural dialogue, which runs

from 5 June to 31 July 2010 at the NIROX Sculpture Park in the Cradle

of Humankind World Heritage Site, Gauteng. “Arnaldo Pomodoro

and Edoardo Villa are two of Italy and South Africa’s most impor-

tant living sculptors. The opportunity to showcase a limited selec-

tion of major sculptures by these artists on the occasion of the

2010 World Cup in South Africa is significant,” says Baylon Sandri,

curator.

Both Italian born artists represent an era of Modernist and abstract

sculpture, symbolic of rapid Post-War industrialisation. The sculp-

tures of Pomodoro can be seen all over Milan and the same ap-

plies to Villa and his artworks in Johannesburg. “Their imposing

steel and bronze sculptures have, unintentionally, become monu-

ments to capitalism and industry, generally and within their current

home towns. Ironically, the appropriation of their art as a physical

manifestation of the industrial-capitalist ideal, contradicts the

philosophy underpinning the work of both artists.”

84-year-old Arnaldo Pomodoro is known for his large bronze

spheres (or spheres within spheres), treated and polished to have

a distinctly gold appearance. “These globes are cracked-open or

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98 >

dissected to reveal a complex inner core or layers upon layers of

cores. Pomodoro’s sculptures draw on Spatialist theories, where

the artwork reveals real concepts of space and time. Therefore,

despite its large physical weight and presence, the work is not

constrained by the vessel in which it is contained – it is a gateway

to worlds within worlds, to space and time. Pomodoro’s spheres

are smooth, polished and perfect on the exterior, but beneath we

find a myriad of shapes and machine-like components, inter-

twined and inter-dependent cogs, gears and toothed pulleys

which grind, pound and wrench. The metaphorical significance of

these sculptures can be analysed ad infinitum, but one aspect of

these works should be glaringly apparent, namely: Pomodoro’s

undisguised and scathing criticism of greed, capitalism, industri-

alisation, mechanisation and exploitation of the planet, among

other issues.”

In Memory of JF Kennedy (1963-1964), a large sculpture on view

at NIROX, was inspired by the trauma experienced first hand by

Pomodoro, by the assassination of John F. Kennedy. This historic

moment represents a violent tremor and an abrupt end to the elevated

ideals and aspirations of his generation. Doppia Porta (1979) is

another well-known work on view at NIROX. “It is a door with two

sides standing in an open area representing portals to unseen

space or dimensions, or in this context – as double-sided barriers

to free space. These are two major and historically important

sculptures, which were specifically selected by Arnaldo Pomodoro

for this occasion,” says Sandri. With this exhibition being the first

time that Pomodoro has ever exhibited in South Africa, this occa-

sion is a rare opportunity for locals and international visitors alike,

to view his masterpieces.

Born in Italy and trained as a sculptor, 94-year-old Villa came to

South Africa as a prisoner of war and has remained in his adopted

country, where he still lives and works. According to Sandri, Villa’s

arguably most important sculpture was produced in 1978, entitled

Page 99: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

99 >

Edoardo Villa, Untitled, 1990. Bronze. 116cm.

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100 >

Arnaldo Pomodoro, Untitled (left) and In Memory of JFK (right), 1963-64, Bronze.

Page 101: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

The Confrontation. “This large public sculpture marked a con-

scious stylistic change from the use of smooth, rounded, tubular

shapes to an aggressive, jagged, coarse, rusted vertical assembly

of figures. Here, Villa addressed head-on the anguish and tension

which had become pervasive in South Africa during the late

1970s, with the exemplification by the Soweto riots of 1978. Villa’s

Confrontation demonstrates how the raw material of steel can ex-

press deep-seated angst and distress and convey profound social

and political messages. The medium becomes integral to the mes-

sage, enhancing it and giving it dimension. Herein lies the impact

of the sculptures by both artists, where the viewer is confronted

by the raw power of emotion and meaning contained in these un-

compromising, immovable vessels,” says Sandri.

Pomodoro, through his previous regular visits to South Africa, has

developed a genuine affinity with the country. Sandri continues:

“He recognises South Africa’s role as an example of change and

tolerance and therefore wishes to ‘leave his mark’ on South Afri-

can soil, having considered this an important part of his legacy

and philosophy. He chose his artworks for this occasion due to

their universality but also their specific historical and political

connection to the upheaval in the USA during the 1960s civil

rights era and therefore their relevance and connection to South

Africa. Pomodoro was introduced to the works of Villa, where he

became fascinated by his story and his art. He had no hesitation

to the idea of placing his work in conversation with that of Edoar-

do Villa and appreciated the complexities that such a dialogue

would explore and unveil.”

In 1964, Villa was exposed to the work of Pomodoro. The exact

extent of Pomodoro’s influence, if any, on Villa, is difficult to gauge

but during the late 50s and early 60s, Villa made a considerable

effort to travel to Europe and counted numerous sculptors of this

era, including Pomodoro, as having made an impact on him.

101 >

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“The use of metal as primary media in the construction of their art

cannot be over-emphasised. Pomodoro’s highly reflective pol-

ished bronze surfaces have the appearance of gold. Villa’s choice

of steel and bronze is not coincidental, but as a direct conse-

quence of the abundant mineral and industrial resources of his

adopted country. South Africa’s economic strength and develop-

ment is driven by its rich mineral wealth. Mining is the lifeblood

of the country and Johannesburg is the ‘City of Gold’. The origin

of the source material is an integral element in the process of

both artists and the impact of their sculptures inevitably depends

and draws on the sheer weight and strength of the material used,”

explains Sandri.

The exhibition is located in the perfect setting: The Cradle of Hu-

mankind literally becomes a crib where these transformed,

moulded steel and metal creations are returned to Mother Earth,

to Africa – their origin. According to Sandri, the artists’ hard, cold

and uncompromising symbols of the urban, concrete and steel

environment, which man has created on the back of extracting the

natural and mineral riches contained deep within the earth’s core,

are transfixed, transplanted and displaced. They are returned to

a place which represents the origins of our species.

Being strongly influenced by Modernism, Abstraction and other

Post-War movements, Villa spent his entire artistic career living

and working in Africa. The strong African spirit contained in Villa’s

work is undeniable. It is an intangible which makes his art so fas-

cinating. This intangible energy enhances the ‘confrontation’ be-

tween Villa and Pomodoro.

“In this relatively small and limited exhibition of a carefully se-

lected body of work, we are literally overwhelmed by the genius

of two great masters. The conversation engages on so many levels,

that numerous visits will not suffice,” concludes Sandri. <

102 >

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104 >

View

s of

the

Ever

ard

Read

Gal

lery

’s A

Vie

w fr

om th

e So

uth

exhi

biti

on.

Page 105: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

105 >

Foreigners often view African through the tainted

lenses of its colonial past, poverty, underdevelop-

ment, civil strife, corruption, famine, disease and

things negative. Yet, in June-July 2010 South Africa

had an exceptional opportunity to change interna-

tional perceptions when the country hosted the

FIFA World Cup. In a grand display of contradiction,

the country not only hosted one of the best ever

organised World Cup events, but also utilised the

opportunity to showcase the rich diversity and

depth of creative talent that the continent has

produced.

One such showcase was the A View from the

South exhibition, which ran from 3 to 30 June at

the Everard Read Gallery in Johannesburg. A View

from the South contextualised the African experi-

ence through South African eyes. It was through

By Stacey Rowan

Page 106: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

106 >

these home-grown artist’s views of their South,

that pessimistic international lenses and obscure

outlooks were changed to view South Africa and

Africa as it truly is today.

According to Gina Mollé, curator, the chosen exhibi-

tion title, A View from the South, “…simply indicates

the various artists’ outlooks on South Africa.”

The exhibition boasted a collection of the finest

South African art spanning many generations, old

and contemporary, and a mixture of sculptures,

paintings and prints. Some of the artists included

old masters such as J.H. Pierneef, Anton van Wouw,

Gegoire Boonzaire and contemporary artists such

as John Meyer, Neil Rodger, Walter Meyer, Simon

Stone, Leigh Voigt and Vusi Khumalo, among oth-

ers. A common thread that bonded the exhibition’s

theme was the artists’ deep connections with South

Africa and the African soil, through which they dis-

played their unique stories and symbolic meanings.

Page 107: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

107 >

FAR

LEF

T: G

rego

ire

Joha

nnes

Boo

nzai

er (1

909–

2005

), S

tree

t Sce

ne w

ith F

igur

es. O

il on

can

vas,

78

x 98

cm

.

CEN

TRE:

Edo

ardo

Vill

a (1

915–

), T

he F

rien

ds (S

tand

ing

Figu

re X

III Y

ello

w, S

tand

ing

Figu

re X

II B

lue)

. Ste

el a

nd p

aint

, 238

x 5

0 x

55 c

m.

CEN

TRE:

Nei

l Rod

ger (

1941

–), Y

okoh

ama

Roos

ter.

Oil

on c

anva

s, 9

0 x

90 c

m.

RIG

HT:

Ang

us T

aylo

r (19

70–)

, Bei

ng, T

hink

ing,

201

0. C

ast b

ronz

e an

d B

elfa

st g

rani

te. 2

50 x

180

x 4

0 cm

.

RIG

HT:

Bru

ce B

ackh

ouse

(195

0–),

Imag

inar

y Ka

roo

No

3. O

il on

can

vas.

76

x 76

cm

.

Page 108: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

108 >

LEFT

: Ant

on v

an W

ouw

(186

2–19

45),

The

Bus

hman

Hun

ter,

1902

. Ita

lian

cast

. 49

cm (h

eigh

t).

LEFT

: Vel

aphi

Mzi

mba

(195

9–),

Nom

phum

elel

o, 2

010.

Acr

ylic

on

canv

as. 1

25 x

125

cm

.

CEN

TRE:

Kei

th Jo

uber

t (19

48–)

, Bic

orni

s. O

il on

can

vas.

43

x 63

cm

.

CEN

TRE:

Bee

zy B

aile

y (1

962–

), C

low

ns g

oing

to C

hurc

h. O

il on

can

vas.

170

x 9

0 cm

.

RIG

HT:

Bri

an B

rads

haw

(192

3–),

Bur

nt M

ount

ain,

Nam

ib. O

il on

can

vas.

90

x 15

0 cm

.

RIG

HT:

Vus

i Khu

mal

o (1

951–

) Em

khum

bane

, 200

7/20

08, M

ixed

med

ia o

n bo

ard.

200

x 2

10 c

m,

Page 109: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

109 >

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110 >

Contemplating on her favourite artworks in the

exhibition, Mollé says: “There are so many pieces

that I just absolutely love. If I really had to choose,

I would be severely torn between the Angus Taylor

sculptures and the Phillimon Hlungwane etchings.

I would also never say no to a top Pierneef.”

Much of the exhibition’s artworks portray the mes-

sage that South African art is alive with talent today.

“There are artists doing incredible and interesting

things. Even though the contemporary art scene

is so exciting, we also exhibit some historical

work to represent what the art in this country has

evolved from,” said Mollé. Another aspect that

characterised this collection was its significance.

According to Mollé, the curators selected artists

whom they thought were important to showcase

and signify the variety of different work that has

emerged in South Africa over the years. “We truly

attempted to give an overall impression of what

has been done in South Africa, and what is in the

process of happening now.”

Looking closely at the different artworks included

in the exhibition, it is evident that no one particular

theme dominanted the collection. The South African

context in which the pieces were embedded, to-

gether with the individual African stories that they

tell, became more important than their themed

references.

Page 111: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

111 >

LEFT

: Nei

l Rod

ger (

1941

–), S

eate

d w

oman

look

ing

at th

e se

a. O

il on

can

vas.

90

x 90

cm

.

LEFT

: Sip

ho N

dlov

u (1

968–

), P

ullin

g Sl

ash

II. O

il on

can

vas,

78

x 11

8 cm

.

RIG

HT:

Phi

llim

on H

lung

wan

e (1

975–

), K

uver

enga

Him

atim

ba S

wah

aker

isa

II, 2

009.

Etc

hing

2/2

0. 8

8 x

121

cm.

RIG

HT:

Sim

on S

tone

(195

2–),

Lee

u G

amka

. Oil

on c

anva

s. 1

17 x

92

cm.

Page 112: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

112 >

“There is no central theme aside from the fact

that all the artists are South African. There are a

variety of different artworks which show the diver-

sity and multiplicity of styles, themes and mediums

in which South Africans work” said Mollé.

The Everard Read Gallery took an innovative ap-

proach to its education program for the exhibition

and Mollé says that “We have sent invitations for

the exhibition to many schools and we usually get

a very enthusiastic response yielding troops of

art classes marching through with great fever.

The response to this exhibition was overwhelm-

ing and we saw hoards of local and international

visitors attending.” <

John Meyer (1942–)

Voices on The Wind (detail), 2009

Mixed media on canvas, 170 x 230 cm

Page 113: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

17905_BG_Forethought_A4_v1.indd 1 27/05/2010 12:14

Page 114: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

LEFT: Francois Jonker, Cains Conquest.RIGHT: Carla Crafford, Combo A$.

114 >

“The forgotten never simply disappears but eternally returns to haunt the present and disrupt presence.” – Mark C Taylor, Disfiguring: Art, architecture, religion. 1992.

Page 115: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

115 >

“The forgotten never simply disappears but eternally returns to haunt the present and disrupt presence.” – Mark C Taylor, Disfiguring: Art, architecture, religion. 1992.

Page 116: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

On two different occasions in 2009, art-

ists Carla Crafford and Francois Jonker had

the opportunity to travel to Paris for two-

month-long sojourns at the Cité Interna-

tionale des Arts. Both stayed at what is

known as Atelier 1731. Their experiences

resulted in a collaborative exhibition titled

Atelier 1731, which is running at the UP

Visual Arts Incubator based at the Van

Wouw House, Pretoria.

The Cité Internationale des Arts is intend-

ed to provide a sojourn of limited duration

to professional artists who wish to develop

their artistic skills in France. The site,

located at 18 rue de l’Hôtel de Ville, in-

cludes 270 atelier apartments in the

heart of the Marais district, which is a

dynamic quarter of the city swarming with

art galleries and a favourite destination

for Parisians and foreign visitors. Since its

opening in 1965, the Cité Internationale

des Arts has accommodated more than

18 000 artists from all over the world.

