Saturday, September 5, 2009

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September 5nd Saturday

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Graffiti offers structure for Brazilian youth

The Power of Culture, 24 August 2009, Netherlands

"Graffiti artists in Brazil take the time to make special works of art, usually with a social or political message. That is why we are organizing a life-size open air exposition within the framework of Brazil Rotterdam: R.U.A. - Reflexo o Urban Art - lines, colours and forms on Contemporary Brazilian Street Art ", says Anouk Piket of Caramundo, a young Dutch ngo that supports cultural grassroots initiatives in Latin America.

"Caramundo invited ten Brazilian graffiti artists to make life-size works of art in Rotterdam. In doing so, more emphasis is placed on the positive aspects of street graffiti: aspects to which often little attention is devoted in the Netherlands. Graffiti can revitalize impoverished parts of a city and turn these into meeting points. This is now often the case in the favelas, the shanty towns of many large Brazilian cities, including São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro."

GAIS and Stile, two Brazilian graffiti artists who were invited, are connected with the Projeto Queto through Nação, a graffiti crew in Rio de Janeiro. It was for this reason that graffiti artist Francisco da Silva of Nação approached Caramundo in 2006 about a cultural project in Morro do Queto / Sampaio, to give the favela a positive impulse. Now, three years later, Moro do Queto has its own cultural centre where a variety of artistic workshops are organized, including on graffiti.

"Art and culture are scarcely available in Brazil's favelas. The only pastimes available to the youth is their Baile Funk in the weekend or TV Globo with its endless soap series. With art we hope to inspire the youth to learn more and read more: to discover what life has to offer outside of their day-to-day existence. Along with other activities, graffiti helps to establish discipline and structure. The participants not only learn about graffiti techniques, but also come into contact with art, culture and language. Letters are important in graffiti, which means that reading and writing are also addressed in the workshops. Stile, for example, only uses letters in his graffiti, as a result of which other graffiti artists - even those in other countries - come to him for answers to their questions," says Piket.



This photographic exhibition features photos from the 1980s taken by Gille de Vlieg during the Resistance campaigns. De Vlieg was a member of the Black Sash movement and became a photographer during that time. She became involved with documentary photography in rural and urban areas and her images have been published in newspapers, magazines and books nationally and internationally. The show opens at Durban Art Gallery on 9 Septembe


The exhibition “Past/Present” is a survey of works by Andrew Verster who turns 72 this year. The artist has been given two retrospectives by the Durban Art Gallery in 1987 and 1997. This exhibition takes the time frame from 1994 – the start of democracy in South Africa - and shows works from that time to the present. The artist places significance on this particular period as it has been a milestone in his life mainly due to the freedom which was enshrined in the new Constitution which gave equal rights to all. Speaking

A residency for Emerging Female Artists has been scheduled for eight weeks in Cape Town, South Africa. Artists will be sharing an open studio space at the historical Castle of Good Hope from 18 January to 14 March 2010. The selected women artists will represent Africa from regions of eastern, western and southern Africa, and finally two from outside Africa (Europe, America). The call for application is now open and due by 16th August 2009. The objective of this residency is to source and nurture new emerging female artists, especially of colour




Mosa Mohave photogravure by Edward Curtis

A fascinating exhibition comes to the Durban Art Gallery in May. Sacred Legacy features reproductions of historical photographs of the native people of North America by legendary photographer/ethnographer Edward Curtis whose life spanned both the old West and its final destruction in the twentieth century. The result is a unique photographic record of an era and broad group of people whose representation is more usually rendered in American television and cinema. After seeing so many fictionalised images of America’s indigenous people, it is remarkable to see the people and landscape free of the biases of modernism



After exhibiting in New York, London, Dublin, Tokyo, and cities across Africa, Stary Mwaba will show his latest series of paintings, "Solace of a Migrant", at Gallery MOMO in Johannesburg, opening on Thurs 14 May 09. Mwaba's paintings shown at the Joburg Art Fair have already generated excitement for the upcoming solo show. The young artist, only 32, generates his concepts for his paintings from his roots in rural Zambia and the struggles and aspirations of his people, and, especially for this exhibit, finding one's place in a world that doesn't readily offer solace


South Africa’s white and yellow pages of the South African art world in its 6th edition is now available to artists, leading decision makers, gallery owners and directors of collections, local and international art libraries. The directory is the largest verified source of information regarding SA art infrastructure and includes information on art schools, museums,



Seippel Gallery, in association with the Pretoria Art Museum, are pleased to launch the opening of Mbongeni Buthelezi's first national touring exhibition.On show will be black-and-white portraits, colourful works from the series Childhood, sepia paintings from the Winter in Kliptown series, and an overview of Buthelezi's latest plastic paintings. Buthelezi has moved on from the style of his earlier paintings and aquarelle drawings to a unique figurative technique which produces works that resemble sculpted reliefs and abstract forms



South African designer Heath Nash uses unusual materials for his designs and work to save the environment at the same time. Nash decided to “look at material for material’s sake” to explore what designs could be fashioned out of them. He said that it was a radical approach that worked backwards, rather than the usual way of coming up with a design and then, looking



