Creative Feel May 2017

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SA R36,90 (incl. VAT) - MAY 2017


GLOBAL CREATIVE ECONOMY

2015 2015 EY EY report, report, ‘Cultural ‘Cultural Times’ Times’ found: found:

10% 10%

8% 8%

3%

OF OFTHE THEWORLD’S WORLD’SGDP GDP 6% 6%

USA USA

SOUTH SOUTH KOREA KOREA

CHINA CHINA

BRAZIL BRAZIL

RUSSIA RUSSIA

INDIA INDIA

2% 2%

SOUTH SOUTH AFRICA AFRICA

4% 4%

NIGERIA NIGERIA

=$2,250BILLION BILLION =29.5 MILLION MILLION JOBS JOBS WORLDWIDE WORLDWIDE

ETHIOPIA ETHIOPIA

CREATIVE CREATIVE & & CULTURAL CULTURAL INDUSTRY INDUSTRY (CCI) (CCI) REVENUE REVENUE

CCI CCIGDP GDPCONTRIBUTION CONTRIBUTIONBY BYCOUNTRY COUNTRY

SOUTH AFRICAN CREATIVE ECONOMY

This This creative creative economy economy isis one one of of South South Africa’s Africa’s most most underappreciated underappreciated economic economic drivers, drivers, keeping keeping thousands thousands in in jobs jobs and and contributing contributing almost almost 3% 3% to to GDP. GDP. Unlocking Unlocking this this potential potential isis key key to to South South Africa’s Africa’s growth. growth.

FACTS & FIGURES: SA

2013/14 2013/14 Mapping Mapping Study Study by by the the Department Department of ofArts Arts and and Culture Culture showed showed some some interesting interesting trends trends about about the the CCIs CCIs in in SA. SA. IN IN2014 2014SA’S SA’SCREATIVE CREATIVEECONOMY ECONOMYCONTRIBUTED CONTRIBUTEDOVER OVER

R90.5BILLION

TO TOTHE THENATIONAL NATIONALECONOMY ECONOMYOR OR2.9% 2.9%OF OFTHE THEGDP GDPIN IN2013/14 2013/14

2.93%

CCI CCIJOBS JOBSMADE MADEUP UP

OF OFTOTAL TOTAL

EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENTIN INSA. SA.IN IN2014 2014(443 (443778 778JOBS), JOBS),SLIGHTLY SLIGHTLYMORE MORE THAN THANMINING MINING

R24BILLION

IN INTAXES TAXESIN INTHE THE2013/14 2013/14PERIOD PERIOD

50% 40% 30%

OF OFTHE THECREATIVE CREATIVEINDUSTRIES INDUSTRIESAND ANDENTERPRISES ENTERPRISES ARE AREOWNED OWNEDBY BYBLACK BLACKSOUTH SOUTHAFRICANS AFRICANS

ARE AREOWNED OWNEDBY BYWOMEN WOMEN

BY BYYOUNG YOUNGENTREPRENEURS ENTREPRENEURS


WHAT IS THE SOUTH AFRICAN CULTURAL OBSERVATORY? The The South SouthAfrican African Cultural Cultural Observatory Observatory(SACO) (SACO) isis aa ‘Creative ‘Creative Economy EconomyThink ThinkTank’ Tank’.. Established Established by bythe the Department Department of ofArts Arts and and Culture Culture (DAC) (DAC) in in 2015, 2015, out out of ofthe the Mzansi Mzansi Golden Golden Economy EconomyStrategy, Strategy, the the Cultural Cultural Observatory Observatoryisis aa statistical statistical research research institute institute tasked taskedwith with charting charting the the impact impact of ofthe the cultural cultural and and creative creative industries industries (CCIs) (CCIs) in in South SouthAfrica. Africa. ItIt isis aa national national organisation organisation and and aa project project of ofthe the DAC, DAC, hosted hosted by byNelson Nelson Mandela Mandela University University(NMU) (NMU) in in partnership partnershipwith with Rhodes Rhodes University Universityand and the the University Universityof ofFort Fort Hare. Hare. The The main main purpose purpose of ofthe the Cultural Cultural Observatory Observatoryisis the the development development of ofaa comprehensive comprehensive cultural cultural information information system systemwhich which continuously continuouslycaptures captures cultural cultural data data and and monitors monitors and and evaluates evaluates government government initiatives initiatives in in the the sector. sector.

FOCUS: FOCUS: TRENDS TRENDS || ANALYSIS ANALYSIS || MAPPING MAPPING || POLICY POLICY || IMPACT IMPACT || RESEARCH RESEARCH VOICE: VOICE: We We are are the the commanding commanding voice voice in in the the economy economy of ofArts, Arts, Culture Culture & & Heritage Heritage sectors sectors and and CCIs. CCIs. KNOWLEDGE: KNOWLEDGE: We We provide provide new new knowledge, knowledge, insights insights and and tools tools to to unlock unlock the the potential potential of of the the Mzansi Mzansi Golden Golden Economy Economywhile while monitoring monitoring and and evaluating evaluating projects. projects. WORLD WORLD CLASS CLASS RESEARCH: RESEARCH: We We develop develop world-class world-class research research and and statistical statistical information information on on the the creative creative and and cultural cultural economy economy of of South South Africa. Africa. ANALYSIS: ANALYSIS: We We are are responsible responsible for for facilitating facilitating the the mapping, mapping, analysing, analysing, monitoring monitoring and and evaluation evaluation of of the the Arts, Arts, Culture Culture & & Heritage Heritage sectors sectors in in South South Africa. Africa. ENABLER: ENABLER: We We are are an an enabler/ enabler/ facilitator facilitator of of aa prosperous prosperous South South African African Cultural Cultural and and Creative Creative economy. economy.

WHAT DOES THE SOUTH AFRICAN MEASURING MEASURING & & VALUING VALUING SOUTH SOUTH AFRICA’S AFRICA’S CULTURAL OBSERVATORY DO? MEASURING MEASURING & & VALUING VALUING SOUTH SOUTH AFRICA’S AFRICA’S MEASURING MEASURING & & VALUING VALUING SOUTH SOUTH AFRICA’S AFRICA’S CULTURAL CULTURAL & & CREATIVE CREATIVE ECONOMY ECONOMY CULTURAL CULTURAL & & CREATIVE CREATIVE ECONOMY ECONOMY CULTURAL CULTURAL & & CREATIVE CREATIVE ECONOMY ECONOMY Mainly Mainly evidence evidence based based research research into into the the creative creative economy, economy, including: including:

CHAMPIONING CHAMPIONING EVIDENCE EVIDENCE >> >> INFLUENCING INFLUENCING POLICY POLICY >> >> SHARING SHARING INSIGHT INSIGHT >> >> INFORMING INFORMING DECISION-MAKING DECISION-MAKING >> >> ASSESSING ASSESSING POTENTIAL POTENTIAL >> >> BUILDING BUILDING INTELLECTUAL INTELLECTUAL CAPITAL CAPITAL FOR FOR THE THE SECTORS SECTORS AND AND THE THE INDUSTRIES INDUSTRIES

Informing decision-making Informing decision-making Informing decision-making Assessing potential Assessing potential Assessing potential intellectual capitalcapital BuildingBuilding intellectual capital Building intellectual

MEASURING & VALUING SOUTH AFRICA’S CULTURAL & CREATIVE ECONOMY


WINTER SYMPHONY SEASON

CALL 031 369 9438 TO SUBSCRIBE & SAVE UP TO 20%

Making music together. THURSDAY, 1 JUNE 2017, 7:30PM, DURBAN CITY HALL

031 369 9438 • www.kznphil.org.za

Conductor:

Naum Rousine

Soloists:

Liebrecht Vanbeckenvoort, piano Nozuko Teto, soprano Violina Anguelov, mezzo-soprano Wayne Mkhize, tenor

WORLD SYMPHONY SERIES

Mthunzi Nokubeka, baritone

WITH OUTSTANDING SOLOISTS, CONDUCTORS

AND

Yale Glee Club Choir (USA)

Brahms

Piano Concerto No. 1 in D minor, Op. 15

Beethoven

Mass in C major, Op. 86

THURSDAY, 8 JUNE 2017, 7:30PM, DURBAN CITY HALL

WINTER SEASON 2017

STAR

Choir:

Conductor:

Daniel Boico

Soloist:

Philippe Graffin, violin

Glazunov

Overture solennelle, Op. 73

Lalo

Symphonie Espagnole in D minor, Op. 21

Shostakovich

Symphony No. 10 in E minor, Op. 93

AN

INTERNATIONAL CHOIR, THE KZN

THURSDAY, 15 JUNE 2017, 7:30PM, DURBAN CITY HALL

PHILHARMONIC

Conductor:

Daniel Raiskin

Soloist:

Lukas Vondracek, piano

Weber

Overture to Euryanthe

THE

WINTER

WILL

PRESENT

SEASON

OF

ITS

RENOWNED WORLD SYMPHONY

Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 4 in G minor, Op. 40 Dvorák

Symphony No. 7 in D minor

SERIES FROM 1 TO 22 JUNE 2017. THURSDAY, 22 JUNE 2017, 7:30PM, DURBAN CITY HALL Conductor:

Daniel Raiskin

Soloists:

DECODA Ensemble *

Van Dijk

Drop

Lutoslawski

Dance Preludes

Haydn

Sinfonia Concertante in B flat, Op. 84

Beethoven

Symphony No. 5 in C minor, Op. 67

* DECODA is an affiliate ensemble of Carnegie Hall in New York

Bongani Tembe, Artistic Director

“The

KZN

Philharmonic

is

committed

to

Single tickets priced from R65 – R230 are available at Computicket. All concerts commence at 7:30pm at the Durban City Hall. Pre-concert talks are held

enriching the cultural life of South Africa’s diverse

from 6pm - 6:40pm. The City Hall precinct, including

audiences by presenting world-class concerts

surrounding parking garages, is patrolled by a

and implementing education and community

dedicated security team.

engagement programmes.”


Liebrecht Vanbeckenvoort

DECODA Ensemble

Nozuko Teto

SOME OF THE Mthunzi Nokubeka

Philippe Graffin

ARTISTS FEATURED IN THE KWAZULU-NATAL

Lukas Vondracek

Naum Rousine

PHILHARMONIC’S WINTER SEASON 2017

Daniel Boico

Violina Anguelov

The KwaZulu-Natal Philharmonic Orchestra

Wayne Mkhize

Daniel Raiskin




Cover image:

44 LOOT: MAD ABOUT JEWELRY From 4 to 8 April 2017, the Museum of Arts and Design

Costume design sketch for the film A Lonely Place to Die

(MAD) in New York presented LOOT: MAD About Jewelry,

Credit: Hayley Nebauer

cover story

the annual exhibition and sale of contemporary art jewellery.

46 MUSE Moroccan-born artist Booshra will be having her solo

42 TELLING STORIES THROUGH CLOTHING

exhibition titled Muse at Candice Berman Gallery, Johannesburg from 29 June to 13 July 2017.

From live productions to film and television, the characters that we see are elevated by the theatrics in their costumes. Building personality with

48

MID-CENTURY MASTERSTROKE Design Joburg, featuring Rooms on View makes its debut

clothing is an art form on its own, one that Hayley

this May at the Sandton Convention Centre. The show

contents Nebauer is incredibly skilled at

promises to bring together an inspiring array of furniture

.

and design ranges, among which, one style stands out… mid-century modernism.

arts and culture 30 THE CREATIVE ECONOMY’S UNPARALLELED POTENTIAL Quantifying the value of a nation’s cultural creative

50

DARLINGS OF LOCAL DESIGN In an inaugural show highlighted by unprecedented collaborations between South Africa’s most prominent design talents and brands, Design Joburg, featuring Rooms on View, is thrilled to announce the DARLINGS feature.

economy plays a huge role in decision-making for future cultural investments and initiatives – and it’s also central to how we understand the fast-paced, changing world.

34 CION: A REQUIEM OF RAVEL’S BOLÉRO

52 STRAUSS & CO’S JOHANNESBURG SALE SPOTLIGHTS A DECADE THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING Strauss & Co’s forthcoming Johannesburg live sale includes a selection of important works by leading

Produced in collaboration with the Market Theatre,

South African artists, including standout lots by

Gregory Maqoma’s newest choreographic piece, Cion:

stalwarts of the auction market, JH Pierneef, Alexis

A Requiem of Ravel’s Boléro, will premiere at the Market

Preller and Irma Stern. The auction, which will be

Theatre on 25 May and run until 4 June. Creative Feel

held at the Wanderer’s Club on 5 June, also includes a

spoke to Gregory Maqoma, Mannie Manim and Jacques

number of iconic works made in the 1990s.

van der Watt of BlackCoffee about the planning and pre-production for this interesting new work.


54 TUMBLING DOWN A BUNNY-HOLE INTO LIZA’S WONDERLAND Liza Grobler’s April show at Everard Read in Cape Town, entitled Maybe Time can Fold was ‘a tangible, textured, multi-coloured montage of time, place and space by the artist, to be explored at the audience’s leisure’. Art lecturer and historian, Lloyd Pollak, reviews the exhibition.

56 KRUGERRAND: CELEBRATING A MODERN-DAY CLASSIC The Krugerrand brand has become synonymous with gold coinage the world over, since it was first introduced in South Africa on the 3rd July 1967.

lifestyle and entertainment 68 69 70

BOOK REVIEWS CD REVIEWS CINEMA NOUVEAU

contents 60

THE MARKET SQUARE

The newly built Market Square has brought an interesting new dynamic to the arts hub in Newtown.

18

The award-winning architecture, with stunning interior

Artlooks & Artlines is a monthly column

ARTLOOKS & ARTLINES

murals created by Artist Proof Studio, is the new home

by Ismail Mahomed, CEO of the Market

for the Market Theatre Foundation as well as a campus

Theatre Foundation.

for students at the Market Theatre Laboratory and Market Photo Workshop.

64

contributors

CELEBRATING A NATION’S JAZZ

Between 29 June and 8 July, some of South Africa and the world’s top young and established jazz musicians take to Grahamstown for the Standard

20

LITERARY LANDSCAPES

Literary Landscapes is a monthly column written

by Indra Wussow, a writer, translator and director of

the Sylt Foundation.

22

BUSINESS & ARTS

Bank Jazz Festival. This year’s programme

Business & Arts is a monthly column by

promises to be exciting and different and, as

Michelle Constant, CEO of Business and Arts

always, excellent.

South Africa (BASA).

24

THE ART OF PERFORMANCE Dave Mann is an editor and award-winning arts journalist.


EDITOR’S NOTE That special moment

I

am generally not a hoarder at all. Every so often, a big black bag is my answer to creating space. As to my cupboard, it is Hospice or the Salvation Army Children’s Home who benefit from this decluttering. There is one thing, though, that I find very difficult to throw out – my special collection of theatre programmes. I still have quite a few special ones from my teenage years, which is longer ago than I like to admit, and they are still very precious.

The theatre has always held a special fascination for me. There is simply no better moment than when the curtain rises, the

stage is revealed and the set design transports me to a different world for the next couple of hours. I can remember moments when I held my breath in awe of so much beauty and such exquisite design. It is the attention to detail and the way in which it enhances the actual performance that makes a set design great.

Athol Fugard’s The Shadow of the Hummingbird SOURCE Market Theatre

West Side Story PHOTO Jesse Kramer

A great set can be minimalistic, depicting a shantytown with a corrugated iron backdrop; or like in Egoli, showing the world of Johannesburg miners; or the delightful, gentle study from where Athol Fugard tells the story of The Shadow of the Hummingbird. More recently, I admired the design of West Side Story’s set. Designed by the late, legendary South African designer Johan Engels, this dynamic set shifted and changed to allow for some great multi-story scenes featuring powerful performances. One can’t forget spectacular, innovative theatrical lighting that can bring a stage to life. Many plays that stick out in my memory were a powerful combination of excellent acting, inventive stage and lighting design and beautiful costumes. For this issue of Creative Feel, we looked at the impact of theatre design on Cion: A Requiem of Ravel’s Boléro, a new Vuyani Dance Theatre production. In this exciting new piece, Gregory Maqoma uses the music of Ravel’s Boléro to explore the character of a professional mourner – Toloki of Zakes Mda’s Ways of Dying and Cion. We spoke to the designers involved in this unusual production: Mannie Manim, Jacques van der Watt and of course, Gregory Maqoma, whose vision these designers are bringing to life. To find out a bit more about the art of costume design, we also spoke to talented designer Hayley Nebauer who has a long list of incredible film and TV credits to her name. A Creative Feel design issue with a twist, a homage to theatre design.

Lore 10 / Creative Feel / May 2017


JH Pierneef, Farm Jonkershoek with Twin Peaks Beyond, Stellenbosch, 1928 R6 000 000 - 8 000 000

AUCTION

Important South African & International Art 5 June 2017, The Wanderers Club, Illovo, Johannesburg Preview 2-4 June, 10am-5pm | Walkabout 3 and 4 June, 11am 011 728 8246 | www.straussart.co.za | 021 683 6560

Strauss & Co: The global leader in the South African art market


We love this!