In the early 1980s, the South African Nation-

al Association for the Visual Arts (SANAVA)

acquired three atelier apartments. These

assets are held in trust in terms of an

Occupational Rights Agreement by the

SANAVA Cité des Arts Trust, valid until

22 March 2060. According to SANAVA,

the apartments create golden opportu-

nities for those who had already shown

proof of their artistic merit to spend

some time in Paris, to enrich their lives

while living and working in a world me-

tropolis, known for its cultural richness,

and to experience the cultures of, and inter-

act with artists from all over the world.

With the Atelier 1731 exhibition, Crafford

and Jonker share with viewers the mem-

ories of their individual sojourns, con-

sidering also what preceded and ensued

from their diverse and common experi-

ences. Crafford and Jonker come from very

different generations: Crafford completed

her Fine Arts studies more than 30 years

ago while Jonker graduated in 2009.

Crafford works mostly with photography

and particularly with other artists and

visual re-interpretations of their artwork

as her inspiration. While photographs are

often considered as visual documents of

places, people and objects of a particular

time, Crafford prefers to see photographs

as artworks in their own right.

For a long time she has been grappling

with the question: Is this or that picture

an example of ‘visual documentation’ or

are they ‘artworks’ in their own right?

She ponders that the difference cannot

always be determined with clarity, but in

her own work, she relies primarily on the

intention of the artist/photographer. It

thus becomes a two-way collaboration.

Crafford says: “What is clear though, is

that any sighted person has personal

116 >

Page 117: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

TOP

LEFT

: Car

la C

raff

ord,

Dub

bel D

iane

Kle

ur.

BO

TTO

M L

EFT:

Car

la C

raff

ord,

Vic

tor K

leur

.TO

P R

IGH

T: C

arla

Cra

ffor

d, A

rtis

t’s w

ork

and

tool

s.B

OTT

OM

RIG

HT:

Car

la C

raff

ord,

For

the

sake

of a

rt.

117 >

Page 118: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

LEFT

: Car

la C

raff

ord,

Cité

Dan

se.

TOP

RIG

HT:

Car

la C

raff

ord,

Mys

tére

dan

s le

s ja

rdin

s de

Ver

saile

s.CE

NTR

E R

IGH

T: C

arla

Cra

ffor

d, C

urt V

osge

s.B

OTT

OM

RIG

HT:

Car

la C

raff

ord,

Cité

Nei

ghbo

rs.

118 >

Page 119: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

visual memories. Yet, those memories

fade with time – almost as if the mind

itself interferes with them, to become a

pollutant of our ‘seen recollections’. So,

one’s visual memory disintegrates, mak-

ing it difficult to recall events and appear-

ances. More often than not, photographs

are looked at as aide-mémoires: Those

images that make us travel back a little,

so that we can better recall what we may

have forgotten.”

“Similarly clear is that no person other

than the photographer will have the same

reaction to an image as the photographer

had when the scene had been captured in

the first instance; then perhaps re-worked

and shown in a specific collection or cir-

cumstance. Still, for any artist to put work

on exhibition, one assumes that the artist

wishes to make his or her recollection

known to some extent.”

“Whereas it is possible to photograph

one’s head, pointing the camera to one’s

mind to photograph a memory or mental

image is out of the question. The camera’s

functions are limited to what is visible

– it cannot think, feel or make any judge-

ment. On the other hand, it is almost im-

possible to give shape or substance to a

mental image – especially one that does

not exist in the otherwise visible world. In

fact, should one imagine a previously

unseen image, then set up that scene to

be photographed, the mental image will

no longer be recallable once a tangible

photograph exists,” explains Crafford.

“After 30 of years of practicing my art I

am less concerned about the purity of

technique and more interested in the

aesthetics of the end result. Therefore I

‘cheat’ a lot.” With ‘cheating’, Crafford

alludes to her various techniques of ma-

nipulating images in her photographic

darkroom as well as recomposing im-

ages in collages as shown in the Atelier

1731 exhibition.

DESIGN>ART interviewed Crafford one

day before the opening of the exhibition

when she was still calmly working on

some of the artworks. This was not a

last-minute rush to complete works for

the opening, but rather part of the theme

and process that brought about Atelier

1731.

This exhibition is an installation of mem-

ories and therefore a work in progress. The

theme and space required her to continue

the story of how Atelier 1731 influenced her

life and artistic work and it was there-

fore natural for Crafford to add a few

current thoughts.

Jonker’s contribution to Atelier 1731

consists of two distinct parts. Firstly he

exhibits works from Testaments and

monuments, a body of works produced

in 2009 after his return from the Cité des

119 >

Page 120: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

Arts International. The second compo-

nent (which actually precedes the first)

is a series of prints from his personal

diaries. These diaries, comprising mostly

of images, give viewer an introduction

to Jonker’s thought and work processes.

He works with digital media and physi-

cal performance. He completed his BA

(Visual Communications) in 2008 and

a BA (Fine Arts) in 2009, which allows him

to cross the barriers of art and design.

Jonker delves into the subject of history

with the Testaments and monuments

series. These works aim to function as

re-writings of his personal cultural his-

tory as a white Afrikaner raised within

a Calvinistic heritage.

The works are also inspired by Michel

Foucault’s interpretation of history. For

Foucault, history proves to be much

more than a stable point of origin from

which one emerges. On the contrary,

history seems to supersede its function

of describing the past, by always already

actively inscribing the present. History

thus becomes a process of archaeology

in which one digs into the fabric of his-

tory with the aid of contemporary tools

– yet those tools are always already a

result of – or testament to – history.

Jonker also quotes R. Bubner who says

ject attempts to identify. Yet, that surface

Francois Jonker, Testaments and Monuments, 2009.

120 >

Page 121: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

Francois Jonker, Cains Conquest, 2009.

121 >

Page 122: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

122 >

COLLECTIONS

South African art (particularly that of the Eastern Cape), British art, international printmaking, Oriental art (including Indian miniatures and Chinese textiles).

EXHIBITIONSShowcasing artworks from the permanent collections,

supplemented by an active programme of temporary exhibitions.

EDUCATION AND OTHER SERVICESGuided tours, lectures, films, workshops, research library, souvenir shop.

1 Park Drive, Port Elizabeth, 6001, South Africa Telephone: +27 (0)41 5062000

Fax: +27 (0)41 5863234E-mail: [email protected]

Website: www.artmuseum.co.za

Francois Jonker, Still Waiting.

Still Waiting, Installation view.

Page 123: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

123 >

COLLECTIONS

South African art (particularly that of the Eastern Cape), British art, international printmaking, Oriental art (including Indian miniatures and Chinese textiles).

EXHIBITIONSShowcasing artworks from the permanent collections, supplemented by an active programme of temporary

exhibitions.

EDUCATION AND OTHER SERVICESGuided tours, lectures, films, workshops, research library, souvenir shop.

1 Park Drive, Port Elizabeth, 6001, South Africa Telephone: +27 (0)41 5062000

Fax: +27 (0)41 5863234E-mail: [email protected]

Website: www.artmuseum.co.za

proves alienating even though it is pro-

jected by the subject itself, guided by

his/her own present ideological frame-

work.

This sense of alienation, as well as the

feeling of loss and even guilt, becomes

central to how Jonker ‘re-writes’ history

in an attempt to uncover his cultural sub-

jectivity through the performance, docu-

mentation and editing of his history. <

Page 124: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

Everard Read leaps into the future

with Circa on Jellicoe

By Bev Hermanson

It’s a Saturday morning and the residents of

Rosebank, one of Johannesburg’s elite northern

suburbs, are flocking to the art precinct on the

corner of Jellicoe and Jan Smuts Avenues to enjoy

a coffee, browse through the book store and view

the artworks on display. This is the vision of Mark

Read of the Everard Read Gallery, whose brief to

Pierre Swanepoel of StudioMAS architecture &

urban design was to create a multifunctional

space on what once was a narrow parking lot.

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Page 126: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

The Circa building

commands the corner

while the Everard Read

Gallery forms a demure

backdrop. A walkway

connects the Circa

building with the fire

escape.

126 >

Page 127: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

127 >

The Everard Read Gallery, Southern Africa’s most famous

commercial art gallery was established in the young

mining town of Johannesburg in 1912. Over the years

the gallery has grown in size and sophistication with

the emergence of Johannesburg as Africa’s business

and financial capital.

Everard Read has become synonymous with the finest

art emanating from Southern Africa. Many of this region’s

most celebrated painters, print-makers and sculptors,

both traditional artists of the past and emerging talent,

exhibit with Everard Read. The gallery has also be-

come the agent for eminent artists from elsewhere in

the world.

In 1980, the Read family chose to relocate the gallery

from downtown Johannesburg to Jellicoe Avenue in

Rosebank, where a domestic residence was converted

into a flowing, bright viewing space for various artworks

and artifacts. Then in the later 80s, the Reads purchased

the property facing Jan Smuts Avenue, across the road

from the gallery. For the next 15 years the land was

utilised as parking for the gallery, however, during this

interval, the seed was sown to do something more

meaningful with the site. Mark Read set about finding

an architect that could share his vision and eventually

settled on the award winning practice of StudioMAS.

He briefed Pierre Swanepoel, the senior partner, to

come up with a concept that would become a dynamic

multi-functional building that would complement the

existing gallery.

“It was very challenging to conceptualise a building that

would take best advantage of what was essentially a

Page 128: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

The concrete stairs

which encircles the

central structure.

128 >

Page 129: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

long narrow utility area. We came up with a triple storey building

that is an elliptical shape, transparent, yet self-contained,” says

Swanepoel. Known as Circa, which means ‘thereabouts’ or ‘ap-

proximately at that time’, the new building occupies the north

western corner of the Rosebank precinct. It is within walking

distance of the various malls, the Rosebank craft market, banks

and the many hotels and restaurants in the district. With the

building of a Gautrain station in the suburb, it is expected that

this area will become a vibrant node and an attractive destina-

tion for visitors and residents of Gauteng to frequent.

“Mark had initially wanted to extend the gallery across the street,

but as the project unfolded he decided to leave the existing

gallery as it was, merely paving the road between the two sites

to create more of an ‘art in the street’ atmosphere,” Swanepoel

continues. “The new building is a very theatrical space that has

been split into three levels with a circular staircase that ascends

around the perimeter. It’s a place where people can meet and

interact in a highly inspirational environment.”

“It was extremely difficult to piece the building together to

achieve the elliptical shape,” says Swanepoel. Much of the

structure had to be constructed virtually ‘by hand’ to achieve

the uniformity desired. The central structure is made from con-

crete, which is encircled by gradually sloping concrete stairs. To

ensure a level of privacy, this was then clad with aluminium fins

that allow natural light to filter in during the day and artificial

light to splash on to the surrounding pavement area at night.

“The fins resemble the structures used for a Zulu kraal, shield-

ing the interiors from the bright African sun.”

The structure was conceptualised to become an integral part of

the public spaces with a coffee shop and book store that will spill

out on to the paving. The streetscape lends itself to the showing

129 >

Page 130: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

The top level lounge,

known as the Darwin

Room, designed by

Christine Read.

130 >

Page 131: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

of large sculptures and two large glass sliding doors

are the perfect answer to the need for security, while

offering transparency and a feeling of openness to the

space.

The ingenuity of the design has given this landmark a

triple storey structure with a top level lounge and

deck that takes in 270 degree views clear across to

Northcliff Hill. The lounge, designed by Christine Read,

and adjoining kitchen area is large enough to cater

comfortably for gatherings of 50 or so people and the

west facing deck is perfect for sundowners. The first

floor, covering around 177m2 is a multipurpose exhibi-

tion space with seven movable screens that can be

dropped through the floor to the level below should the

need arise for more exhibition space on the ground

floor.

Named Speke, after John Speke, the pioneer who sought

the source of the Nile, this ground floor space is ideal

for displaying treasures of contemporary art and arte-

facts, all things passionately collected by Mark and

Christine from Africa and around the world. The top

level, known as the Darwin Room, is linked to a fire

escape via a walkway. This metal structure will even-

tually be covered by a vertical garden, allowing visi-

tors the experience of descending through a green

world of foliage, should they wish to do so.

In addition to displays of artworks and crafts, Circa will

be used for a variety of cultural events that will en-

courage gallery supporters to rethink the definitions

131 >

Page 132: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

of art and other cultural pursuits. “One can say that Circa is a

small building with a big attitude,” says Swanepoel. “One that

is inspired by a new world economy, where commercial gain is

tempered by a concern for urban and natural environments.” <

The top level

deck that takes in

270 degree views

clear across to

Northcliff Hill.

Circa’s

multipurpose

exhibition space.

132 >

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6 Jellicoe Avenue, Rosebank, JohannesburgTel: + 27 11 788 4805 Fax: + 27 11 788 5914 Email: [email protected] www.everard-read.co.za

We are delighted to announce that Everard Read is now officially

Deborah Bell’s primary dealer

CIRCA on Jellicoe will be hosting an exhibition of her latest work in November 2010

Deborah Bell (1957–) Inflame 2008 and 2009 mixed media on paper 116 x 156 cm

Page 134: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

134 >

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Standard Bank’s long-term, sustained support and promotion of the arts role has been

extensive and wide-ranging, and has enhanced its image as a South African institution

that nurtures cultural development.

Makonde, Lipiko (Helmet Mask), undated. Wood, pigment, hair. 22 x 24 x 17 cm.

Mozambique. Standard Bank Collection of African Art, Wits Art Museum.

135 >

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136 >

THE STANDARD BANK GALLERY

The Standard Bank Gallery is an exciting and sophisti-

cated exhibition space situated in the heart of down-

town Johannesburg. Opened in 1990 and extensively

refurbished in 2004, it is recognised as a world-class

facility, one of the few non-commercial public venues

for major exhibitions, and it has earned a reputation

as one of the country’s foremost fine art venues.

The Standard Bank Gallery has made its mark on Johan-

nesburg – and the national art scene – with its skilful

mix of highly relevant exhibitions. Shows such as Alexis

Preller: Africa, the sun and shadows in 2009, Judith

Mason: A Prospect of Icons in 2008, Willem Boshoff:

Word Forms and Language Shapes in 2007, Karel Nel:

Lost Light also in 2007, Gerard Sekoto: From the Paris

Studio in 2006, Irma Stern: Expressions of a Journey in

2003 and Johannes Phokela: I like my neighbours in

2009 have created opportunities to reassess and re-

view the work of established South African artists.