Tryptych Care By Johannes Phokela


Artist Johannes Phokela is known for recontextualizing works by Old European Masters like Breugel, Jacob De Ghen and Rubens, among others, and giving them a completely new meaning by adding unsettling features such as an African person, a red nose or bananas. In his just concluded Standard Bank Gallery Exhibition entitled ‘I like My Neighbours’ Johannes explores the psychological impact of meeting new people. For him new people or neighbours supply him ‘with all the material he needs to create his very intelligent and witty works


Madam Suzma by Vusi Beauchamp

Obert contemporary at Melrose arch presents "Smokin Cheese" from 12-31 march 2009 by Vusi Beauchamp. Beauchamp is a recent graduate in painting from the Tshwane University of Technology. Inspired by classic comics and cartoons, Beauchamp has developed his own cast of characters who offer cutting commentary on present day South African society. His work is often infused with graphic text that challenges outdated stereotypes and racial profiles



Kay Hassan occupies an intriguing place amongst artists of his generation. A generation heavily influenced by Polly Street modernists including Lucas Sithole, Leonard Matsoso, Alfred Khumalo and Ezrom Legae , artists who emerged from the harsh urban areas of apartheid environment and created works of art that defied prejudices and self pity. Their works were notable for having escaped from European modernism, naiveté and primitivism. Hassan distinguished himself with work that reconsiders Conceptual and post-Conceptual art practices from an intensely personal and emotional art perspective. His work moves




A two day auction of decorative and fine arts was held by Stephan Welz & Co in association with Sotheby’s on February 24 and 25. Over R10-million was raised. Despite negative financial indicators, these outstanding results proved that the art market in South Africa is very much alive.“Collectors continued to battle it out in the sale room, proving that quality and desirability outweigh the economic climate and overall sense of sobriety,” said Cape Town painting specialist, Phillippa Duncan. Two art works proved pivotal to the success of the sale. Keen bidding on the telephones and in the room were responsible for Erik


His “Jozi”, a street scene of peddlers with fruits and umbrellas is a busy, lively congestion; but the subject registers only momentarily. Soon it is the technique that you see: His adeptness at making connections, choosing the right shades to fit in (he needs an awful lot of paper) is what surely makes the magic. Again it’s the minuteness of it all. All of these, the line of buildings, people, their shadows, how he catches the time of day, all using paper still does not jar the eye. A calm, naturalness, springs out of this all. It is after considering these that the true beauty of his work emerges and from there



Freedom - infectious freedom - and the abandon that comes with, leap up literary in Andrew Verster’s “Bodyworks” series. The 71-year old South African, who speaking as a gay man makes a statement that elsewhere might sound enigmatic when he says “For the first time in my life I became legal”. But he is South Africa; this statement and the joy expressed in his work celebrate the post-1994 South Africa. His works are traveling through the country, a journey



The works by Wayne Barker, Pat Muatloe and Dinkies Sithole transformed through soft colour images into subtle symbols. Barker through his tradition of neon lights and markings recreated consideration relating to despair and plight of displaced émigré souls in “Luggage and Clandestine”. This is to say nothing of the fact that luminaries Marlene Dumas and William Kentridge who have wowed audiences the world over were also on show at the same exhibitio


“All the sculptures and the frames are plain white or bleached out - as it were, evoking the sense of absence or reconstruction, perhaps simplicity, neutrality or restraint and vagueness or simply incompleteness of the work itself.”

This is the kind of reaction that South African Artist, Marco Cianfanelli seems to inspire. The son of printers, who grew up in an industrial area and who is himself working out in an industrial area in Johannesburg, he has been described as an artist who “romanticizes space and its inverse”. The intensity that Cianfanelli inspires is not incidental but forms some coherence


Museum Africa in Newtown has a new chief curator, and he's encouraging his staff to have tantrums as a way of creating a lot of noise around badly needed new vision for the museum. He is Ali Hlongwane, formerly the curator of the Hector Pieterson Museum and Memorial in Orlando West,



At the heart of Kate Gottgens latest body of work lies a sense of entrapment; a quiet dissonance that emergies in the use of evocative imagery, painted in ash. Gottgens started photographing the contents of a props warehouse in Voortrekker Road, that grim grey, modernist trash-can of a road that runs through some of the bleakest mid-century suburbs of Cape Town. Subjects distort, ambiguities shift and a sense of unease is manifested. The ash evokes a realm between worlds, a liminal universe of dreams



Gallery on the Square invites you to an ongoing exhibition featuring artists Phillemon Hlungwani, Vusi Mfupi and Thabo Molapo. Philemon’s work is predominately self-expressive in light of his background and Christian beliefs while Vusi’s work portrays a celebration of youth and mobility. Thabo employs the medium of traditional weaving as an expression
















It is not the FIFA Football World Cup, but the organisers of Cape Africa Platform are promising that for lovers of African Art and Art generally, starting this December, South Africa – i.e. Cape Town - will be the go-to town. The series of events kicking off on December 4 are planned to culminate with a show of contemporary art from across the continent, which the organisers promise will be “ground-breaking.” For now, from December 4-6, weighty matters and topics from artists and philosophers will dissect such areas as the “state of contemporary African art,” “networks without borders,” curating African arts and more. Speakers include Angolan artist “Etona” Antonio Tomas Ana and philosopher Patricio Batsikama, to researcher and artist Monica Banyana Selelo (Botswana) and South African




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