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PUBLISHER & EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Lore Watterson; lore@desklink.co.za COPUBLISHER & PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Chris Watterson; chris@desklink.co.za DEPUTY EDITOR Tamaryn Greer; tammy@desklink.co.za DIGITAL CONTENT CURATOR Angelia Muller; angelia@desklink.co.za ADDITIONAL EDITORIAL CONTENT: Ismail Mahomed Michelle Constant Indra Wussow Lloyd Pollak Dave Mann SALES & MARKETING sales@desklink.co.za sales@creativefeel.co.za SALES & MARKETING COORDINATOR Zama-Africa Mkhize; zama@desklink.co.za DESIGN Leigh Forrest; leigh@desklink.co.za DISPATCH Khumbulani Dube SUBSCRIPTION & CIRCULATION subs@creativefeel.co.za Published by DeskLink™ Media PO Box 3670, Randburg, 2125 Tel: 011 787 0252 Fax: 011 787 8204 www.creativefeel.co.za www.desklink.co.za

Andile Dyalvane and Zizipho Poswa of Imiso Ceramics will show their distinctive clay art on the Darlings Stand at Design Joburg this May. Imiso is one of South Africa’s most successful imports, with work in prestigious local and international public and private collections. Andile Dyalvane is the recipient of numerous awards, including a recent Southern Guild Design Foundation Icon Award in recognition of outstanding achievement and innovation. His solo show titled Ca Magu at New York gallery, Friedman Benda, last year was a huge success. Dyalvane describes his work as ‘reflective of culture, experiences, and locale, with a constant spiritual consciousness delivered in each line and form. A musicality of possibilities in paying attention to detail.’

12 / Creative Feel / May 2017

PRINTING ColorPress (Pty) Ltd © Copyright DeskLink™ Media The opinions expressed in this publication do not necessarily represent the views of the publisher.

While every last effort has been made to check that the information in this magazine is correct at the time of going to press, the publisher and their agents will not be held liable for any damages incurred through any inaccuracies.


King of the Belgians

Artwork used with permission: Justin Dingwall

H C T A W THIS SPACTREISE THE EUROPEAN FILM FESTIVAL IS BACK AT CINEMA NOUVEAU THEATRES

T

he lineup of films represents twelve countries, including Ireland and Croatia for the first time. Each film reflects the skills and take on the world of filmmakers who are not limited by national borders. American Honey,

an award-winning British-made road movie set in America’s mid-west, is as much a magical mystery tour into Americana as it is a coming-of-age drama. King of the Belgians is a comedic piece coming out of Belgium, which sees the Belgian king and his entourage crossing the Balkans in a madcap adventure, after learning of a coup back home. Strike a Pose is a Dutch documentary exploration of ‘Madonna’s men’, the male dancers who served to consolidate the pop icon’s message and status as an outspoken advocate for LGBT rights. Germany’s Toni Erdmann is the outlandish tale of how the passing of a family dog sets off a series of events with a major impact on a father-daughter relationship. An Academy Award Winner for Best Foreign Film in 2017, and a must see, by all accounts. Festival Director Katarina Hedrén, who returns as the curator for the second time, is delighted with the pickings: ‘With this year’s selection which includes films of different genres, textures and moods, the aim is to entertain, amuse and offer opportunities for reflection, new discoveries and recognition,’ she says. ‘The theme binding the films together is cinematic excellence through acclaimed and award-winning films from twelve European countries.’ The 2017 selection is a mixed pot in terms of film themes which span from animal rights to family dynamics. Dramas and documentaries, comedies, tales of grief and a children’s adventure sit side by side on this eclectic and exciting programme. CF

#ARTMUS

TELIER 2017 INTO THE L’A UR ENTRY . YO R FO CL U OW OSED THANK YO IES HAVE N TION, ENTR E TI TH PE M ON D CO ART NOUNCE WILL BE AN THE WINNER . 17 20 R EMBE 13TH SEPT


SNS_01_2017

Priscilla Extends Joburg Season

S

howtime Management, SA Producer of the international hit musical, Priscilla Queen of the Desert announced the extension of the Johannesburg season at The Teatro, Montecasino. The show

opened on 29 April and although originally scheduled to close on 28 May, popular demand has led to the show being extended until 18 June 2017. Since Priscilla Queen of the Desert opened in Cape Town in March to critical acclaim, the show has received nightly standing ovations and rave reviews. The rapturous applause at every performance was loud enough to almost literally lift the roof of Artscape’s Opera House. Accolades from media and audiences alike are synonymous in their delight at seeing the multitalented 28 member all-South African Priscilla cast on the stage. Priscilla Queen of the Desert is a heart-warming and uplifting tale of three drag artist friends who hop aboard a battered old bus known as ‘Priscilla’, and go off on the adventure of a life time through the Australian Outback, to perform in Alice Springs. On the way they find friendship, love and far more than they ever dreamed of. With a dazzling array of over 500 award-winning costumes, 200 extraordinary head dresses and a hit parade of dancefloor favourites including ‘I Will Survive’, ‘Hot Stuff’, ‘Finally’, ‘Boogie Wonderland’, ‘Go West’, ‘Girls Just Wanna Have Fun’, and ‘I Love The Nightlife’, this wildly fresh and funny musical is a journey to the heart of FABULOUS!

We’re searching for South Africa’s best artistic talent. Enter now.

Hop on board the bus for the most entertaining journey ever. It’s the most fun you’ll have in the theatre. Book now at Computicket by calling 0861 915 8000, visit www.computicket.com or your nearest Computicket service centre. This musical contains some strong language and adult themes, therefore parental guidance is recommended for children under the age of 12. For further information visit www.showtime.co.za or

www.sasolnewsignatures.co.za #SasolNewSignatures

www.montecasino.co.za. Special hospitality packages as well as show and stay packages available from Montecasino hospitality & corporate events, (011) 3674250 or montecasino.reservations@tsogosun.com. Stay current on the latest news through social media on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube. #PriscillaSA CF

est. in 1947



King Kong

The long awaited revival of the legendary South African musical King Kong, which took South Africa and London’s West End by storm over 50 years ago and launched the careers of Miriam Makeba and Hugh Masekela, among many others.

Shebeen queen Joyce (Miriam Makeba) dances with Lucky (Joseph Mogotsi)

K

Joyce (Miriam Makeba) and King Kong (Nathan Mdledle)

ing Kong is a landmark, 1959 South African jazz-

a unique ambassador for South African black talent and a

influenced musical, billed at the time as an ‘all-

window into the black experience.

African jazz opera’. Opening in Johannesburg on 2 February 1959 at Witwatersrand University’s Great

King Kong launched the international career of Miriam Makeba, who played the shebeen queen of the Back of

Hall, the musical was an immediate success, with The Star

the Moon, a famous shebeen in the historic Sophiatown

newspaper calling it ‘the greatest thrill in 20 years of South

of the 1950s. The male lead was Nathan Mdledle of the

African theatre-going.’ It ‘swept South Africa like a storm’,

Manhattan Brothers.

touring the country for two years and playing to record-

Others in the cast were Hugh Masekela, Abdullah

breaking, multi racial audiences, before being booked for a

Ibrahim, Kippie Moeketsi and Thandi Klaasen, all of whom

London production in 1961, by which time it had been seen

went on to have successful careers. The London cast featured

by some 200 000 South Africans. The music and some of the

Nathan Mdlele and Peggy Phango, with Joseph Mogotsi, Ben

lyrics were written by Todd Matshikiza. The lyrics were by Pat

Masinga, Stephen Moloi, Sophie Mgcina, Patience Gowabe

Willams and the book by Harry Bloom.

and former Miss South Africa 1955, Hazel Futa. Gowabe and

The musical portrays the life and times of a heavyweight

Futa later became The Velvettes, the backing vocal singers

boxer, Ezekiel Dlamini, known as ‘King Kong’. Born in

for the Cyril Davies All-Stars band and performed backing

1921, after a meteoric boxing rise, his life degenerated into

vocals on the Joe Meek produced single ‘She’s Fallen in Love

drunkenness and gang violence. He knifed his girlfriend,

with The Monster Man’ by Screaming Lord Sutch and the

asked for the death sentence during his trial, and instead was

Savages in 1964. CF

sentenced to 14 years’ hard labour. He was found drowned in 1957 and it was believed his death was a suicide. He was 36. With the musical, he posthumously became an unlikely

King Kong will show at the Fugard Theatre from 25 July to 2

symbol for freedom in apartheid South Africa. During its

September 2017, after which it will make its way to Joburg.

200 performances in London’s West End, King Kong became

Tickets are available through Computicket.