Exhibitions such as Santu Mofokeng: Invoice in 2006

and Skin to Skin in 2008 have given viewers a unique

insight into the artists’ reflections on South African

society. Exhibitions by award-winning Standard Bank

Young Artists, Nontsikelelo Veleko: Wonderland in

2009, Pieter Hugo: Messina/Musina in 2008 and

Churchill Madikida: Like Father Like Son? in 2007 have

demonstrated Standard Bank’s commitment to nurtur-

ing up-and-coming young artists, while Picasso and

Africa in 2006 and the Magical Universe of Joan MirÛ

in 2002 brought the work of international luminaries

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137 >

The Standard Bank Gallery, established in 1990, is a

world-class, non-commercial exhibition space

situated in the heart of downtown Johannesburg.

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138 >

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139 >

to South Africa. Furthermore, the groundbreaking exhi-

bition, Marlene Dumas: Intimate Relations, was widely

celebrated in 2007 as a ‘homecoming’ exhibition, the

first solo show of this internationally acclaimed artist

in the land of her birth.

The Standard Bank Gallery serves a fundamental edu-

cational role in the Standard Bank Group’s operational

strategy as a leading supporter of the arts. In addition

the hosting of seminal exhibitions, the Standard Bank

Gallery produces publications, educational materials,

regular talks by resident artists, guided tours and

workshops for all ages. Furthermore, the gallery regu-

larly hosts lunch-hour concerts and recitals for Stand-

ard Bank staff and the general public, which play a

critical role in facilitating the continued development

and protection of South African culture.

STANDARD BANK YOUNG ARTIST AWARDS

Last year, 2009, marked the 25th anniversary of the

Standard Bank Young Artist Awards. Established by

the National Arts Festival (NAF) in 1981 and taken over

by Standard Bank in 1984, these awards, in the disci-

plines of Dance, Visual Art, Drama, Film, Music and

Jazz, are granted to young South Africans who have

demonstrated exceptional ability in their field, but

have not yet achieved national exposure and acclaim.

One vital aspect of the award, which makes it different

from others in the country, is that Standard Bank,

where possible, endeavours to provide visual artists

Marlene Dumas interacting with the press at

the media preview for Intimate Relations at

the Standard Bank Gallery, Johannesburg.

Marlene Dumas, Fog of war, 1996.

Ink on paper. 45 x 35 cm.

Standard Bank Corporate Collection).

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140 >

with a platform after winning the award. In the Visual

Arts, winning artists are supported through a spon-

sored travelling exhibition to all the main centres in

the country. Launched on the main programme at the

NAF, this exhibition affords them national exposure.

The bank also purchases an artwork from this exhibi-

tion for the Standard Bank Corporate Art Collection

which is on display at its corporate head office and

other provincial offices around the country.

In sponsoring, unearthing and contributing to the de-

velopment of young artists over the past 25 years,

Standard Bank has made an enormous contribution

to South Africa’s cultural wealth. Not only has it nurtured

creative talent and propelled the careers of artists, it

has also created role models for other aspiring artists

and forged a rich cultural legacy.

THE STANDARD BANK AFRICAN ART COLLECTION

The Standard Bank African Art Collection, developed

in partnership with the University of the Witwatersrand,

Johannesburg, demonstrates Standard Bank’s long-

standing commitment to the conservation of African

cultural heritage. Established in 1978 with the aim of

acquiring, maintaining, preserving and exhibiting a col-

lection of African art forms, the collection is a unique

collaboration between business and academe.

This collection is of historical significance for the in-

sight it offers into development in Africa’s culture. It

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141 >

LEFT TO RIGHT:

Karel Nel, Stele, 2004. Red ochre with

sprayed pigment on bonded fibre fabric.

220 x 50 cm.

Karel Nel, On Earth, 2004. Yellow, red and

brown ochre with sprayed pigment on bonded

fibre fabric. 220 x 50 cm.

Tsonga-Shangane, South Africa, Nhunguvana

(Medicine gourd). Wood, beads, basket, metal,

string 18 x 15.5 x 15.5 cm. Standard Bank

African Art Collection (Wits Art Museum).

BOTTOM:

Judith Mason, She-wolf, 1965. Oil on hard-

board. Iziko South African National Gallery.

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142 >

Churchill Madikida,

Virus 5, 2005. Lambda

print. 72 x 99 cm.

Standard Bank

Corporate Collection.

Pieter Hugo, Pieter and

Maryna Vermeulen with

Timana Phosiwa.

Musina, South Africa,

2006. C-print.

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143 >

includes pieces from all over Africa, but an emphasis

on local art has helped to stem the flow of valuable

artworks out of the country. The collection includes

wood figurines, drums, masks, clothing and ritual ob-

jects as well as specialist areas such as beadwork,

textiles and valuable ceramic pieces.

In its 30+ years of existence, the African Art Collection

has been widely used as an important research and

teaching resource, providing actual examples of ob-

jects for students of Art History, Fine Art and a range

of interdisciplinary subjects to study. As such, it is not

only a major cultural resource which attempts to ad-

dress some of the imbalances of cultural conservation

in South Africa, it is also a major teaching resource, a

stimulus for further research, an inspiration for aspir-

ing artists and a legacy for the nation.

THE STANDARD BANK CORPORATE ART COLLECTION

Formed over the last four decades, the Standard Bank

Corporate Art Collection is a testament to the vision of

its creators and the changes in attitudes by which it

has been shaped: shifts in corporate culture, the visu-

al art sector and the broader South African social and

historical context.

One of the oldest and most comprehensive of the

South African corporate collections, it consists of more

than 1000 works of art, housed mainly in the Standard

Bank Centre and the Standard Bank Global Leadership

Nontsikelelo Veleko, Screamblacklips, 2006.

Pigment print on cotton rag paper. 40 x 30cm.

Goodman Gallery Cape.

Page 144: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

Centre in Johannesburg. Components can also be

found in other venues, such as Standard Bank offices

in Port Elizabeth, Cape Town, Pretoria, London and

New York. There is a strong pictorial focus in the col-

lection, which includes artworks in diverse media by

over 250 different South African artists. Significant

artworks of local subjects by non-South African art-

ists, such as the pioneer explorers during the colonial

years, are also included. The collection spans more

than 250 years, dating from 1755 to the present, with

the majority of the works being from the last 50 years.

The recently launched Signature Pieces, a catalogue

edited by Julia Charlton of the Wits Arts Galleries,

gives an insight into the collection, reflecting its

growth and development. The high quality images

provide readers with a sense of the scope of the col-

lection, and the essays by specialists on particular

aspects of the art offer additional insight. A chapter is

also dedicated to the artists’ voices, and 12 invited art-

ists discuss an aspect of their works in the collection,

offering valuable perspectives on their sources,

thought processes, methods or intentions. Contribu-

tions have been made by Willem Boshoff, Alan Crump,

Bronwen Findlay, Robert Hodgins, Churchill Madikida,

Colbert Mashile, Kagiso Pat Mautloa, Karel Nel, Sam

Nhlengethwa, Doreen Southwood, Minnette Vári and

Andrew Verster.

STANDARD BANK – LEAVING A LEGACY FOR THE FUTURE

Standard Bank’s sponsorship of the arts goes beyond

marketing, demonstrating the institution’s commit-

ment to the development, promotion and conserva-

tion of South African arts, culture and heritage; its

lasting legacy is a gift to the nation. <

TOP: Irma Stern, Gardenias, 1940. Oil on

canvas. 60 x 49 cm. Standard Bank

Corporate Collection.

ABOVE: Alexis Preller, Still life with gourds,

1953. Mixed media. 61 x 47 cm. Standard

Bank Corporate Collection.

144 >

Page 145: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

Johannes Phokela, The bean

feast, undated. Oil on canvas.

168 x 198 cm. Standard Bank

Corporate Collection.

Importers and distributors of an extensive range of Artists consumables.i.e. canvas, brushes, oil and acrylic paints, copic markers and pads.

[email protected]

Tel: 011 334 2004Fax: 011 334 1970

2 Pryce Rosser Str, City DeepProlecon, Johannesburg

145 >

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146 >

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147 >

The Unisa Art Gallery is the contemporary gallery

of the University of South Africa featuring estab-

lished and emerging South African and African art-

ists working in different media including painting,

ceramics, photography, multi-media and sculp-

ture. The Art Gallery is situated in Pretoria, at the

University of South Africa Main Campus, Theo Van

Wijk Building, B-Block, 5th Floor.

Prof. Karin Skawran established the Unisa art col-

lection in 1961. The Unisa Art Gallery was accom-

modated in the former Unisa Library in 1988 with

the appointment of the first art curator. Since then

the gallery has grown to be one of the most sig-

nificant exhibition spaces in South Africa and is

privileged to be in possession of a hugely relevant

collection of predominantly contemporary South

African art.

This year marks a very significant point in the de-

velopment of the Unisa Art Gallery, as the Unisa

permanent art collection is moving into its first

state of the art exhibition space and storage facil-

ity. These facilities can be found at the entrance of

the Unisa main campus in Pretoria.

Gerard Sekoto, Four figures at a table. Oil on board.

Page 148: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

With its new curator, Bongani Mkhonza, the Unisa

Art Gallery and the permanent collection will be

moving into the new art gallery space which

claims to be the biggest in Pretoria. The Unisa Art

Gallery as a valuable cultural asset, aims at na-

tional and international relevance by promoting

the culturally diverse manifestations of the visual

arts. Within the spirit of academic excellence and

cultural relevance, the Unisa Art Gallery strives to

collect, document and conserve primarily South

African art.

Exhibitions expose and focus on diverse and rel-

evant aspects in the arts. These include regular

exhibitions of the Unisa Art Collection, as well as

LEFT TO RIGHT:

Nandipha Mntambo, LeLive Lami, 2006.

Cow hide, cow tails, waxed chord,

polyester resin & fiberglass.

Alexis Preller, Still life, 1946. Oil on board.

Cecil Skotnes, Untitled – 13/100, 1972. Woodcut.

Maud Sumner, The garden party. Oil on canvas.

Maggie Laubser, Landscape with pink house.

Oil on board.

Judith Mason, PANEL 2 (Triptych) Sandwich Board

Man. Oil on canvas.

148 >

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149 >

exhibitions curated by the Unisa Art Gallery con-

sidering current research of historical, cultural

and educational value, as well as significant travel-

ling exhibitions curated by other institutions.

Student exhibitions, community outreach exhibi-

tions and international exhibitions also provide

the opportunity for endless creative and intellec-

tual stimulation. Opening events, presentations

and walkabouts are arranged in order to engage

with exhibitions and to provide a platform for in-

teraction.

The Unisa Art Gallery is one of the most significant

exhibition spaces in South Africa. The collection

encapsulates the richness of our social fabric and

the creative potential of South African artists.

Unisa’s permanent collection acquisition team

has consistently been collecting historical and

contemporary artists that are pushing the bound-

aries of creativity in South Africa. In terms of his-

torical artists, the collection boasts artists like

Cecil Skotnes, Durant Sihlali, Maud Sumner, Gerarld

Sekoto, Alexis Preller and Maggie Laubser.

It is crucial not to portray these historical artists

and their contribution in a cosmos perception but

to bring to light their interrelationships as workers,

parents, educators and human beings. If you trace

their histories most of these artists (through their

careers) have crossed paths; worked together or

even creatively influencing one another. Examples

Page 150: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

include Cecil Skotnes, who made a remarkable

contribution to the art history of South Africa be-

tween the 50s and the 60s when he worked as a

Cultural Officer at the Johannesburg City Council’s

Polly Street. Polly Street offered adult education

for black people at that time. Durant Sihlali, one of

the students at Polly Street, was taught by Sko-

tnes and was amongst the artists that started the

trend called ‘township art’.

Maud Sumner was born in Johannesburg of British

immigrant parents from Warwickshire. She was

educated at home and later attended Roedean

High School for Girls in Johannesburg where she

took art lessons from A.E. Gyngell, the curator of

the Johannesburg Art Gallery in 1913. Sumner’s

later work departed from the late-Impressionist

style of the Nabi movement and became more in-

tellectual.

Gerald Sekoto befriended artists Alexis Preller,

with whom he exchanged a lot of ideas and Preller

taught Sekoto to work in oil. Within a short time

Sekoto started exhibiting his work and had built

up a reputation in the Johannesburg art scene.

However, Sekoto was unhappy in the racial and

claustrophobic work environment in Johannes-

burg. In 1942 he decided to leave Johannesburg

for District Six in Cape Town before he went abroad

in exile.

The contemporary collection includes works by

artists such as Lawrence Lemaoana, Nandipha

Mntambo, Lyndi Sales, Gwen Miller, Steven Cohen

and many more. <

150 >

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Restoration. Our investment in the future.Celebrating 100 years of art and culture

with the Johannesburg Art Gallery.

City Property transforms inner city buildings

and creates sophisticated, modern and

cosmopolitan living and retail spaces. Attention

to every detail, from security to finishes,

ensure that those who live and work in City

Property buildings enjoy the best that

South Africa’s cities have to offer.

Head Office: CPA House, 101 Du Toit Street, Pretoria P.O. Box 15, Pretoria 0001 Tel: 012 319 8811 Fax: 012 319 8812 Website: www.cityproperty.co.za E-mail: [email protected]

7378

LEFT TO RIGHT:

Lawrence Lemaoana, Players of colour, 2006. Fabric.

Gwen Miller, Earth Skin, 2000.

Vilene, wax, oil paint, charcoal, plastic hair.

Steven Cohen, Let the voice of the youth be heard, 1993.

Hand Painted Chair.

Contact the gallery:

Curator: Bongani Mkhonza, Tel: (012) 429 6255,

Email: [email protected]

Administrator: Magda Botha, Tel: (012) 429 6823,

Email: [email protected]

151 >

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www.nwu.ac.za
Page 153: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

The North-West University (NWU) is a multi-campus

university with a footprint spanning two prov-

inces. The Mafikeng and Potchefstroom Cam-

puses are situated in the North-West province

and the Vaal Triangle Campus is in Gauteng. The

NWU came into being on 1 January 2004 through

the merger of two universities with very different

histories, personalities and cultures – the Potch-

efstroom University for Christian Higher Educa-

tion and the University of the North-West. The

staff and students of the Sebokeng Campus of

the former Vista University were also incorpo-

rated, adding further to the richness of the new

institution’s heritage.

Today, the NWU is recognised as one of the best-

managed and most innovative universities in

South Africa. As conveyed in its pay-off line, ‘In-

novation through diversity’, the institution con-

tinues to celebrate and encourage multiculturalism,

multilingualism and multinationalism.

Support of the arts forms part of the balanced

approach of the NWU, realised through involve-

ment in various initiatives. National arts projects

are part of the social calendar and cultural

groups span choir, dance and drama. On the aca-

demic side, the Graphic Design course has been

Crea

tivi

ty C

entr

e ex

hibi

tion

153 >

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154 >

named as one of the best in the country. Partici-

pation in – and celebration of – creative excel-

lence in all forms, is at the heart of the NWU.

THE NORTH-WEST UNIVERSITY ART COLLECTION

The NWU boasts an extensive art collection that

began in 1972 when some of the 66 artists that

participated in the institution’s first exhibition

donated works. Over the years the collection ex-

panded in an environment that nurtured devel-

opment of the arts. It currently consists of three,

previously separated, collections: those of the

old PUK, POK and the Ferdinand-Postma Library,

with the addition of works acquired more recently

by the Institutional Office. Works by Maggie Laubser,

Bettie Cilliers-Barnard, Judith Mason, George

Boys, Robert Hodgins, JH Pierneef and Christo

Coetzee are revered, with an appreciation for

both contemporary artists and the old masters.

Two galleries at the Potchefstroom Campus regu-

larly exhibit South African art and provide differ-

ent but equally worthwhile experiences. The

Main Gallery, with its large exhibition space and

storage facilities, is often the hub of the local art

scene, enjoying an evening out at a new exhibi-

tion or a contemplative retreat during the work-

ing day. The newer venue at the NWU Botanical

Garden provides a unique setting in which to en-

joy a combined visual feast of nature and art.

Having adopted the modified C1 building in

Potchefstroom, formally known as the old POK

library, the Institutional Office now houses con-

temporary works by Peter Eastman, Philemon

Hlungwani, Stompie Selibe, Hanneke Benade,

Sam Nhlengethwa, Claudette Schreuders and

Diane Victor, amongst others. Completion of the

interior design of the Institutional Office forms

part of the brand roll-out for 2010 and the art is

offset by contemporary furniture and the restful

presence of some greenery. Typographic design,

signage and finishing touches will aim to supple-

ment the existing environmental design and will

hopefully provide an interesting and productive

atmosphere for those working in or visiting the

building.

In 2009, sculptor Marco Cianfanelli was commis-

sioned to produce a work for the Institutional Of-

fice, inspired by the NWU’s vision and values. As

a result, an innovative spirit is reflected in the

theme, ‘unity through diversity’. The sculpture is

also a manifestation of actual geographic data of

the North West province and the Vaal Triangle in

Gauteng, which translates into the 76 steel

sculpture profiles, of which the relief echoes the

topography of the region. These profiles exhibit

words pertinent to the NWU culture, in a multilin-

gual celebration of Afrikaans, English and Set-

swana. The arrangement of the sculpture profiles

is suggestive of embrace and connectivity, creat-

ing a form that is iconic yet not monolithic.

The restored bronze statue of Totius, the name

signifying the pen-name of Jakob Daniël du Toit,

is an icon of profound importance to the NWU’s

community, past and present. The statue has

found a proud new home on the Potchefstroom

campus after receiving approval in 2009 from the

Town Council. Approval was granted for the well-

known writer and poet’s statue to receive a place

of honour in the intended Writers’ Garden, which

forms part of the campus’ initiative to honour the

great writers and poets of North West, including

Sol Plaatje and Herman Charles Bosman. The

first of the Potchefstroom poets to be honoured

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155 >

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was TT Cloete, where his poems were recited ear-

lier this year during a special occasion in the

NWU Botanical Garden. Copper plates bearing

extracts from his poems were then unveiled in

the garden. Work on Sol Plaatje’s statue by Jo

Roos is also progressing and will soon find its

special place in the Writers’ Garden.

THE RENDEZVOUS ART PROJECT

The NWU has been involved in the Rendezvous

art project since its inception in 2007. Initiated to

develop links between business, educational in-

stitutions and the arts, this non-profit organisa-

tion supports community projects and artist de-

velopment on various levels.

The first project was Rendezvous Focus Sculpture,

which raised funds for some grade 12 students

from Alexandra, enabling their application for

tertiary education. The following project, Ren-

dezvous Focus Wearable Art, raised funds for a

bursary at the NWU in the faculty of humanities.

The current project, Rendezvous Focus Original

Lithography, consists of a series of travelling ex-

hibitions at various venues throughout South

Africa. This project aims to forge cultural links

between South Africa and France through exhibi-

tions. The French component of these exhibitions

is a collection of lithographic prints from the At-

eliers Pons in Paris and South African artists

working in the medium of lithography. The

project will give eight South African artists the

opportunity to travel to Paris and to be part of a

workshop on lithography at the Atelier Pons.

THE AARDKLOP NATIONAL

ARTS FESTIVAL

The NWU is one of the main sponsor’s of the

Aardklop National Art Festival, which seeks to

create the opportunity for upcoming talent to

perform with established artists. The NWU plays

host to some of the exhibitions on the visual arts

program.

Over the past 12 years, the festival has highlight-

ed nationally and internationally renowned art-

ists through the Festival Artist programme at the

NWU’s Main Gallery. Past guest artists include

Kevin Brand, Deborah Bell, Judith Mason-Attwood,

Berni Searle, Louis van Rensburg, Jan van der

Merwe, Robert Hodgins, Marco Cianfanelli, Willem

Boshoff, Nicholas Hlobo, Diane Victor and Conrad

Botes. In 2010, the festival artist is Angus Taylor.

The Botanical Garden Gallery exhibits artists that

focus on environmental work or environmentally-

conscious works, such as Strijdom van der Mer-

we’s works in 2009.

The Creative Quotient Festival (CQ-Fest) is held

annually in conjunction with Aardklop and the

Graphic Design subject group. It showcases the

best of the advertising and design industries and

includes the Cannes Lions and The Loerie Award

road shows as well as student work from various

design education institutions.

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158 >

ARTÉMA

Artéma, the first institute of its kind in South Af-

rica, is the Institute for Arts Management and

Development at NWU, Potchefstroom campus.

The Institute was established in December 2003

and focuses on the empowerment and training of

people involved on the management and organi-

sation of the arts environment and related disci-

plines. It serves the arts in collaboration with as

many role players as possible by training manag-

ers and administrators in the arts through a vari-

ety of university-accredited courses. It conducts

practical research within the arts environment

and presents development projects in the field of

arts management on all levels. Additionally, a

state-of-art recording studio was also launched

in recent years, making facilities available to tal-

ented musicians.

THE CREATIVITY CENTRE

The mission of the Creativity Centre is to make

creativity part of people’s daily lives. Since its in-

ception in 2000, the Centre has been offering

certificate short courses in graphic design, web

design, computer software, photography, drama,

creative entertaining, painting and drawing

which are registered at the Institutional Commit-

tee of Academic Standards.

NWU-PUK ARTS

NWU-Puk Arts is housed in the oldest building on

the Potchefstroom Campus, which is a National

Monument. The essence is to foster a healthy arts

and culture presence on campus and deals mainly

with the non-academic aspects of the arts. As a

result, the department partners with the Student

Council’s Culture division. Student concert groups

form part of the stable of Puk Arts, providing won-

derful opportunity for expression.

FACILITIES

The NWU offers students, staff and the public

with a wide range of facilities that supports cul-

tural development and arts appreciation. Per-

formances and concerts of all kind take place at

the Sanlam Auditorium or the Cachet ‘Kleinteater’.

Practice sessions, rehearsels, courses, adminis-

trative actitivies and smaller events are staged at

various other venues, including the historic Totius

hall, the Heimat hall, Uitspan building, Education

Sciences hall, offices, amongst others. For mass

gatherings, the Amphitheatre, now sporting a

roof, suffices, and the Conservatorium, known for

its excellent acoustics, is used for music recitals.

ACTIVITIES

The NWU also houses two national arts head-

offices, namely Kuesta (choir festival and sere-

nade comptetition) and Jeunesses Musicales

South Africa (a branch of the international body

that promotes music in the youth market). These

organisations focus on the development of talent

through support and exposure to new opportuni-

ties by hosting national and international artists

and groups which provides opportunities for

cross-cultural influences, inspiration and collab-

oration.

Other arts and culture groups that form part of

NWU activities include the internationally re-

nowned Puk Choir; Boulevard Harmonists, a

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capella ensemble encompassing classical, popular

and folk music; Puk Serenaders, promoting different

traditional African arts and culture through music,

dance and vibrant rhythm; Thalia Drama Society,

responsible for annual pieces and an assortment of

cultural offerings, including the popular inter-hostel

campus theatre competition; Buzzin Brass Ensemble

offering instrumental music for any occasion; NWU-

Puk Symphony Orchestra, playing three to four con-

certs annually; Divaco, Cape culture expressed in

theatre, dance and music, and Disfunctional Beat,

a dance group presenting a variety of ballet, free-

style, hip-hop and breakdancing.

Annual offerings in partnership with the Student

Council’s Culture division include the Alumni-Cam-

pus Talent Festival, First Years’ Concerts, Serenade

Inter-Hostel Competition, Fine Art on Canvass, Inter-

hostel Theatre Competition, and participation in the

National Serenade-and Debating Competitions.

GRAPHIC DESIGN AT NWU

The South African Communication Design Council

(think) named the North-West University as the top

Graphic Design educational institution for 2009, at

the Thinkahead Awards. The NWU’s Graphic Design

department has annually rated in the top 5 since

2006, and now offers a multimedia elective within

the BA Graphic Design degree.

Students and staff have scooped numerous awards

in recent years, including ‘outstanding visual artists’

at the 2010 Woordfees, SABS Design Institute De-

sign Achievers Awards finalists, South African Post

Office Philatelist Federation Stamp Competition,

Goldpack (Institute for Packaging South Africa) fi-

nalists and merits, Pendoring gold and silver, Inter-

national Society for Typographic Design membership

and a Sappi Ideas that Matter grant.

CULTURAL ACTIVITIES ACROSS THE NWU

The Mafikeng Campus has distinguished itself in

music, choral and multicultural drama, with the

campus choir winning first place for three consecutive

years in the regional championships of the Telkom/

Old Mutual choral championships.

The Potchefstroom Campus hosts the renowned

NWU-PUK Choir and the Boulevard Harmonists, the

latter having won an international Christmas Choir

competition in Prague. The Campus also boasts the

Buzzin’ Brass Ensemble, the Thalia Drama Society,

and the NWU-PUK Serenaders who took third place

in the Old Mutual National Choir Championship and

a special award at the ATKV Competition. In addition,

this campus won the national debate competition

for universities, also presented by the ATKV, for the

fourth consecutive year. Marshell Lombard, a talent-

ed artist and music student of the of the NWU, was

chosen as a member of the World Youth Choir in

May 2010. Corporate Writer for Corporate Affairs

and Relations at the Institutional Office, Nelia

Engelbrecht, was awarded the prestigious Scheep-

ers Prize for Youth Literature for her Afrikaans chil-

dren’s book, Pandora se boks.

The Vaal Triangle Campus’ Riverine Toast Master

Chapter participates in public speaking events and

assists learners from secondary schools in the area

to improve their public speaking skills. Other culture

endeavours include the campus choir participating

in various competitions and the campus establish-

ing a campus radio station and a brass band. <

Page 162: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

The Faculty of the Arts at the Tshwane University of Technology is home to an array of programmes in design, visual and performing arts. It is designed to support the creative process – a process of making, doing, thinking and problem-solving.

The Faculty of the Arts offers you 15 internationally recognised programmes to choose from:

Dance • Drama • Fashion Design & Technology • Fine & Applied Arts • Film & TV Production • Graphic Design • Interior Design • Jewellery Design & Manufacture Musical Theatre • Music • Multimedia (arts-based) • Performing Arts Technology (Entertainment Technology) • Photography • Textile Design & Technology • Vocal Art

For more information Call: 012 382 6175 or E-mail: [email protected]

www.tut.ac.za

C R E AT E Y O U R F U T U R E

Live your life. Create your destiny.

TUT Arts Design Magazine A4 Advert 01.indd 1 2010/03/31 10:13 AM

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One of the main attractions at the Salone Internazionale

del Mobile 2010, which took place in Milan in April,

was the unveiling of the spectacular installation,

The Dwelling Lab, by star designers Patricia Urquiola

and Giulio Ridolfo, featuring the new BMW 5 Series

Gran Turismo.

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Blending their creative and technological expertise, the German

carmaker and the Danish textile manufacturer commissioned a

unique sculpture based on BMW’s innovative new car concept, the

BMW 5 Series Gran Turismo. BMW and Kvadrat chose their long-

time favorites designers, Patricia Urquiola and Giulio Ridolfo to ex-

ecute their brief. Urquiola is an internationally acclaimed Spanish

designer and architect and creator of sensual and compelling fur-

niture, while Ridolfo is a distinguished Italian designer and colour

expert with en enviable background in fashion and accessories. The

four-party team also opted to partner with illumination company,

Flos, who developed a bespoke OLED solution for the soft-lit fea-

tures that Urquiola’s concept required.

The BMW 5 Series Gran Turismo, designed by the team of BMW

Group Design Director, Adrian van Hooydonk, broke with conven-

tions and explored a new vernacular, bringing together elements

that are part sedan, part SAV, part coupé for the exterior design,

while at the same time creating a visionary interior that is as luxuri-

ous as it is modern and functional. Urquiola and Ridolfo translated

these concepts into a design sculpture whose most daring ele-

ments include huge cone-like structures that seem to be growing

out of the car’s body, drawing the viewer inward just as they reveal

the usually sealed-off interior to the outside gaze.