16 / Creative Feel / April 2017



A UNIQUE EXPERIENCE

C

asta Diva Boutique Hotel, nestled on the northern slopes of the Magaliesberg, is like no other hotel. The guests are met at the parking area and shown to reception with a warm, welcoming smile. The

property itself (just under two hectares of lush green gardens) is breathtakingly beautiful. The rooms are individually

Boutique Hotel A unique venue, nestled high on the northern slopes of the Magaliesberg amidst peaceful and tranquil surroundings that offer stunning views and an unsurpassed setting of natural beauty and elegance in an oasis of peace and serenity in the city.

decorated without any clutter and the on-site restaurant guarantees a culinary adventure. Ask your host about the Special of the Day, or order one of the signature dishes from the á la carte menu, such as the Dutch Style Beef Fillet. There is also an intimate theatre/art gallery where guest could enjoy a performance by some local talent. The establishment prides itself on art and cultural development by hosting young, up-and-coming talent as often as possible. Jazz aficionados across the country have been sitting up and listening to the sounds of Mlungisi Gegana’s bass guitar for years. It didn’t take long for his talent to be recognised. Playing at Kippie’s Jazz Club, he was spotted by a record company executive who spent the night phoning his colleagues, and the rest is history. Gegana went to

Restaurant Guaranteed the true Decadent, Divine, Delightful fine dining experience, the perfect fusion between the magic of Casta Diva, fresh ingredients, a dedicated culinary team and the friendliest service of South Africa.

the studio with the best in the recording industry – Louis Mhlanga, Godfrey Mgcina, Andile Yenana, Vusi Khumalo. In 2000, he came back to Johannesburg where he met Khaya Mahlangu and played with him around jazz clubs and corporate gigs until they did a 13-part jazz series called ‘Bejazzled’. They backed the likes of Jonas Gwangwa, Steve Dyer, Zim Ngqawana, Suthukazi Arosi, and many others. He performed at the North Sea Jazz Festival in Holland 2001 with Zim Ngqawana and did numerous recording sessions with various artists. In 2004 he released his debut album, One Step Forward, recorded with artists like Thandiswa Mazwai, and toured to France with his band. Mlungisi Gegana is on stage at Casta Diva on 6 May. Be sure to book your tickets, as seats are limited, for bookings call 012 542 4449, or email info@castadiva.co.za. You are guaranteed to be amazed and made to feel special at Casta Diva Boutique Hotel. It truly is the place to just… be. For booking information visit the website at www. castadiva.co.za and keep an eye on their Facebook pages for updates on events. CF

18 / Creative Feel / May 2017



Artlooks & Artlines Artlooks & Artlines is a monthly column written by Ismail Mahomed, CEO of the Market Theatre Foundation.

London Thames sunset panorama | Feb 2008 | By Diliff | Own work | CC BY 3.0

T

here was a time when one could easily get away

During a 30-year career in the arts sector, from working

with imagining that arts leadership was about the

as a writer, director, stage manager, artistic director of the

effective administration of artists’ contracts, the

National Arts Festival in Grahamstown and now as the CEO

ability to balance the books and to ensure that

of the Market Theatre Foundation in Johannesburg, I have

theatre foyers were kept spotlessly clean for the nightly

experienced many inspiring ways in which the resilience

visit of theatre patrons. That world in which arts leadership

of artists has kept the South African art sector vibrant

in South Africa operated very much in its own bubble has

and engaging. Very often I’ve sat in conferences with

changed significantly.

colleagues and counterparts devising ways in which our arts

In a world that has become increasingly networked and interconnected, where the traditional boundaries of

organisations can adapt to political, social, economic and other changes.

time, space and information in the arts have expanded,

Very often, by the time we have left the conference the

arts leadership is now more than just about heading the

world has changed so much more and whatever resolutions

operations of an institution. It is now so much more about

we may have considered would have to be rethought. It is this

being able to recognise opportunities and challenges that can

kind of pulsating vibrancy about leading arts organisations

be catalysts that direct and navigate other changes in society.

that has pumped my adrenaline. Arts leadership is about

20 / Creative Feel / May 2017


knowing that getting back to an office desk is not about

to play in being the catalysts for the creation of spaces and

making new calculations about how goods will be moved off

opportunities that will challenge the status quo. Effective

the shelves or about how the books will be balanced. Arts

arts leadership is about being the seedbed on which new

leadership is more about how bums will be put on seats and

trees can grow and bear new fruits.

about how the arts will raise social consciousness so that

In the 21st century, arts leaders no longer work with only

society becomes more balanced and equitable.

productions, venues, technical equipment and promotional

Arts leadership is most unsuccessful when it is conducted

billboards. Our successes are not built only on how many

from the boardroom. Arts leadership requires both a

awards our theatres scoop. As arts leaders, our jobs often

sensibility and a sensitivity about society. It requires a passion

take us into unfamiliar and terrifying spaces that are not

for the arts but to keep one’s head above the water, in the

just about figures on a balance sheet. We hold that delicate

complex web in which the arts operate it also requires a

thread that weaves society together, and we can do it with

deeper passion for society. It demands being at the coalface,

great care, to raise the consciousness of our societies.

King’s College | Strand | London | Engraving by JC Carter | By Wellcome Images constantly engaging with artists, audiences, bureaucrats,

This short course at King’s College in London allowed

funders and policy-makers. It requires a diary that is flexible

me the chance to reflect on the visionary roles played by the

and one in which the author seldom has real control.

founders of the Market Theatre in its 40 years of existence.

For ten days in April this year, I was fortunate to

During these four decades, the Market Theatre has told stories

participate in an arts leadership programme at King’s

that have challenged the old South Africa and given us hope

College in London. The Arts Leadership for the 21st Century

for the possibilities of a new South Africa. Today, its theatres

programme brought together an exciting array of arts

bear the names of Mannie Manim, Barney Simon and John

leaders from 17 countries. Key to the seven-day programme

Kani. The real challenge in managing the Market Theatre is to

was the opportunity to engage with counterparts from other

go beyond the nostalgia of celebrating their great works and

parts of the globe and to reflect and challenge how we can

to find ways in which we can put tomorrow’s pioneers under

constantly remain relevant to our societies.

the spotlight of these theatres so that their stories can also

If there was one theme that was driven home quite strongly on the first day of the intense programme it is that in our challenging times, as the world grapples with so much poor political leadership, arts leaders have an increasing role

move, inspire and challenge us to continue to build the kind of South Africa that we’re still a far cry from achieving. Only then, will we be honestly honouring the legacies of these great visionaries. CF

Creative Feel / May 2017 / 21


Literary Landscapes Literary Landscapes is a monthly column by Indra Wussow, a writer, translator and director of the Sylt Foundation.

H

ow does the transformation of a society really

His generation is young enough to hopefully make a real

work? This is one of those incredibly intriguing but

change happen, but still old enough to have grown up in a

almost unanswerable questions. What makes the

difficult time, under a harsh system. It is his generation that

process successful and what hinders a true change?

could, for the first time, openly reflect on the wounds of the

Some special people and their positive attitudes can

make a difference. While I am once again staying in Yangon, I experience the power of stamina and open-mindedness through the minds, lives and works of artists. It is a Sunday afternoon in one of the many parks in Yangon. Close to the harbour, this part of the city was neglected for many years but there is renewed interest and

past and make them the starting point for investigating new ideas and a new social utopia. ‘Myanmar is still in a hybrid condition. It has not changed much as yet. People overrate the amount of change. The new malls and the consumerism do not mean that there is more freedom involved,’ says Kyi Thar critically. Kyi Thar grew up in the 1990s in the small town of

the neighbourhood’s housing, which is still affordable, has

Thandwe in the Rakhine State in the west of Myanmar. With

become popular again.

his love and passion for reading, he felt very alone in a place

Alongside young couples, who sit behind umbrellas so that

like this. There was a public library, though, and in it, he

other people do not see them kissing (which is considered

found everything that he was longing for: books, literary

very rude in Myanmar society) and children playing on the

magazines and even foreign translations that made the

lawn, a group, mostly made up of young people, gather. It is

outside world a major part of his life experiences. Later, after

time for a major poetry reading, with ten poets reciting their

the first cautious opening of the country, tourists began to

works. A well-known band is performing too.

visit Myanmar’s beaches and through them, Kyi Thar began

The large audience is as excited as the poets involved. They have been sitting patiently on the lawn, waiting for the event to start, for the past hour.

to learn English. It is this dichotomy of the isolation of his own life and the magnitude of opportunities introduced through

As I am waiting, I start a conversation with one of the

literature that informed his own writing. Kyi Thar started

older poets. He is very excited about the event. ‘Look, before

writing as a young boy and wrote his first poem at the age

the change, it was not possible to gather here and do an

of ten. It was a lonely venture that he was not able to share

event like this. There would have been police, you had to

with anyone.

be careful what to say and what to read and events like this were considered subversive and dangerous.’ His generation, today’s 50 to 70-year-olds, experienced

After finishing high school, Kyi Thar came to Yangon to study law and to share his poetry. Here he was able to talk about literature, to read, to write essays and to study the

the brutal dictatorship and its relentless methods to keep

interfaces of literature and life. Here he became Di Lu Galay,

resistance and dissent silent and unheard. Their fight for

the poet whose work has been published extensively and

freedom of expression and human rights saw many of this

who has been engaged in major initiatives to support young

generation’s fearless writers and poets imprisoned during

poets, to build networks and to enable intellectual debate

their lifetime.

about art and writing.