REFINED BEAUTY AND CUTTING-EDGE TECHNOLOGY

The idea for this groundbreaking installation was born when van

Hooydonk, who has long been an admirer and close follower of the

Kvadrat collections, met Kvadrat CEO, Anders Byriel, at a fair and

suggested a collaborative project. The Danish company known for

its innovative curtain and upholstery fabrics was thrilled at the

chance to enter new terrain by developing materials suited to the

requirements of a car. Working on a car – the structured space of

mobility – was also a debut for Urquiola who approached the com-

mission with excitement and curiosity.

Urquiola, saw the car interior of the BMW 5 Series Gran Turismo as

a unique opportunity to experiment with soft edges and colours,

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Model of The Dwelling Lab by Patricia Urquiola.

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Urquiola created a special child seat for the

BMW 5 Series Gran Turismo.

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whilst at the same time creating an atmospheric space inside the

car, infused with the dominance of the textiles and the interaction

between the various materials. The final result includes an array of in-

novative products and interior details in various hues and materials.

Describing her inspiration for the design, Urquiola says: “Usually

we perceive cars from the outside, and then the inside follows.

However, our direct interaction is with the inside. It is the core that

protects and comforts us, the space in direct contact with our bod-

ies and our functions and needs in the process of travelling. I inves-

tigated this interface and tried to understand the possible evolu-

tion as a softer, dwelling experience.”

CHALLENGING BOUNDARIES

For van Hooydonk, this project was an equally stimulating experi-

ence. “BMW contributed expertise in automotive design and con-

struction. Patricia Urquiola approached this project from a different

perspective and with a different perception. With her openness and

creative vigour in finding innovative solutions, she allows people to

see the car in a totally different way. And above all, underscores the

emotional connection that people have to this very technical object

that is a car.” He says that The Dwelling Lab “creates a daring shift

in perspectives which challenges boundaries. The philosophy and

character of the BMW 5 Series Gran Turismo were ideally interpret-

ed in this unique design installation.”

“The BMW 5 Series Gran Turismo was designed from the inside out,

and The Dwelling Lab allows you, for the first time in history, to see

the interior of the car before you see the exterior. It highlights the

growing importance of a car’s interior. Design is focusing ever more

closely to people with their needs and desires; it is an expression

of modern understanding of well-being – to be comforted and pam-

pered in style.”

Kvadrat as that textile partner in the project had similar experienc-

es. The company actively engages in art and design projects that

push the boundaries of textiles and its unique uses and The Dwell-

ing Lab is the latest in a series of projects which illustrates how

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The Dwelling Lab by Patricia Urquiola and Giulio Ridolfo.

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textiles can be used in innovative ways interior car design. Byriel,

CEO of Kvadrat says: “Given the amount of time that most drivers

spend in their cars, comfort, individuality and function are impor-

tant. Currently, people think automatically about leather when they

buy an expensive car. With this collaboration we want to show that

by using high quality textiles you can create a very exclusive but

also warm and personal interior, which is more in line with the at-

mosphere that people create in their homes.”

THE FINE ART OF TRAVELLING

Patricia Urquiola is one of the few women to have established her

firm in an area largely dominated by men. Magazines such as Wall-

paper, ELLE Déco and the German magazines Häuser and H.O.M.E

voted her as Designer of the Year and among the Best Designers of

the Decade. She is known for her furniture designs such as the

couch Antibody and for the chairs reminiscent of handbags called

Smock. Together with Kvadrat she developed a lush, skin-coloured

fabric with a special soft finish and a complex quilt-like stitched

pattern for the interior of the BMW 5 Series Gran Turismo. With the

combined efforts of the specialists in BMW´s design department,

Urquiola created inspired solutions dedicated to the art of traveling

that dress the inside of the car in enticing elegance, extending even

to the dashboard.

As a mother of two, Urquiola also has a sharp eye for design that

excels not only in wit but equally in functionality: she created a

special child seat for the BMW 5 Series Gran Turismo and designed

holders for baby bottles that are a part of the array of compart-

ments and fittings on the backs of the two front seats.

In collaboration with Flos, one of the leading manufacturers in de-

sign light known for its innovation and creativity, Urquiola devel-

oped an exclusive light concept including soft-lit features and Mi-

cro-Chasen, a mini version of her acclaimed Chasen Lamp which

she designed for Flos in 2009. Piero Gandini, President and CEO of

Flos say that “The Micro-Chasen is perfect for reading and makes

this experience more alluring and emotional.”

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Details of the BMW 5 Series Gran Turismo by Patricia Urquiola and Giulio Ridolfo.

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DARING AND DYNAMIC STATEMENT

The spectacular ‘entrance’ to the BMW 5 Series Gran Turismo by

Urquiola is an ensemble of cone-like elements which Urquiola calls

‘diamonds’.

Giulio Ridolfo created the colour concept for these geometrical

structures –frames with stretched fabric by Kvadrat –. They seem to

grow out of the car’s body like huge loudspeakers, beckoning on-

lookers to come closer and peer inside. A daring and dynamic state-

ment that for Urquiola and Ridolfo demonstrates how mathematics,

geometry and engineering can produce beautiful, balanced design.

The result is a dynamic statement introducing unconventional no-

tions about the worlds of inside and outside.

For Ridolfo, colour is more than a ‘colourful’ selection – neither ran-

dom nor simply decoration – but, rather, a form of applied art that

helps relate the act of perceiving to an object as a whole. After he has

selected a tone he usually begins by examining many similar shades

until he has narrowed it down to only one – a complicated process

which allows Ridolfo to include what he calls “the vibrations of other

colours”. The Dwelling Lab was a novel and challenging experience,

as he needed to focus on fabric and tones that would be adequate

and expressive for the larger dimensions of a car.

Ridolfo says: “To enhance the spirit of the BMW 5 Series Gran Turismo,

we have integrated several unexpected details and accessories to

create sensory experiences and a mood of leisure and gentle sur-

prise. Textile is the fundamental material: the geometrical cones are

coated with 700 meters of Kvadrat’s Max in an specially designed

colour, and the car’s interior is upholstered with various other

Kvadrat fabrics.”

For BMW and Kvadrat, this design collaboration is a premiere. How-

ever, both have a tradition in supporting design and art projects that

explore the boundaries between creativity and technology. This vi-

sionary concept and the process of realising this challenge are of key

importance to both premium manufacturers. Like Patricia Urquiola,

they share a belief in viable aesthetics that allows customers to ex-

perience luxury and functionality in a forward-looking manner. <

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At the premiere of the 17th BMW Art Car

Jeff Koons unveiled and signed his car in

front of 300 international VIP guests on 1

June at the Centre Pompidou. It is the

same place where Roy Lichtenstein, back

in 1977, first presented and signed his

BMW Art Car.

WORLD PREMIERE OF JEFF KOONS’ BMW ART CAR

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In the spirit of Calder, Stella, Lichtenstein,

Warhol and many others, BMW announced this

year that the 17th Art Car, created by Jeff Koons,

will race where the first rolling pieces of art by

legendary artists raced – at the 24 hours of Le

Mans in France on 12-13 June 2010. Koons’ canvas

is a BMW M3 GT2, which was homologated to

compete at this year’s running of the world’s

most famous endurance race.

THE DESIGN PROCESS

As part of his creative process, the artist collected

images of racecars, related graphics, vibrant

colors, speed and explosions. The resulting art-

work featuring bright colours conceived by Koons

is evocative of power, motion and bursting energy.

Its silver interior along with the powerful exterior

design, the Art Car will impart a dynamic appear-

ance even when it’s standing still.

“These race cars are like life, they are powerful

and there is a lot of energy,” said Koons. “You

can participate with it, add to it and let yourself

transcend with its energy. There is a lot of power

under that hood and I want to let my ideas tran-

scend with the car – it’s really to connect with

that power”.

Koons has been in an intense collaboration

with BMW’s team in Munich for months – melding

his skill with sophisticated BMW engineering

– to ensure that the 17th BMW Art Car will be

race-ready for the 24 Hours of Le Mans.

Travelling back and forth to Germany many

times since the February, Koons has worked

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with the BMW engineering and design teams to

conduct in-depth explorations of materials and

application options that will prove crucial to

optimising both the aesthetic and aerodynamic

attributes of the racecar. Working with actual

3-D computer-aided design models of the BMW

M3 GT2, Koons could simulate the application

of the graphic to the car’s surfaces and evaluate

it from all angles.

Koons even donned a helmet and joined BMW’s

US Le Mans Series race team for testing in Sebring,

Florida, on 23 February where he was able to

experience the M3 GT2 at race speed to further

inspire his design. As Koons describes it, he

witnessed “the raw unfiltered performance” of

the M3 GT2 from the seat of a historic BMW M1

racecar. Koons also drove a BMW M3 Coupe on

the circuit to further the dynamic exercise.

Under Koons’ direct guidance and supervision,

his BMW Art Car was produced with assistance

of a team of BMW engineers and designers at

Schmid Design in Germany. The challenge for

creating this latest BMW Art Car focused on uti-

lising a light material and a design that would not

interfere with the racecar’s aerodynamics and

weight. Timing was also an issue, as there was

only a two-month window between the first design

sketches and the Paris world premiere. There-

fore the team opted for digital printing on car

wrapping vinyl covered by a double clear coat-

ing to enhance the colour of Koons’ design. To

apply hundreds of dynamic lines of Koons’ design

onto the car, CAD designs were translated from

3D into 2D for the printing process and then

painstakingly applied to the entire car as well

as onto individual spare parts.

Koons’ design incorporates many bright contrast-

ing colors to communicate the aesthetics of

power. The concept design was transformed

into hard-edged lines of color. Graphics of debris

were added to the rear sides and back of the

car to simulate the power of the car. Furthermore,

two graphic rings on the rear of the car represent

supersonic acceleration.

KOONS AND BMW

Koons’ collaboration with BMW began in 2003,

when he expressed his desire to create a BMW

Art Car. His relationship with BMW started more

than two decades ago when he drove a BMW while

residing in Munich, home to the BMW Group head-

quarters. Koons is known for his heartfelt appre-

ciation of cars. Earlier this year he was even recog-

nised by music icon Bono of U2 as one of the

ideal artists to design a car that would make

the world fall in love with automobiles again.

Koons’ creative process for the BMW Art Car

mirrors techniques, some borrowed from trans-

portation design and development, which he

regularly employs for his artistic production.

For example, in the creation of his signature

monumental sculptures, his studio uses 3-D

CAD models to evaluate the surfaces, assem-

bles them via methods found in bike chop

shops, and paints them in a manner based on

sophisticated automotive painting techniques.

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THE BMW M3 GT2

Derived from the BMW M3 high-performance

sports car, the BMW M3 GT2 boasts a 4.0-liter

V8 engine with a maximum output of 500 bhp,

an upgraded chassis, racing-caliber brakes and

extensive use of lightweight materials. Able to

reach 100 mph in 3.4 seconds, the BMW M3

GT2 is rapidly emerging as a real first year con-

tender at this year’s event.

For the comeback at 24 Le Mans, BMW Motor-

sport is supported by numerous partners such

as Castrol, Crowne Plaza, Dunlop, Randstad,

Sympatex, LuK, H&R, BBS and NGK for the race

on the Circuit de la Sarthe.

BMW ART CARS

Since 1975, artists from around the world have

turned BMW automobiles into art signifying a

particular period through the Art Car program.

In 2007, the latest installment was revealed

with Olafur Eliasson’s Your mobile expecta-

tions: BMW H2R project.

Many of the cars designed by the likes of

Warhol, Lichtenstein, Stella, Rauschenberg,

Hockney and Holzer have been exhibited in re-

nowned museums throughout the world in-

cluding the Louvre, the Guggenheim Museums

and the Shanghai Art Museum. They have been

displayed at the BMW Museum in Munich, be-

tween 2006 and 2010 and many went on a

world tour throughout Asia, Russia, Africa, In-

dia, the United States and Mexico.

The Koons car number, 79, pays tribute to the

1979 Andy Warhol car. The Warhol car was as-

signed the number 76, a homage to the 1976

Frank Stella car, both of which raced at Le

Mans.

“Ever since it was created back in 1977, the

Centre Pompidou has acted as an interface and

a platform of exchange between creative art

and society, striving to expose the larger public

to the art of our time in the firm belief that art

can foster a more innovative and flexible soci-

ety,” said Alain Seban, president of the Centre

Pompidou. “For this reason the Centre Pompi-

dou is glad to join BMW’s project which, I trust,

can go a long way in bringing together creation

and society by inviting the great artists of our

time – from Roy Lichtenstein in 1977 to Jeff

Koons today – to challenge the most mythical

object of our era, the car, through a unique

creation.”

The home of all BMW Art Cars is the BMW Mu-

seum in Munich. Starting in September, Koons’

17th BMW Art Car will be presented there to-

gether with some of its predecessors.

With over 100 major projects worldwide, BMW

Group cultural programs have been an integral

part of the company’s contributions to society

for almost 40 years. Besides contemporary art,

architecture and design, classical music and

jazz are key components of this engagement.

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Page 188: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

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By

Nos

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Ram

ela

Page 190: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

New York’s prestigious Tribeca Film Festival has named the

South African film Father Christmas Doesn’t Come Here its

best narrative short film in an indigenous language. Fund-

ed by the National Film and Video Foundation (NFVF) the

film was chosen from 47 finalists as one of the Indigenous

Language short film contest winners.

The film was written by South African screenwriters Bongi

Ndaba and Sibongile Nkosana, and directed by Bhekumu-

zi Sibiya. This is Sibiya’s first short feature film, and he re-

ceived great praise for his work.

“The director consistently foregoes sentimentality in fa-

vour of subtle debunking of myths based on culture. His

frames are urgently alive with telling details. This film an-

nounces a persuasive and deep human directorial vision,

one rich with authenticity and insight,” read a statement

by the judges.

The panel of judges who selected the film included Brooke

Shields, whose most recent film is Lipstick Jungle, Justin

Bartha from the movie Hangover, Peter Facinelli, who stars

in the Twilight movies, and Jack Dorsey, creator and chair-

person of the social site, Twitter. They described the film as

being exceptional and touching. “It is a film of resilience

and hope. It is an assured, original, and profoundly moving

film, which perfectly executes its aims and is buoyed by a

remarkable performance by its lead actor.”

In 2009, the film won an award at the Tri-Continental Film

Festival and it has also been included in the South African

Line-Up event for the Cannes Film Festival this year.