One of the younger poets performing is 31-year-old lawyer Kyi Thar Phone Myint or Di Lu Galay, his pen name.

22 / Creative Feel / May 2017

Being a careful and critical observer, Di Lu Galay’s poetry is recognised for his meticulous use of language, his


Take a Good Aim at Your Enemy empathy for the human plight and a deeply rooted sympathy

A guy in my neighborhood died the other day.

for the outsider. His poems often animate a surrealist

He had little spats with his neighbor for years.

collection of many different kinds of curios. Objects,

After hearing the news, his neighbor cried

people and animals all become ghosts in a ghastly awkward

And said: It’s me next, my friend.

environment that they have been mistakenly alienated from. An inner wasteland whose void is filled with fear, anger,

In boxing, both the winner and the loser

violence and impotence.

Will be asked to leave the ring in the end.

‘I chose to be a poet but the lawyer role chose me, so I try to combine both roles and as it is they both influence one

Time and again, I wake up on battlefields,

another,’ Di says and points out that his accuracy of language

Surrounded by dead bodies.

and his sensitivity for situations and their consequences are

I wake up with a great sense of loneliness,

of major importance for both of his professions.

And survival has become completely tiring.

The freedom he had experienced, if only theoretically,

In the end, battlefields always bend like rainbows.

in the literary works that he read during his adolescence, ingrained in him an understanding for the necessity of human

You know a crow when you see one

rights and social justice. This is a fight he is dedicated to as a

Because a crow will always be a crow.

lawyer, trying to make a difference and trying to change the

But when you know someone to be your enemy,

social and political landscapes of his country.

He is never your enemy.

The absurdities and anxieties of this lawyer life and experience, on the other hand, became the starting point of

Baby, this hand, which is touching you right now,

a truly Kafkaesque search for truthfulness, humanity and

Has failed to keep its hold on human civility

justice through the means of poetry.

The same way your laughter has eluded

Di Lu Galay is surely an important writer of his

Public decipherments. We look at each other.

generation and when he performs in the park, his older

In our eyes, smoke from gunpowder

colleague, who is still sitting next to me, is thoroughly

Which I call ‘adversities of life’

impressed by his performance. ‘It makes me proud that our

Falls like red flowers from a Flamboyant tree.

literary fight for freedom, which made us suffer so long,

I take pride in this art of happiness.

brought such gifted young poets to life... It shows us that our sacrifice was worth it and that we as a country are on our

Di Lu Galay

way to a better future.’ CF

Translated from the Burmese by Maung Day


Business & Arts Business & Arts is a monthly column by Michelle Constant, CEO of Business and Arts South Africa (BASA).

C

onceived in 1997 as a partnership between several

over the past two decades will be in the spotlight. Drawn

South African corporates and the now Department

from different initiatives, including BASA Artstrack, BASA

of Arts and Culture (DAC), BASA has evolved over

Supporting Grants, BASA Awards, and other arts-based

the past two decades to include a wide spread of

initiatives, this research, once consolidated, will provide

different stakeholders, including 126 business members, the

crucial insights into best practice, shifts and trends and

creative sector, organisations within the Southern African

will be used to inform the next generation of arts-business

region, and a growing slate of project-specific partners.

partnerships – once again underlining BASA’s value to

This is a year of celebration and we’re thrilled to be able to acknowledge those organisations and individuals who

government, business and the arts sector in the new decade. This integrated research will support BASA’s standing

have played an integral part in our evolving and changing

as a unique Knowledge Hub and will be made available in

organisation. Our vision has always been to elevate the

the latter part of 2017. BASA will host a Symposium with

importance of the arts in society, and we are fully focused on

international peer Business and Arts agencies, from India,

that as we prepare for the journey forward.

Zambia, Scotland and further, to share and discuss the 20

Growth is best exemplified by new programmes that provide and support knowledge transfer, skills development and training – these include the DAC Debut Programme and Creating Opportunity for South Africa’s Youth (COSY), among others. The DAC Debut Programme will see the Department of Arts and Culture, in partnership with BASA, provide knowledge and skills development to emerging artists on the cusp of ‘making it’ – supporting them with launching or implementation of their first creative product (album, book etc.), and enabling them to take advantage of opportunities to pitch for funding to further support their venture. BASA’s growth focus during 2017 also includes its Business Exchange Programme which aims to create an environment where young business professionals learn the importance and economic value of the arts, much the same way the arts realise and respect the importance of business skills while on their

years of research and best practice in the relationship and leverage between business and the arts.

“2017 sees Business and Arts South Africa (NPC) celebrate 20 years of arts-business partnerships, with an invigorated focus on growth, research, connectivity and celebration that confirms the organisation’s standing as a leader on the African continent.” The research will continue to support BASA’s role

creative journey. The Business Exchange Programme anchors

in providing a bespoke service to the corporate sector,

BASA’s role as a development agency and is built around

creating greater connectivity, collaboration, and co-

several arts-based initiatives that tap into BASA’s corporate

creation between business and the arts.

members and the wider business community, allowing them to use their experience to add business insight to the arts. As BASA celebrates its 20 years of business and arts partnerships, valuable research that has been collected

24 / Creative Feel / May 2017

As we move rapidly into 2017, BASA celebrates 20 years, looking forward to the next decade, ensuring that we are able to offer the creative and business sectors in South Africa, and on the continent real value and true partnerships! CF


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The Art of Performance Dave Mann is an editor and award-winning arts journalist.

PERFORMING POWER IN THE LOCAL COMEDY SCENE

‘A

nd then I said “Grandpa, I’m not doing that to

young performers trying their hand at the craft. But as it

grandma, she’s family!”’

goes, not all of them cut it.

The 20-something-year-old stands before

a silent audience in a small Johannesburg

It’s a tough gig, stand-up comedy. Of the few shows I’ve been too, I’ve seen countless comics bomb, and it’s

venue, strained smile and wide eyes scanning the crowd for

always just as cringeworthy. It’s so common in fact, this act

a friendly face. He finds none and only continues to stand

of unintentionally embarrassing yourself on stage, they’ve

there, punchline all run out and with no laughs to show

come up with a term for it – ‘dying’. It’s an apt term. How

for it. A few audience members shuffle uncomfortably in

else can you describe the act of taking to a stage in front of

their seats while others offer up forced laughter to cut the

a group of people all expecting you to make them laugh, and

tension. Eventually, after what seems like a lifetime, the

proceed to fumble your way through a few sweaty, laughless

MC for the night takes to the stage again, putting the young

lines before driving the final bit home to a decidedly stony-

comic out of his misery.

faced audience? There’s no coming back from that. Quite

The South African comedy scene is a small, but active one, and it’s entirely fascinating too. Collectively, it’s

simply, you ‘die’. Still, as I watched the 20-something-year-old comic

produced a good crop of well-known performers – Marc

slink off stage that evening and head straight for the bar,

Lottering, Loyiso Gola, Nik Rabinowitz, Tumi Morake, and

I felt bad. Bad for not laughing even though I didn’t find

most notably, Trevor Noah. If the recent Joburg International

him funny. Bad because he had found the courage to stand

Comedy Festival is anything to go by, we’re also a country

in front of an audience with the hopes of making them

that attracts a number of internationally renowned comics.

laugh and he had failed terribly. Bad because, really, he

We have a healthy amount of emergent comics too. At

is a performer and I am an audience member and it is as

a glance, there is Schalk Bezuidenhout – famous for his

much my job to be entertained as it is his job to do the

parodying of small-town Afrikaans complexities – while

entertaining. Or is it?

Tyson Ngubeni is becoming well known for his side-splitting

There’s a strange dichotomy that exists between

sets that put forward shrewd commentary on issues such

performer and viewer, and the commonly accepted

as colourism and Afriphobia. Lihle ‘Lindzy’ Msimang has

understanding of it is that the performer is to put on a

a knack for satirising South African tropes, while comedic

show and the viewer is to gaze upon that show and quite

troupe Thenx Ladies are fast gaining traction for their

simply, love it or hate it. Certainly, the viewer should always

unique blend of stand-up comedy and musical performance

understand it, and through that understanding, make their

that shines a light on contemporary politics, media and

judgement. It’s far more complex than this, of course. When

more. There are many more stand-up comics in the country,

we really interrogate the politics of performance, we find

and each week, another open mic night sees a handful of

that it all comes down to power. Most of the time, the one

26 / Creative Feel / May 2017


Tyson Ngubeni PHOTO Kerryn Chegwidden

viewing a performance will hold the power and can yield

a setting, we will almost always choose to walk out rather

it how they please – either celebrating or condemning the

than stand up and berate a performer or vocally express our

artist. Sometimes, when you are feeling a little out of your

disappointment. This is not to say that performing artists

depth and are perhaps made to feel uncomfortable by a

never experience such antagonistic reactions to their work,

performance, you could say that the tables have been turned,

because they certainly do in many instances, just not as

and that the performer is the one who holds the power. But

often as they would in less formal settings. Like at an open-

again, it is far more complex than this.

mic comedy gig for instance.

When we sit in low-lit cinemas or in the teared rows of

So why is it that we exercise our power as audience

expansive theatres, what is it that we most often do when

members in certain settings, but choose to dampen it

we are unimpressed by an actor on the stage or the silver

in others? My thinking is that it’s largely to do with the

screen? We walk out. No matter how bored to death we may

space in which we are viewing a performance. I recently

feel, or how appalled we may be by a performance in such

noticed this strange navigation of power during a trip

Creative Feel / May 2017 / 27


through Hartbeespoort in the North West earlier this year. My partner and I had stopped at a busy weekend market for lunch and decided to grab a drink at a small restaurant that overlooked the part of the market housing a packed out beer garden. From the restaurant, we could see a musical performance taking place below where an amateur singer-songwriter tried her absolute best to entertain the drunken crowd filling up the beer garden. She did, for the most part, but a few overzealous (and overindulgent) crowd members took it upon themselves to tell her just how much they disliked her performance. ‘Play the other one!’ one of them would shout at her mid-performance. ‘Where’s the drummer?’ another one would slur. To her credit, they seemed very drunk and she seemed unperturbed by it all. A week later we went through to a comedy show in Johannesburg’s Melville to see a friend perform, and this is where I saw the 20-something comic fail dismally. It was at this small show for aspirant comedic performers that I truly realised just how strange the space of stand-up comedy can be, with all of its ‘dying’ and its strange, shifting power dynamics. As much as I saw comics try and fail in front of a despondent audience, I also saw comics really come alive on stage, drawing on the flux-like state of power inside the room to subvert the performer-viewer relationship, and at times completely topple it. Imagine my surprise when, after the failed comic slunk off stage, another equally shy and awkward young comic took his place. As he fumbled through his set in the same clammy and unrefined manner as the performer before him, I watched the audience slowly turn against him like they had with many of the other performers. Only this time, they lost their power. ‘Was that not a good joke?’ The comic asks the audience. ‘No, it sucked,’ responds a man towards the back of the crowd, causing a few audience members around him to snigger. ‘Oh? Well, why don’t you come up here and tell it better?’ the comic shoots back. ‘I mean, I’m already laughing just looking at you.’

28 / Creative Feel / May 2017


Schalk Bezuidenhout

The Thenx Ladies: Tumy Motsoatsoe, Zethu Dlomo, MoMo Matsunyane, Kitty Moepang

And just like that, the comic got his power back. The heckler, clearly stunned and embarrassed, shrunk into his seat and the comic, with a renewed sense of power, launched straight into his next joke. At the end of it all, his set wasn’t a complete success, but it was at least salvaged by one hell of a comeback. While the informal nature of stand-up comedy may allow for us to more immediately exercise our responses to a certain performance, it also completely breaks down any notions of a powerless or unresponsive performer we hold onto. And once we let go of those notions, the performance really gets good. So if you want to be entertained, go see a movie. If you’re hoping for something a little more intimate, why not visit the theatre? But if you’re looking for something a little different, and entirely immediate, you’d do well to head down to the next local stand-up comedy show. CF

Creative Feel / May 2017 / 29


PLAY ON THE LIFE OF CAN THEMBA COMES TO THE SOWETO THEATRE!

From 10 to 21 May, Soweto audiences will be enthralled by the extraordinarily talented Sello Maake kaNcube in the theatre masterpiece, The House of Truth. The play is written by Siphiwo Mahala about distinguished South African writer Can Themba and directed by Vanessa Cooke.

T

he House of Truth premiered to full houses and rave reviews at the 2016 National Arts Festival in Grahamstown, later playing at the Market Theatre. Laced with wit, humour and a deep

sense of irony, it reveals the circumstances that inspired some of Themba’s most intriguing works and covers some of the profound aspects of his life that are rarely written about. Themba’s complex life story, including his troubles with the Transvaal Department of Education, which refused to recognise him as a qualified teacher despite him holding a degree, is interwoven with how he turned to journalism, rising through the ranks of Drum magazine to become an assistant editor, but without any financial reward. These frustrations are shared from his abode, the House of Truth, a single-room bachelor flat in Sophiatown in the 1950s. The House of Truth was Themba’s way of cocking a snook at snobbery, officialdom and anything that smacked of bureaucracy. He hosted candid debates where anyone,

30 / Creative Feel / May 2017


Sello Maake kaNcube in The House of Truth PHOTOS CuePix/Jeffrey Stretton-Bell

SNIPPETS FROM REVIEWS: ‘The play is seen as hope to bridge the [racial] divide’ – SABC News ‘A hit with the audiences!’ – An ENCA headline ‘This is work which stretches across the epochs. There are many moments where you swear Themba is talking about now, not then.’ – Journalist Mike Louw ‘The House of Truth is riveting, absolutely brilliant.’– Nathi Mthethwa, Minister of Arts and Culture ‘The play examines themes such as media ownership, exploitation and editorial independence’ – Sam Mathe, Jazz Life irrespective of race or social class, was welcome to participate in intellectual engagement. The House of Truth is acted by Sello Maake kaNcube, one of South Africa’s most accomplished and internationally revered actors who will be performing for the first time at the Soweto Theatre, and directed by Vanessa Cooke, a

SHOW TIMES:

theatre legend in her own right.

Tuesday to Saturday: 20:00

Themba would have turned 93 in 2017 but died at the tender age of 43. He passed away on 8 September

Sunday: 15:00 Mondays: no shows

1967, and this year marks the 50th anniversary of his passing. Themba is one of the most illustrious alumni of

Venue:

the centenary old Fort Hare University. Other illustrious

Blue Theatre

alumni include Nelson Mandela, Oliver Tambo, Govan

Mbeki, and at least three African heads of state: Seretse

Ticket Prices:

Khama (Botswana), Robert Mugabe (Zimbabwe) and Yusuf

From only R120! Block booking discounts are

Lule (Uganda).

available.

‘The House of Truth celebrates South African artistic excellence. It will inspire Sowetans, young and old alike,’ says

Book at www.sowetotheatre.com or call

Makhaola Ndebele, Joburg City Theatres Artistic Manager. CF

011 930 7461/2/3

Creative Feel / May 2017 / 31


THE

UNPARALLELED POTENTIAL Culture and creativity make us human – it’s one of our defining features – but counting the value of creativity is controversial at best, complicated at worst. However, quantifying the value of a nation’s cultural creative economy plays a huge role in decision-making for future cultural investments and initiatives – and it’s also central to how we understand the fast-paced, changing world. The point is to understand how creativity and the economy are stronger together – something the South African Cultural Observatory (SACO) is doing.

U

ncharted terrain has captured the human mind for centuries, but with the dawn of the information age, the desire to understand human creativity, ability for innovation, and capacity to generate

knowledge has mushroomed exponentially – creating the final frontier for travel: gaining deeper insight into who we are. Culture and creativity remain central to this journey and it’s no surprise that we turn to culture – its nuances and replication – to better understand ourselves, says Professor Richard Haines, chief executive of the South African Cultural Observatory (SACO), a research institute tasked with measuring and valuing South Africa’s cultural and creative industries (CCIs). ‘The cartography of culture and creativity ensures we understand the many strands that make us human. In South Africa we know that we are a deeply creative nation with diverse cultures, but we have not spent much time focusing on what value these assets bring to the country and how we can grow a cutting-edge creative economy that increases our intrinsic and fiscal wealth,’ says Haines.