View a trailer at:

http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=feBHND LKjxw&feature =player_embedded

190 >

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The film looks at the life of a naive teenage black girl who

writes to Father Christmas, requesting long straight hair as

her Christmas gift. She has low self-esteem and hopes the

hair will help her gain more confidence. Her hopes are

shattered when a pessimistic man from her neighbour-

hood tells her that Father Christmas is not real. However,

her grandmother is there to help her through her uncer-

tainty, and teaches her to love herself.

“I think this film hits home to all young black girls all over

the world,’” said Mpho Setati, a film student at Afda film

school in Johannesburg. “This is a great South Africa film

that showcases the talent of our country, and the world is

taking notice and rewarding our talent.”

The Tribeca Film Festival was held in Manhattan, New York,

from 21 April to 2 May. Currently in its ninth year, it was

launched by well-known Hollywood actor Robert de Niro,

film producer Jane Rosenthal and real estate investor Craig

Hatkoff in 2002. The trio were motivated to start the festival

after the attacks on the World Trade Center in 2001. “We

hoped to use the festival to spur the economic and cultural

revitalisation of the lower Manhattan district and to help

filmmakers reach the broadest possible audience while pro-

moting New York City as a major filmmaking center,” they said

in a statement.

Republished courtesy of mediaclubsouthafrica.com

The award for winning Best Narrative Short Film was R38

336 (US$5 000) in cash, film stock donated by Kodak, and

an art award, A Box of Smile, 1967/89, by Yoko Ono. <

View a trailer at:

http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=feBHND LKjxw&feature =player_embedded

191 >

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South African production Life, Above All was the

talk of the 2010 Cannes Festival after receiving a

10-minute standing ovation at its world premiere

there on 18 May. The film delivers a powerful mes-

sage about the country’s HIV/Aids burden from the

perspective of a young girl whose family is deeply

affected by it.

The movie is competing in Cannes’s Un Certain Regard

(translated as ‘a certain outlook’) section for world

cinema. This has been a part of the festival’s official

selection since 1978, and takes place at the De-

bussy Auditorium.

Introduced two decades after the section’s inclusion

in the festival, the top prize is the Prix Un Certain

Regard, which rewards innovative young talent with

invaluable exposure and financial assistance for distri-

bution in France. The prize, worth €30 000 (R293 000),

has never been won by a South African film.

In fact, only three African films have ever taken hon-

ours in this section – Morocco’s A thousand months

which took the Prix Le Premier Regard or First Glance

Prize in 2003; Moolaadé from Senegal, which scooped

the big prize in 2004; and Burkina Faso’s Delwende,

which took the Prix de l’Espoir or Prize of Hope in

2005.

Life, Above All is the only South African film showing

as part of the official selection this year. It received its

second and third screenings on 19 and 20 May.

With a lot of Cannes’ attention going to the forthcom-

ing Winnie Mandela movie, unjustly in the opinion

of some as it stars American actors, it is hoped that

the increasingly popular local drama will wrench

back some of the focus onto the real South African

film industry.

By Janine Erasmus

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SOUTH AFRICAN TALENT

Life, Above All, based on best-selling Canadian au-

thor Allan Stratton’s young adult novel Chanda’s

Secret, is about a 16-year-old girl dealing with HIV/

Aids and the accompanying stigma. The subject is

particularly poignant in light of South Africa’s huge

HIV/Aids burden, which has cost the lives of hun-

dreds of thousands and has left countless children

orphaned.

The screenplay was adapted by award-winning

playwright and screenwriter Dennis Foon (The

Longlight Legacy trilogy, Little Criminals). The film is

marketed in France as Le Secret de Chanda.

Stratton has since written a standalone sequel ti-

tled Chanda’s Wars, which focuses on the humani-

tarian issue of child soldiers in Africa.

Life, Above All is a South Africa-German collabora-

tion, directed by Cape Town-born Oliver Schmitz,

the son of German immigrants. Schmitz is no stranger

to Cannes, with two of his earlier films, Mapantsula

(1988) and Hijack Stories (2000), making it to the

prestigious competition. The former film was banned

in South Africa at the time, but Cannes was eager to

view it.

Schmitz was humble about his achievement. “It is

the fourth time I am in selection in Cannes but you

don’t get blasé about it because it’s the cream of

what’s happening every year in the film world,” he

said.

His previous works have featured the talents of well-

known South African entertainers such as Rapulana

Seiphemo, the late Dolly Rathebe, Darlington

Michaels, Robert Whitehead, and Tumisho Masha.

Page 194: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

194 >

However, this time it was the young first-time ac-

tress Khomotso Manyaka who stole the show with

her portrayal of Chanda. Manyaka’s performance

has caused a sensation and has been described as

“commanding” (ScreenDaily), “stellar” (Times Live),

and “stunning” (film distributor Bavaria Interna-

tional).

The cast is entirely South African and includes Lerato

Mvelase (Chanda’s mother Lillian), Harriet Manamela

(the neighbour Mrs Tafa), and Keaobaka Makanyane

(Chanda’s friend Esther).

Accompanying Schmitz to Cannes were South African

Minister of Arts and Culture Lulu Xingwana, National

Film and Video Foundation CEO Eddie Mbalo, the

film’s co-producer Grieg Buckle, and cast members

Mvelase and Manamela, as well as young Manyaka.

Renowned film critic Roger Ebert gave the film two

thumbs up, noting in his Cannes blog that it was

warmly received by the notoriously difficult Cannes

audience, who are not known for holding back their

favour – or displeasure. Ebert added that even the

renowned Jean-Luc Godard, whose latest offering

Film: Socialisme showed before Life, After All, man-

aged only a trickle of applause.

The lengthy ovation bestowed on Life, Above All is

a sure sign of approval – “At Cannes, audience satis-

faction can be measured by the length of ovations,”

blogged LA Times journalist, Steven Zeitchik.

“The film is about deep human emotions, evoked with

sympathy and love,” wrote Ebert in his glowing review.

A MODERN SOUTH AFRICA

Life, Above All is set in the community of Elandsdoorn,

near Johannesburg. In the book, the action takes

place in the fictional town of Bonang, somewhere in

Southern Africa. Lead actress Manyake is from the

real town of Groblersdal, which is located in the

Sekhukhune district of Limpopo province.

Page 195: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

195 >

The film’s central character, 12-year-old Chanda, is

first seen as she makes preparations for the burial

of her baby sister Sara, who has died. Her grief-

stricken mother takes ill and her stepfather is drink-

ing heavily, although nobody talks openly to Chan-

da about these problems. The child is left with no

choice but to take over the care of her two younger

siblings.

Rumours begin to spread through the close-knit

community that the baby died because her mother

and father have HIV/Aids – which nobody wants to

acknowledge – and the family is shunned. Chanda’s

mother flees the village and the young girl looks for

answers but finds none. She courageously decides

to tackle the situation head-on, leaving her home

and school to seek her mother, challenge the gos-

sip, find healing in truth, and restore her family’s

name.

The film paints a tragic picture of the devastating

effect that HIV/Aids has had on many families in

South Africa, particularly because of the Thabo

Mbeki government’s inexplicable denial of the link

between HIV and Aids, and the delay in rolling out

antiretroviral treatment.

Children, whose parents have died of HIV/Aids, are

often left to look after the younger ones in the fam-

ily, trying to survive through any means they can

find. In the film, Chanda’s best friend Esther, for in-

stance, sells herself into prostitution to earn money

for herself and her siblings, becoming infected in

the process.

However, with President Jacob Zuma’s new HIV/

AIDS action plan, announced on World Aids Day and

brought into effect in April, the situation in South

Africa is looking somewhat brighter. Patients will

receive more extensive treatment, and all pregnant

HIV-positive women will receive anti-retrovirals at

14 weeks. Zuma also urged South Africans to get

tested for HIV, and to live responsibly. <

Republished courtesy of mediaclubsouthafrica.com

View the trailer at http://www.festival-cannes.fr/en/mediaPlayer/10599.html

Page 196: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

By Nicky Rehbock. With catchy and crude beats, pre-

pubescent bodies, gold teeth, tattoos and mean-looking

mullets, hilarious trio, Die Antwoord, have become

one of South Africa’s hottest – and most unlikely – exports,

landing a deal with a major US label that represents

superstars like Eminem and Lady Gaga.

196 >

Page 197: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

Images from The Secret Chamber featuring Die Antwoord members Ninja and Yo-Landi along with Leon Botha

197 >

Page 198: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

And all this since February 2010, when the group

emerged from relative obscurity with a series of

YouTube videos and their debut album, $O$, posted

as a free download on their official website.

Within days it went viral and the unexpected

swarm of hits, amounting to more than a terabyte

of data, crashed the group’s server, forcing them

to switch their hosting to the major US-based

blog site Boing Boing.

A quick look at YouTube today, four months on,

shows that their Enter the Ninja video has

amassed 5.1-million hits, while Zef Side has

2.2-million views, which clearly attests to Die Ant-

woord’s cult-like global following. Their curious

name is Afrikaans for ‘the answer’.

‘Zef’ refers to the group’s X-factor, which seems

to simultaneously embody white Afrikaner work-

ing-class trashiness and, according to them, “the

ultimate style.”

South African newspaper Beeld says the term

comes from an old make of car, the Ford Zephyr,

which small-town folk here would pimp up with

modified engines and bulging tyres, to rip through

deserted streets during late-night dicing ses-

sions. Disapproving neighbours called these

rough types ‘real zefs’.

Koos Kombuis, one of the country’s best-known

alternative Afrikaans musicians and authors, said

earlier this year that ‘zef’ is a word from his child-

hood, and means ‘common’. But, “these days it’s

not necessarily negative. I like being common. It’s

like wearing high heels with a tracksuit. Being

truly zef takes guts.”

INTERNATIONAL HIT

And guts are certainly what Die Antwoord had in

March and April, when they made their first two over-

seas trips. They began with a mini tour of Europe

Phot

ogra

phs

by S

ean

Met

eler

kam

p.198 >

Page 199: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

and the US, and then returned to North America

to perform at the prestigious Coachella music fes-

tival in California, with a crowd rumoured to be as

large as 85 000. Joining a line-up that included

world-famous Jay-Z, Beyonce and Gorillaz, the

South Africans sent shock-waves through the audi-

ence and earned instant praise from well-known

celebrities and respected publications.

Burlesque star Dita von Teese wrote on Twitter

that the South Africans were among “the best of

Coachella”, and later the New York Times com-

mented that Die Antwoord “fully lived up to its

reputation”.

The LA Times was also taken by the “deliciously

trashy” trio, reporting that the “suspected nov-

elty act proved they had an overwhelming mag-

netism and a ferocious, deadly serious lyrical

flow.”

LOOKING FOR ANSWERS

But who exactly are Die Antwoord, and why has

their particular brand of music and brutal image

created such a stir? The group call themselves a

“fresh, futuristik rap-rave crew from the dark

depths of Africa” (sic). Its members are concep-

tual artist Watkin Tudor Jones, who performs as

the roughed-up gangster ‘Ninja’ alongside slinky

blonde soprano Yolandi Visser, aka ‘Yo-landi

Vi$$er’, and a rather quiet, portly chap known

only as ‘DJ Hi-Tek’.

By opting for cleverly crafted, cryptic media inter-

views, the trio maintain an air of bizarre intrigue.

It’s never quite clear whether they are indeed the

portrayed bunch of poor, low-life pals from run-

down suburbia, or a slick assembly of manufac-

tured personas created to thrill and shock audi-

ences who’ve grown weary of conventional music

genres. Either way, it works.

199 >

Page 200: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

Writers following the craze have their own opin-

ions about the group’s strategy:

“Well, let’s just say that there’s a whole lot more

method to their darkly surreal live shows than

such seeming slapstick might suggest,” reviewer

Miles Keylock writes in the Mail & Guardian On-

line.

US-based music guide Pitchfork goes a bit deeper

in its offbeat analysis Who the hell are Die Ant-

woord?, calling the outfit “Jones’ latest identity-

skewing art project, which, on the surface, is just

the most recent in a never-ending line of ‘did ya

see that?!’ blog-hopping music memes”.

But, “considering the mix of absurdity, genuine

talent and impressive production values, you

can’t help but think: are these guys for real?”

Pitchfork’s Ryan Dombal writes.

GANGLAND TIES

The group’s heavy use of slang and irreverent lyr-

ics emanate from the culture of the Western

Cape’s coloured people, who were forced to settle

on the dusty plains outside Cape Town during the

apartheid years, so authorities could too make

space for more white families within the city.

Most communities on the so-called Cape Flats are

descended from slaves brought to the country

from east and central Africa, the Khoisan who lived

in the region at the time of colonisation in the

1800s, and other indigenous African, and white

people. This complex racial mixing – combined

with a legacy of cross-over culture, displacement

and oppression – still haunt the area today, and

crime, drug abuse and gangsterism are rife.

But there are also likeable things that stem from

this notorious place, like a highly expressive and

Phot

ogra

phs

by S

ean

Met

eler

kam

p.200 >

Page 201: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

often-impersonated dialect – a mix of mainly Eng-

lish and Afrikaans that’s often very funny if you get

the gist – and a thriving hybrid of hip-hop music

from groups like Brasse van die Kaap and Kallitz.

It’s this that Die Antwoord has picked up on and,

perhaps, parodied to blow the minds – and ears

– of fans.

SO BAD, IT’S GOOD

For those who may not immediately appreciate or

understand the group’s skilful fusion, Richard

Poplak, of Canadian publication The Walrus, of-

fers an artful description of zef rap: “an ungodly

potpourri of top-40 hip-hop, chintz house, rave

music, DIY beat-making and bad techno.” In other

words, a combination so wacky and disturbing

you can’t help but be drawn in by it.

Jones’s bad-ass alter-ego, Ninja – who has metallic

incisors, heavy gold neck chains and a patchwork

of prison-gang tattoos – is also straight out of the

Cape Flats. In fact, “this is where Ninja spent

years, mining for meaning among the violence,

the misery, the strong familial bonds – developing

not just a style, but an entire persona”, Poplak

writes.

Jones has been compared to Eminem in this regard,

posing as a “white-boy rapper who successfully

appropriated the energy and anger of the black

ghetto”, editor Kevin Bloom comments in The Daily

Maverick.