32 / Creative Feel / May 2017


Enter the SACO, whose job it is to do some of the hard miles it takes to map, analyse, monitor and measure the country’s creative and cultural economy: and identify trends and key research areas that will support growth and influence policy. Established in 2015 by the Department of Arts & Culture (DAC), the SACO is a national think tank hosted by Nelson Mandela University, in partnership with the universities of Rhodes and Fort Hare. The research centre traces its origins to 2011 and the Mzansi Golden Economy strategy. ‘The Mzansi Golden Economy took the stance that while the cultural creative economy is undervalued, it has significant potential to drive development and strengthen job creation options. ‘The South African government also wanted greater systematisation of cultural information collection. We fulfil this role and are also tasked with driving cultural diplomacy at both a macro- and micro-level as the premier research agency for the DAC,’ says Prof Haines. Internationally there is a growing trend to map out the impact of the arts, culture and heritage sectors, as well as the cultural domains that make economic and other intangible contributions to nations, cities and people’s lives. The recognition that there was a very real need for a more coherent and systematic understanding

Creative Feel / May 2017 / 33


of how the cultural economy works, grows and ‘lives’, led

and qualitative elements. But if we don’t start somewhere we

to the SACO’s establishment.

will never understand real value from a solid baseline.

Some early research points to this impact. In 2014

‘It’s our job to observe, learn and then feedback into

South Africa’s creative economy contributed over R90.5-

cultural policy and production. We have already started

billion to the national economy or 2.9% of the GDP in

this through a series of research reports and publications,

2013/14, exceeding, for instance, the contribution of

our monitoring and evaluation frameworks, and a national

agriculture to the GDP (2.2%). Industry jobs made up 2.93%

research agenda for the industry.

of total employment in SA in 2014 (443 778 jobs), slightly

‘We ask deep and necessary questions, while taking a

more than mining, a recent study by SACO chief research

holistic view of the industry to identify trends, pockets of

strategist, Prof Jen Snowball, found.

excellence and to analyse why certain activities and funding

‘Though mining has higher salary bands, this information

work or not,’ Haines adds.

demonstrates the potential of the creative economy. Small tweaks to the way we approach small businesses in the arts,

SA Cultural Observatory National Conference 2017

or set up creative clusters, or help promote exports can mean

The SACO is hosting its second National Conference at

real, on-the-ground growth for an industry literally working

the Turbine Hall in Johannesburg on May 24 and 25, over

to create South Africa,’ says Snowball.

the Africa Day celebrations. The theme is: ‘The Creative Economy & Development – Perspectives from Developed

Counting culture – can it be done?

and Emerging Economies’. It features an eclectic mix of

The SACO is mandated to produce a working cultural

academics and practitioners including some of the world’s

information system for South Africa. But how do you

leading cultural economists, creative minds and thinkers. CF

measure the economic contribution arts and culture makes to a country and how do you evaluate the impact that cultural events and experiences have? ‘Counting culture is by no means a simple endeavour – and it’s made more complex by the depth and intricacy of the industries and sectors – but there is a strong case for counting and many points of departure. ‘Business, statistical and typical indices are a good place to start. Typical frameworks for monitoring and evaluation are also important and can be adapted to include both quantitative

34 / Creative Feel / May 2017


THE SACO CONFERENCE KEYNOTE SPEAKERS INCLUDE: PROFESSOR LLUIS BONET, Director of the Cultural Management Programme, University of Barcelona, a leading authority on cultural economics; PROFESSOR EREZ LIEBERMAN AIDEN, Director of the Rice University Culturomics Cultural Observatory in Houston; PROFESSOR GEOFFREY WOOD, Dean of International Business, at the University of Essex; ANDRES GRIBNICOW, Creative Economy Undersecretary at the Argentinian Ministry of Culture; PROFESSOR JEN SNOWBALL, SACO Chief Research Strategist, Rhodes University; PROFESSOR KENNEDY C. CHINYOWA, Tshwane University of Technology Centre for Creative Industries; AVRIL JOFFE, Head: Cultural Policy and Management: School of Arts, University of Witwatersrand; SHUKRI TOEFY AND AMR SINGH, owners of the Fort; PROF ENYINNA SODIENYE NWAUCHE, Rhodes University; JAMES DRUMMOND, North West University Mafikeng; TSIETSI THEMANE, National Film and Video Foundation; IGNACIO PRIEGO, SAMRO Foundation; KEVIN KIMWELLE, sustainability architect and BUSINESS AND ARTS SOUTH AFRICA.

‘We want to convene actors from across the creative sector and economy to share their research, so we can establish trends and look for alignment and best practices to apply to South Africa,’ says Haines. For more conference information, visit: http://www.southafricanculturalobservatory.co.za/2017saco-conference/


36 / Creative Feel / April 2017


Produced in collaboration with the Market Theatre, Gregory Maqoma’s newest choreographic piece, Cion: A Requiem of Ravel’s Boléro, will premiere at the Market Theatre on 25 May and run until 4 June. Creative Feel spoke to Gregory Maqoma, Mannie Manim and Jacques van der Watt of BlackCoffee about the planning and pre-production for this

CION: interesting new work.

I

n Cion: A Requiem of Ravel’s Boléro, Maqoma brings together the works of two virtuosos who have inspired his own creative output: French composer, pianist and conductor Maurice Ravel and South African novelist, poet and playwright Zakes Mda. This is not the first time that Maqoma has used Ravel’s Boléro; he performed a

stunning interpretation of the piece in Joys of Sharing, his 2016 collaboration with Wouter Kellerman and Simphiwe Dana. Originally composed as a ballet commissioned by Russian actress and dancer Ida Rubinstein, Boléro, which premiered in 1928, is Ravel’s most famous musical composition. While on vacation at Saint-Jean-de-Luz, Ravel went to the piano and played a melody with one finger to his friend Gustave Samazeuilh, saying, ‘don’t you think this theme has an insistent quality? I’m going to try and repeat it a number of times without any development, gradually increasing the orchestra as best I can.’ This piece was initially called Fandango, but its title was soon changed to Boléro. According to Idries Shah, the main melody is adapted from a tune composed for and used in Sufi training. ‘Apart from the music being popular and certainly one of Ravel’s most known composition, I am fascinated by its simple structure which I find to be African in its structural and haunting nature,’ says Maqoma. ‘Nhlanhla Mahlangu and Xolisile Bongwana are working on developing a score that gravitates the choreography into a space of worship, love and hate, and a fight for survival. The Requiem of Ravel’s Boléro is our healing, the song to the departed souls, to pause for second and think about life, what it means, maybe just maybe we can value life again.’ To bring home the African structure he hears in Boléro, Maqoma will also incorporate Iscathamiya singing. ‘When I was listening to Ravel’s Boléro, I felt I had to

Creative Feel / April 2017 / 37


bring the music home and allow it to grow new energy, to strip away the classical instrumentation and allow voices, chanting, church hymns and the circular motion of music structure to drive the choreography.’ Using the repetitive sounds of this piece as a backdrop, Maqoma explores the character of a professional mourning, using Zakes Mda’s Toloki of Ways of Dying, and later Cion, as a starting point. ‘I am always drawn to Zakes Mda’s work,’ says Maqoma. ‘As a choreographer, I am fascinated by the images he communicates in his works and more that he is drawn to the issues of black culture, tradition, urban and political shaping. In this case, Toloki discovers an unconventional profession of mourning; hence in my approach to the work, I made a choice to focus on the character to tackle the idea of death in our modern context. Death is a universal rite of passage. To choose the theme of death in my approach is inspired by the universal events that lead to death, not as a natural phenomenon but by decisions of others over the other. We mourn the death by creating death, the universe of greed, power and religion has led us to be professional mourners who transform the horror of death and the pain of mourning into a narrative without feeling for life, and we are doomed and lost without any sense of taste, touch or even sight. I am concerned and terrified by the thought of how it has become easy for a person to die, and we die in masses. I am disturbed by how we have normalised death. I am creating this work as a lament, a requiem required to awaken a part of us, the connection to the departed souls. I decided on artists who embody the ideals of chant as a driving force in our negotiation of space, confinements, fall and recovery. ‘What attracted me to the character is how we have been turned into professional mourners, the developing events in our country, with the political dynamics developing around the world we are forced into mourning, mourning for the country, mourning for those fleeing their homes to seek protection in other countries where they are clearly not welcomed, as others mourn, others are like the runaway slaves always searching for a place they can call home or at the least to feel safe.’ In Mda’s Cion, Toloki, the professional mourner introduced in Ways of Dying, takes the opportunity to travel the world in search of new ways of mourning. He finds himself abandoned in Athens, Ohio, but a chance meeting leads him to the poor hamlet of Kilvert, home to descendants of fugitive slaves. The Quigley family offers Toloki hospitality while never completely coming to terms with what they regard as his shamanistic attributes. The old story is told of the slaves in the plantations of the south and their eternal quest to escape and find their freedom, interwoven with the story of life in present-day Kilvert. To bring this piece to life, Maqoma has enlisted the help of legendary lighting designer and co-founder of the Market Theatre, Mannie Manim; set designer, Oliver Hauser; composer