But Die Antwoord themselves put it best in their

$O$ album intro, implying they embrace even

more than just “zef-ness” and Cape Flats street

cred: “I represent South African culture. In this

place, you get a lot of different things … Blacks.

Whites. Coloureds. English. Afrikaans. Xhosa.

201 >

Page 202: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

Zulu. Watookal,” says Ninja. “I’m like all these dif-

ferent people, f****d into one person.” Yo-landi

chips in, in her little voice: “Whateva, man.”

Poplak believes this makes Ninja “the ultimate

South African”. The idea is “thrillingly, gloriously

radical”, and an essential step towards racial co-

hesion in South Africa, he writes.

Well, we’ll never quite know whether Die Antwoord

are actually out to unite an entire nation – or simply

cause a bit of controversy and entertaining hype

along the way – as they’ll probably never tell us,

but that’s okay. Their rise to fame has been a gritty

and fascinating study, and has carved out new,

brave arenas of performance and expression. Let’s

hope there’s a lot more to follow ... <

View Die Andwoord’s website at

www.dieantwoord.com

Photographs by Sean Metelerkamp.

This article is republished courtesy of

mediaclubsouthafrica.com.

202 >

Page 203: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

A night out without music is like a business without profit.

Make sure your business has a music licence!!!

At SAMRO we understand the value of music in business. For further information on music licences

please contact us on 011 712 8000 or email [email protected]

Visit us on www.samro.org.za

Page 204: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

SP_JAG_Ad2989.fh11 6/3/10 11:53 AM Page 1

Page 205: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

South Point was established in 2003 to meet the

growing need for student accommodation in South

Africa. “When we entered the property business

we found the majority of students were unable to

find a place in the university residences and were

forced to live in poorly maintained and expensive

accommodation – hardly conducive to promoting

a successful study environment. We therefore sought

to focus our efforts on providing a differentiated

offering to the student market, with an emphasis

on safety, cleanliness and affordability.”

What began as a vision to aid communities of as-

piring professionals in achieving their study goals

has resulted in so much more. Instead of simply

providing safe precincts for students, the begin-

nings of an urban renewal are evident, particularly

in Braamfontein, Johannesburg.

Surrounded by the University of the Witwatersrand,

the University of Johannesburg, the Labour Court,

major corporates, icons of history including Consti-

tution Hill and The Nelson Mandela Bridge, theatres,

local businesses and eateries, a student village

has emerged. With it, a rebirth for the Braamfontein

area.

Braamfontein, spring by the brambles, began its

life in 1853 as a rather large farm covering Park-

town, Melville, Greenside, Roosevelt Park and

Northcliff. By 1889, the farm had been sub-divided

several times and Braamfontein officially became

recognised as an ‘official extension of Johannes-

burg proper’.

205 >

Page 206: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

206 >

According to GA Leyds’ History of Johannes-

burg, the area along Smit and Wolmarans

streets became known as Wanderers’ View,

looking out across the Wanderers Ground

with its plentiful trees. But, by the 1950’s the

rich had moved over the hill to the sunnier

slopes of Parktown and the middle class to

Hillbrow, Yeoville and Bellevue.

What remained was a “low income white work-

ing class area. Braamfontein was then an area

of semi-detached cottages, small flats, cheap

hotels and canteens,” says Keith Beavon,

Johannesburg, the Making and the Shaping

of the City. Leyds stated that the up market

houses “ended their existence, which had

started so full of hope and promise as second

rate lodging houses, but is now being re-

placed with blocks of flats”.

Then in the 1950’s, two things happened

that would see the beginning of change for

Braamfontein: the relocation of the City

Council from the CBD to Braamfontein Hill

and the rezoning of land in Braamfontein to

commercial rights – welcoming the likes

then of Eskom, Shell, SAB, and today, Liberty,

South Point, JD Group and Sappi, among

others. The area has blossomed as a home

to a successful corporate culture, students,

upmarket restaurants, sought after flats

along the northern ridge and thriving local

retail.

Sadly in the 1990’s, the general decline in

the CBD resulted in the neighbouring areas

declining alongside the CBD. The Northern

suburbs became favoured for business with

some core business relocating along with

Johannesburg Stock Exchange. Braamfontein

alleyways became dark, dirty, polluted and

home to crime. The University of the Witwa-

tersrand closed its doors to the surrounding

Braamfontein area and became almost self

contained, dealing a significant blow to the

already struggling retail and restaurant

business in Braamfontein.

Then, in the early 2000s we saw the initiation

of the Braamfontein Regeneration Initiative

– with the objective to “re-establish Braam-

fontein as an area that is well managed,

vibrant, physically attractive and well-lit with

a growing evening economy” driven by the

University, the City Council and the private

sector.

Today Braamfontein is flourishing and a new

energy abounds. The streets are filled with

students, the formally dressed Labour Court

participants headed to lunch in one of the

many restaurants and street cafes emitting

glorious aromas of curries, biryanis and sa-

moosas. The streets are sunny, almost in de-

fiance of the area’s history, and everywhere

you look buildings are being torn down, re-

built and renovated. Alleyways have opened

up, widened and removed altogether, whilst

piazzas are created and urban greening is in

progress. Entertainment venues are making

their appearance too. Local businesses such

as Fatima’s, R. Janas, Mzithos and the famous

Narina Trogon are being revitalised and

Braamfontein is re-emerging as a colourful

Page 207: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

207 >

South Point’s contributions to the rejuvenation of Braamfontein.

Page 208: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

208 >

vibrant student village, business centre, cul-

tural district and seat of learning.

Much of this is thanks to South Point, who,

with their visionary approach seven years

ago, have been core to the rejuvenation of

Braamfontein. Beginning with student ac-

commodation, to assist the plethora of stu-

dents unable to find safe, clean and well-

priced abodes, the business has naturally

extended to professional accommodation,

penthouses, a smart hotel, student bars,

cafes, an exclusive cocktail bar and a piaz-

za, all at the very heart of Braamfontein.

Auckland House, ONE Biccard and Skyline

penthouses have opened the doors for

young professionals who want a taste of

city living, furnished and safe, and more im-

portantly the start of a community living in

Braamfontein. With over 700 apartments

for young professionals living and working

in Braamfontein, the impact on local busi-

ness could be phenomenal. Streets are no

longer deserted as a nightlife naturally be-

gins to flourish and with that, increased

economic activity.

Randlords, at South Point Towers, is a devel-

opment that is situated on the 20th floor of

South Point Towers. An extraordinarily

beautiful rooftop bar has been created for

the city’s well-heeled. A sandstone and

glass construction creates an architecturally

beautiful shell with 360 degree panoramic

views of the city. Open till late and serving

an exotic array of tapas; shellfish, caviar,

fois gras and beautifully designed cocktails

one hopes that this might be the start and

continuation of a vibrant night life in Braam-

fontein – perhaps even persuading some of

the Northerners south to experience Braam-

fontein.

The S Bar and #1 Bar contribute to the variety

of nightlife on offer, with what are typically

‘student joints’. The S Bar, a prime example

of pop-up retail, is positioned in a rugged

shell of brick and concrete. The bar could be

dismantled overnight and replaced with

something new and fresh, accommodating

the fickle nature of our trendy populace.

Constructed using recycled materials, the

interior is intriguing, industrial and bound

to become a dedicated student haunt.

South Point’s latest venture, or adventure,

is the Hotel Lamunu. Lamunu, the Zulu word

for orange, is a smart hotel offering value-

for-money accommodation. There are no

frills or fuss, only the necessities of modern

hotel living. Spilling out onto The Grove, the

newest Piazza on the block, the Hotel Lamunu

is everything a Braamfontein hotel should

be – down to earth, great value and your

ticket to Braamfontein by night.

No self respecting urban development would

be complete without a coffee bar and a SP

Café which brings great coffee to Braamfon-

tein, and hopefully another reason to gather

in the village.

Page 209: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

209 >

Randlords, a rooftop bar, is a development that is

situated on the 20th floor of South Point Towers.

Page 210: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

210 >

Views of Hotel Lamunu.

Page 211: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

211 >

It really does seem that all the ingredients

are in place for a true urban rejuvenation

and a transformation of Braamfontein, with

its good residential accommodation, stu-

dents, businessmen, academics, the Labour

Court, eateries, theatres, open areas to

gather, beginnings of retail, all which are

very accessible by foot. Braamfontein, with

amentieis not being more than a ten-minute

walk away, is linked easily to the CBD and

has easy access to highways. In addition,

the Gautrain and Rea Vaya station are on its

doorstep. The great divide between the cor-

porate north and dilapidated south has de-

creased and the future for Braamies is look-

ing good.

South Point’s building refurbishment pro-

gramme which is currently underway hopes

to increase capacity from 8 500 student

beds in 2010 to 20 000 in 2013, in the major

centres of Braamfontein, Pretoria, Bloem-

fontein, Durban, Port Elizabeth and Cape

Town. Nationally, there are currently 40

buildings for student accommodation.

South Point is a majority black-owned com-

pany, with Lereko Metier Capital Growth Fund

being a 67% shareholder in the company.

LMCGF was formed by its principals Popo

Molefe, Valli Moosa, Thierry Dalais, Anthony

Hewat, Paul Botha and Lulu Gwagwa, who

have all had successful careers in business,

private equity fund management, community

leadership, politics and public service. <

Interior views of Hotel Lamunu.

Page 212: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

World Architecture FestivalBarcelona3-5 November2010

1000 practices

have entered

the WAF

Awards!

Meet hundreds of architects from all over the worldWorld Architecture Festival offers architects from all over the world the chance to meet, share and learn. Since 2008 we have welcomed architects from over 80 countries, and urge you to take advantage of this three day opportunity to network and gain information and inspiration.

Don’t miss out!

Network with

architects from

80 countries

Partner Sponsor:

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Last year’s winners included:

World Building of the YearMapungubwe Interpretation Centre, Peter Rich Architects, South Africa

Future Project of the YearSpanish Pavilion, ShanghaiMiralles Tagliabue EMBT, Spain

Interiors and Fit Out of the YearCorian Super-Surfaces Showroom, ItalyAmanda Levete Architects, United Kingdom

Structural Design of the YearArena Zagreb, CroatiaUpi-2m, Croatia

Judges this year include: Arata IsozakiBarry BergdollStefan BenischRichard HassellSophia van Ellrichshausen

Arata Isozaki Super Jury Chair Japan

Murat Tabanlioglu Turkey

Akihiko Hamada Japan

Isay Weinfeld Brazil

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Ken Tadashi Oshima USA/Japan

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chance to make contacts from abroad, but it’s not just that, I’ve met incredible people and I’ve found it really great.”Peter Rich, Peter Rich Architects, Winner of 2009’s World Building of the Year.

“WAF is a great idea, it’s a great organisation that’s putting together people from all over the world. I was really impressed to be here, to be in touch with people from the same profession from every part of the world. Most of the projects are fantastic.”Benedetta Tagliabue, Miralles Tagliabue Embt, Spain, Future Project Of The Year Winner 2009

The quality of the event - from its organization to the composition of the jury - makes WAF a very unique meeting. Being awarded a prize at that competition is, therefore, a major achievement and recognition.Isay Weinfeld, Architect, Brazil, Shopping Category Winner 2009

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Page 213: DESIGN>ART magazine No. 1

World Architecture FestivalBarcelona3-5 November2010

1000 practices

have entered

the WAF

Awards!

Meet hundreds of architects from all over the worldWorld Architecture Festival offers architects from all over the world the chance to meet, share and learn. Since 2008 we have welcomed architects from over 80 countries, and urge you to take advantage of this three day opportunity to network and gain information and inspiration.

Don’t miss out!

Network with

architects from

80 countries

Partner Sponsor:

To book your place, and for information on planning your whole journey visit www.worldarchitecturefestival.com Quote BLUPAF

To book your place, and for information on planning your whole journey visit www.worldarchitecturefestival.com Quote BLUPAF

“WAF is amazing! At a critical time for architecture, this event is

essential in promoting new and well established fi rms who set the benchmark for innovation around the world.” Rafael Viñoly, World-renowned architect & 2009 Super-Jury Chair

Architectural excellence – LIVE!

Last year’s winners included:

World Building of the YearMapungubwe Interpretation Centre, Peter Rich Architects, South Africa

Future Project of the YearSpanish Pavilion, ShanghaiMiralles Tagliabue EMBT, Spain

Interiors and Fit Out of the YearCorian Super-Surfaces Showroom, ItalyAmanda Levete Architects, United Kingdom

Structural Design of the YearArena Zagreb, CroatiaUpi-2m, Croatia

Judges this year include: Arata IsozakiBarry BergdollStefan BenischRichard HassellSophia van Ellrichshausen

Arata Isozaki Super Jury Chair Japan

Murat Tabanlioglu Turkey

Akihiko Hamada Japan

Isay Weinfeld Brazil

Daniel Bonilla Columbia

Ralph Johnson USA

Enrique Norten Mexico

Vladimir Djurovic Lebanon

Ken Tadashi Oshima USA/Japan

John Patkau Canada

Kjetil Thorsen Norway

Barry Bergdoll USA

Wang Lu China

Sofi a von Ellrichshausen Chile

Manfredi Nicoletti Italy

Lorcan O’Herlihy USA

Saija Hollmen Finland

Shane O’Toole Ireland

Stefan Benisch Germany

Dan Meis USA

Richard HassellSingapore

GET IN TOUCH TODAY!

Call us on: +44 (0) 20 7554 5800Email us at: [email protected] at: www.worldarchitecturefestival.com

Expert judging panelIncludes

“I think it’s been very successful, it’s given me a

chance to make contacts from abroad, but it’s not just that, I’ve met incredible people and I’ve found it really great.”Peter Rich, Peter Rich Architects, Winner of 2009’s World Building of the Year.

“WAF is a great idea, it’s a great organisation that’s putting together people from all over the world. I was really impressed to be here, to be in touch with people from the same profession from every part of the world. Most of the projects are fantastic.”Benedetta Tagliabue, Miralles Tagliabue Embt, Spain, Future Project Of The Year Winner 2009

The quality of the event - from its organization to the composition of the jury - makes WAF a very unique meeting. Being awarded a prize at that competition is, therefore, a major achievement and recognition.Isay Weinfeld, Architect, Brazil, Shopping Category Winner 2009

WAF Ad2 FP_BLUPAF_(420X297.indd 1-2 6/7/10 13:56:50

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31341 SPI art ad portrait version p.indd 1 5/25/10 12:48:00 PM

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Sanlam Private Investments (SPI), one of the

fastest growing businesses within the Sanlam

Group, has forged a very close relationship with

art and investment in art during recent years.

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Taking the Sanlam Art Collection around the country

As part of its ten-year anniversary last year, SPI

participated in a road trip where 83 pieces of the

Sanlam Art Collection were taken around the country.

The event also marked the celebration of a decade

of curatorship by Stefan Hundt, who is responsible

for the Sanlam Art Collection. As the only corporate

art collection exhibited broadly in public art galleries

last year, the exhibition offered South Africans the

opportunity to view this truly representative and

important collection.

For more than 40 years, the Sanlam Group has active-

ly engaged in corporate art collecting and continues

to do so passionately. It currently owns a collection

of about 2 000 pieces, including an eclectic mix of

past and present, which is valued in the region of

R120-million.

Daniël Kriel, CEO of SPI, says that the Sanlam

board took a decision to begin collecting art at a time

when the employer played a pivotal, long-term

role in a person’s life. “In the sixties, companies

were more than just places of work, they were also

social entities which were closely involved in family

life. Sanlam showed movies every Friday night, hosted

Christmas parties and had numerous sporting

teams. It was a natural progression, then to also

invest in art – a cultural investment aimed at bring-

ing joy to employees and beautifying offices. In

addition, the investment in the culture of South

Africa also strongly drove the decision to collect.”

Kriel says that the group has remained deeply

committed to investing in art because it is a pow-

erful tool to develop links between the corporate

and cultural world, build brand awareness and

raise company pride among employees. “Art is a

wonderful way of engaging with both our clients

and employees. We hope that it can play an impor-

tant role in stimulating interest in South Africa’s

cultural and artistic history and can raise curiosity

to follow the continuously changing art landscape

in our diverse country.”

He adds that, as with all investments made by

Sanlam, each art purchase is a business decision

which is taken extremely seriously. “Each must be-

come a valuable and appreciating asset for the group.”

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Stefan Hundt, Sanlam Art Collection curator, says the

collection strategy has not changed significantly

since inception. “We have always aimed to build a

‘representative’ collection which reflects the art from

all sectors of society from the late nineteenth century

until now.

The collection is guided by the principle of collecting

exceptional and meaningful images from career artists

of status who are committed to art in South Africa.

“We acquire more than one piece from each artist, so

that a picture of their career can be told,” says Hundt.

“No other strict rules govern our choices. The collection

comprises contemporary and classic pieces including

photographs, sculptures and paintings. The thread

which binds them together is the significance of each

image we select. It should clearly reflect the integrity

with which the artist has pursued his or her concept

and the degree to which they engage the eye and the

mind of the viewer.”

A public gallery at Sanlam’s Bellville headquarters is

open to the public permanently.

Stephan Welz, Director of Strauss & Co, on the

right, with two of the many art lovers that

attended the opening event of the Sanlam Art

Collection exhibition at the iArt Gallery in Cape

Town on 26 February 2009. Welz delivered the

opening address. The event was sponsored by

Sanlam Private Investments.

Elana Brundyn, Curator of the iArt Gallery in

Cape Town, welcoming guests at the opening

event of the Sanlam Art Collection exhibition at

the iArt Gallery in Cape Town on 26 February

2009. The event was sponsored by Sanlam

Private Investments.

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INNOVATION AWARDS 2009

As part of their ten-year birthday last year, SPI

awarded South African students who demonstrate

exceptional innovation, a quality that SPI consid-

ers central to their business. The winning students

were those that challenged the status quo within

their fields of study by producing truly unique ide-

as, thoughts and concepts which are practical and

add value.

The purpose of the awards was to promote and

encourage innovation within areas of study which

are of particular interest to their clients – high-net-

worth individuals with an appreciation of rarity,

beauty and the finer things in life. For this reason,

students eligible to enter were pursuing studies in

art, jewellery design, wine-making, architecture,

culinary arts, music, fashion design, interior de-

sign, photography, outreach programme. SPI

elected to run the awards exclusively among insti-

tutions, which their research had identified as be-

ing among the top in their respective areas of spe-

cialisation.

The campaign ran from 1 March to 31 July 2009 and

the winner in each category received a cash prize

of R10 000 at an awards ceremony that was held in

Cape Town in October 2009.

TO THE NEXT LEVEL

Their involvement in art and art investment and

the positive response from their clients and other

stakeholders to these initiatives has prompted SPI

to take their relationship with art to the next level.

In this regard, the business has incorporated an

art theme into the design of its new offices in Stel-

lenbosch with pieces from the Sanlam Art Collec-

tion that will be on permanent display. All of these

works of art are from artists from in and around

Stellenbosch.

SPI is also planning some further initiatives to ce-

ment their relationship with the fine art commu-

nity, some of which will be launched later this year.

ABOUT SANLAM PRIVATE INVESTMENTS (SPI)

Part of the Sanlam Investment Group, SPI is a private

client portfolio management and stock broking

business, serving high net worth individuals, char-

itable trusts and smaller institutions. With some

R50 billion of assets under management, it is the

second largest South African private investment

manager, with branches in Cape Town, Stellen-

bosch, Durban, George, Knysna, Johannesburg,

Sandton and Pretoria. <

For more information, visit www.spi.sanlam.com

218 >

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It’s a matter of association

Atterbury has incorporated a strong heritage component in

the Potato Shed - designed to attract a mixed population of

visitors, complementing the built environment in a dynamic,

vibrant and cosmopolitan space and boasting some of the

best cultural offerings in Africa. Historical landmarks in the

immediate vicinity include the poultry shed, the original

Station Master’s residence, the Mary Fitzgerald Square,

Market Theatre and Museum Africa.

The Potato Shed at Newtown is ideally located in the

Johannesburg Inner City with easy access to highways and

the site provides excellent exposure to the M1 freeway, the

Nelson Mandela Bridge and intermodal transport facilities

such as the Park, Metromall, Westgate and Gautrain Stations.

The original Potato Sheds on the Museum Africa and Mary

Fitzgerald Squares will house retail areas of 40 000m2 and

restaurants at the Market Theatre corner. The focus is on

convenience goods and services aimed at catering for the

inner city offi ce workers and tourist market, supported by

exclusive restaurants, coffee shops, open air restaurants,

personal care, boutiques, a City Lodge hotel and ample

parking available for convenience makes the Potato Shed a

winning development.

A sustainable and unique place where people will shop, eat, relax and linger...

www.atterbury.co.zaContact: 012 483 86 76, [email protected]

The Potato Shed (Newtown)

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Whatever the size of your company, our people can use their skills, experience and industry expertise in assurance, tax and advisory services to help you realise your vision. Working with you to find fresh approaches and long-term, smarter solutions. Giving our clients the confidence to succeed in a world of complexity and opportunity.

To find out more about what we can do for your business, please visit www.pwc.com/za.

You have a vision. Make it a reality.

© 2010 PricewaterhouseCoopers Inc. All rights reserved. PricewaterhouseCoopers refers to the network of member firms of PricewaterhouseCoopers International Limited, each of which is a separate and independent legal entity. PricewaterhouseCoopers Inc is an authorised financial services provider. 10-07516

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Whatever the size of your company, our people can use their skills, experience and industry expertise in assurance, tax and advisory services to help you realise your vision. Working with you to find fresh approaches and long-term, smarter solutions. Giving our clients the confidence to succeed in a world of complexity and opportunity.

To find out more about what we can do for your business, please visit www.pwc.com/za.

You have a vision. Make it a reality.

© 2010 PricewaterhouseCoopers Inc. All rights reserved. PricewaterhouseCoopers refers to the network of member firms of PricewaterhouseCoopers International Limited, each of which is a separate and independent legal entity. PricewaterhouseCoopers Inc is an authorised financial services provider. 10-07516

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PricewaterhouseCoopers provides industry-

focused assurance, tax and advisory services

to build public trust and enhance value for

our clients and their stakeholders. More than

163 000 people in 151 countries across our

network share their thinking, experience and

solutions to develop fresh perspectives and

practical advice.

At PricewaterhouseCoopers, we apply our in-

dustry knowledge and professional expertise

to identify, report, protect, realise and create

value for our clients and their stakeholders.

The strength of this value proposition is

based on the breadth and depth of the firm’s

client relationships.

Networks are built around clients to provide

them with our collective knowledge and re-

sources. Our international network, experience,

industry knowledge and business under-

standing are used to build trust and create

value for clients.

PricewaterhouseCoopers is not only bigger

than many professional services firms but our

structure and culture enable us to be funda-

mentally different as well. Our people are fo-

cused on issues that matter to our clients and

all our stakeholders, namely building trust,

creating sustainable value and providing

leadership.

BUILDING TRUST

Building trust matters deeply to all stake-

holders. It underpins everything we do at

PricewaterhouseCoopers. Building trust is

obvious in public company audit work and it

also underlies significant and innovative

projects in financial regulation, reporting and

control. Investors demand information that

will enable them to judge the value of a com-

pany relative to the risks that it takes. Inves-

tors rely on us, as the auditors and advisers

to those companies, to provide assurance

that attests to the reliability and relevance of

the information companies are providing. In

this way, we build public trust.

CREATING SUSTAINABLE VALUE

Creating sustainable value is at the heart of

the matter for companies and their stake-

holders. As members of the accounting pro-

fession, we play an essential role in making

sure that appropriate systems and controls

are in place to report accurate and timely infor-

mation, and provide sound advice that does

not put reputation at risk for short-term gain.

Developing and maintaining trust, whilst cre-

ating wealth with the advice we give, being a

trusted business adviser, is where we seek to

differ from the competition.

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224 >

PROVIDING LEADERSHIP

Leadership is one of our three core values; to

us it means much more than having the big-

gest market share. It means advising and

leading the way forward on difficult issues for

our clients and their investors. In addition to

being a leader in our profession, within the

many markets and industries within which we

live and work, we have endeavoured for many

years to provide leadership on the need for

greater transparency and corporate reporting.

Working with organisations such as the World

Business Council for Sustainable Development

and the Global Reporting Initiative, as well as

being involved with developments in corporate

reporting such as the King Committee, we are

leading the debate with regard to transparen-

cy, good governance and reporting.

A TEAM TAILORED TO OUR CLIENTS’ NEEDS

PricewaterhouseCoopers is defined and

shaped by the way our clients like to work.

Their organisations and the way in which they

operate are varied and never static. Instead,

they evolve constantly, requiring different

skills and knowledge. Over time they will grow

and so will their needs. Our depth, diversity

and geographical spread means we have the

ability to meet their needs with the perfect

team of people.

AN INTEGRATED GLOBAL APPROACH

We are not bound by traditional barriers. Our

people and knowledge are deployed wherever

they are needed, across financial, political

and geographical boundaries. In this way our

people develop both a broad overview of global

issues and an intimate understanding of their

own sectors. Those with global experience

work alongside others with deep local knowl-

edge.

A CHANGING INDUSTRY

Professional services are undergoing rapid

change through a transformation driven by

regulatory restrictions, as well as clients’ de-

mands for better service. Pricewaterhouse-

Coopers has taken a leading role in meeting

this challenge.

GLOBAL REACH, LOCAL KNOWLEDGE

Being global is not the only competitive ele-

ment that counts. Local knowledge and capa-

bility are extremely important as well.

Business success is never achieved in the

same way in two different places. To gain a com-

mercial edge globally, a business must repli-

cate its local successes over and over again in

various environments, each with its own sen-

sitivities and characteristics that are tailored

to specific goals and conditions. That is why

local knowledge and capability are so impor-

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225 >

tant. This is the reason why we focus on un-

derstanding national linguistic, regulatory

and cultural differences, and for adapting our

services to our clients’ local customs and

working styles. This means all our services

involve a careful balance between our global

expertise and local experience, and between

global trends and the local business environ-

ment. We strike this balance by taking the

most relevant and innovative ideas from

wherever they arise and apply them as work-

able, practical solutions in a local context.

We follow this approach in every one of the

countries in which we work. It is a strategy that

underpins our close involvement in the life of

local communities. This attitude fosters the

rich cultural diversity within Pricewaterhouse-

Coopers. And for our clients, it gives access to

expert advice, anywhere, at any time.

COMMITTED TO QUALITY

A strong and durable reputation is among the

most valuable assets any organisation can

possess. Such a reputation can only be sus-

tained by embedding quality deep within the

organisation.

Our reputation depends on adhering to the

highest standards of quality. That message

starts at the top of the organisation and touches

every aspect of our work, including the clients

and organisations with whom we do business,

our approach and methodologies, and our

quality assurance and performance manage-

ment processes.

A WORLD OF SKILLS AND EXPERIENCE

Across PricewaterhouseCoopers, our people

have a firm grasp of business principles and

processes. Our wide range of services are de-

signed to assist a diverse client base to solve

complex business problems and enhance

their ability to build value, manage risk and

improve performance.

Globally, we provide industry-focused assur-

ance, tax and advisory services for public and

private clients, primarily in four areas:

> Corporate accountability

> Risk management

> Structuring and mergers and acquisitions

> Performance and process improvement

TRANSFORMATION

As one of the largest professional services

firms in the world and in South Africa, we believe

that we have a responsibility to play a role in

empowering all the people of our country,

starting with our staff.

We strive to be a transformed firm that repre-

sents the demographics of South Africa, and

also to create an environment that will enable

growth and economic empowerment for all

our people, in particular, those that were pre-

viously disadvantaged. <

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Website: www.scaw.co.za

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The Scaw Metals Group (Scaw) is an international group, manufacturing a diverse range of steel products. Its principaloperations are located in South Africa, South America, Canada and Australia. Smaller operations are in Namibia, Zimbabweand Zambia. Scaw’s Specialist products manufactured for the shaft mining and surface mining industries include:

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Scaw provides a full range of customer support services. A team of qualifiedengineers with extensive experience in all aspects of steel wire ropes, chain andcast products are available to advise on the selection, handling, installation andmaintenance of products as well as provide on-site inspection of products andequipment.

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