38 / Creative Feel / April 2017

Gregory Maqoma in Joys Of Sharing PHOTOS John Hogg


Design for performance exists to support the performers, which means that there will always be some practical constraints on performance design. For dance productions, there needs to be room for the performers to move, and lighting positions to provide good modelling of their forms when they move. ‘My favourite lighting designer of all time, Jean Rosenthal, wrote a wonderful book called The magic of light,’ says Mannie Manim. ‘She used to say that great lighting is when you get the air right. When you light the air so that the performers can move through that space.’ Most important to Manim is creating lighting design that is in line with Maqoma’s vision. ‘I know the theatre, I know the theatre relatively well,’ he laughs. ‘It’s a slightly different shape to what it was at the start, it’s still more-or-less the same. It’s a question of if I can find a way that is totally apt for this piece, each piece has its own requirements, its own demands, its own kind of logic and I have to try and create that logic with Greg. What’s vital for me is that I’m doing it in the way that Greg would like it done, that’s the most important thing for me. That I’m creating a vision in terms of lighting… What Greg has in his mind, in his deepest thoughts when he first started thinking about this. ‘This is our first time working together, which is even more exciting, I like that.’ The costumes too need to reflect Maqoma’s vision for the piece, as well as being functional and, as one has come to expect from BlackCoffee, beautiful. BlackCoffee have created costumes for numerous Vuyani Dance Theatre performances, including the memorable white, flowing pieces for Full Moon. For Cion: A Requiem of Ravel’s Boléro, Nhlanhla Mahlangu; dancer and composer Xolisile

‘Gregory briefed me about the mood and movement of the

Bongwana; and fashion designer Jacques van der Watt of

piece. He was looking for something very sombre and he

BlackCoffee. This team will play an integral part in ensuring

wanted the idea of a funeral procession to come across,’

that Maqoma’s vision is brought to life in a way that is

says van der Watt.

appealing and which will draw in the audience. The stage holds the world of the play or dance

That the costumes are created for dancers and movement, ‘is always something to keep in mind,’ he says.

performance. It provides time and context and automatically

‘Either the cut of the garment of the fabric has to allow for a

transports the audience to a destination. Design for live

lot of movement. The BlackCoffee style of cutting often uses

performance can often do much more than representing

a lot of volume so it isn’t usually a challenge for us… In this

time and place, providing an emotional context and visual

particular case we want to bring in elements of menswear

interest, as well as giving the audience something to think

cloth, but use it in combination with other fabrics and in a

about. Even when the chosen aesthetic is to recreate as

very unconventional way.

closely and completely as possible a very particular world, there are choices open to the design team which will allow

‘The influence isn’t very obviously traditional but it will still have an underlying African element.’ CF

their work to convey more than simply time and place to the audience. A great set balances functionality and aesthetics

To book to see this fascinating new production,

while expressing the director or choreographer’s vision.

visit www.markettheatre.co.za.

Creative Feel / April 2017 / 39


25 May – 04 June at The Market Theatre

‘In this work, I am drawn to Zakes Mda’s character ‘Toloki’ the professional mourner from his beloved Ways of Dying as he further uncovers in his book Cion the story of the runaway slaves. In my interpretation, Toloki rediscovers death in a modern context, inspired by the universal events

DANCERS’ STATEMENTS ON CION “What does death signify for you?”

that lead to death, not as a natural phenomenon but by decisions of others over the other. We mourn the death by

“Death means the rebirth of another human being for the

creating death. The universe of greed, power; religion has

next generation, the continuation of life for generations to

led us to be professional mourners who transform the horror

come.” Phumlani Nyanga

of death and the pain of mourning into a narrative that questions what seems to be normalised and far more brutal

“Death is the physical body separating from the soul/spirit. It

in how we experience death and immigration. I am creating

signifies the loss of the physical being.” Phumlani Mndebele

this work as a lament, a requiem required to awaken a part of us, the connection to the departed souls.

“Death is a secret path that releases the spirit from the physical into an unknown journey or destination, only

The first offering under the title ‘Requiem Request’ was

known to the deceased. Death is leaving the known to the

first presented at William Kentridge’s The Centre for the

unknown.” Julia Burnham

Less Good Idea where the idea of interrogating the music of Ravel’s Boléro using other music devises was cemented.

“The role/purpose you were meant for is over.” Otto Nhlapo

I am grateful to the Market Theatre Foundation for their support with the staging of this work. Special thanks to

“The end of one’s physical being, the spirit leaves to a place

Professor Zakes Mda for his generous permission in using

that is unknown.” Sinazo Bokolo

his material as reference. I am also highly indebted to the Management Team of Vuyani Dance Theatre and The Board

“The end of your journey in the physical realm, death causes

of Directors. On behalf of the cast and the creative team of

pain for some and others are left unaffected or rather

Cion, I invite you to go on this journey with us.

immune to the act of dying.” Smangaliso Ngwenya

Regards,

“To no longer live after having been alive. The representation

Gregory Maqoma

40 / Creative Feel / May 2017

of “the end”; to no longer exist; to be absent physically or spiritually.” Cebolenkosi Zuma


Credits

CREATIVE TEAM

MANNIE MANIM

CONCEIVER, CHOREOGRAPHER AND DANCER Gregory Maqoma

Mannie Manim, co-founder of The Market Theatre, has been involved

SUPPORTING MOVEMENT ANALYST/DRAMATURGY Shanell Winlock

in theatre for 60 years and lighting productions in South Africa and

REHEARSAL ASSISTANT Lulu Mlangeni

internationally for over 40 years. Manim was Head of Drama for The

MUSICAL DIRECTOR AND COMPOSER Nhlanhla Mahlangu

Performing Arts Council of the Transvaal (PACT) for seven years;

COMPOSITION ASSISTANT Xolisile Bongwana

Managing Director of The Market Theatre Company for 17 years;

COSTUMES BlackCoffee

Managing Trustee, The Market Theatre Foundation for 15 years;

SET DESIGN AND TECHNICAL DIRECTOR Oliver Hauser

Director of Performing Arts Administration, Wits University for 10

LIGHTING DESIGN Mannie Manim

years; Director and CEO of the Baxter Theatre Centre for 9 years;

PROPS Wesley Mabizela

and the Executive Director of The Fugard Theatre for its first year.

SOUND ENGINEER APPRENTICE Katleho Mokgothu

Now a producer and lighting designer, Manim’s career highlights include lighting Sarafina! and Asinamali, SA and USA; Nothing But

DANCERS

the Trut,h SA, Australia, UK and USA; Woza Albert, SA, UK, Australia

Phumlani Nyanga | Phumlani Mndebele | Julia Burnham | Otto Nhlapo

and USA; The Island and Sizwe Banzi is Dead in SA, UK, Europe,

Sinazo Bokolo | Smangaliso Ngwenya | Cebolenkosi Zuma

Canada and USA; Othello, The Market; The Tempest, the Baxter

Gregory Maqoma

and Stratford upon Avon; Waiting for Godot, Broken Glass, The Fugard Theatre; Carmen and The Mysteries, Spier, London, New

MUSICIANS

York, Perth, Toronto; The Magic Flute, SA, London and Paris;

Thabang Mkhwanazi | Sbusiso Shozi | Simphiwe Bonongo

Hamlet, the Baxter and The Swan Theatre (Stratford upon Avon);

Xolisile Bongwana

Showboat, Artscape, UK, Germany, Sweden, Norway and at The Chatelet Theatre, Paris; Porgy and Bess, Artscape, Sweden,

VUYANI DANCE THEATRE

Berlin Opera House and Oslo. Has lit every first production of

CHAIRPERSON OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS Thandiwe Msibi

a Fugard play in SA since 1976 and produced most of them.

BOARD MEMBERS Dr Thuthula Balfour-Kaipa, Vonani Mathebula,CA (SA),

Ouroboros in SA, Europe and India. Solomon and Marion, four

Dumo Mbethe, CA (SA)

SA seasons, Edinburgh and Washington. A DISTANT DRUM ,

EXECUTIVE CREATIVE DIRECTOR Gregory Maqoma

Bloemfontein and Carnegie Hall, New York. Madame Zingara,

CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER Lindiwe Letwaba

IN CELEBRATION, Cape Town and Johannesburg. Firebird,

CREATIVE ASSISTANT Lulu Mlangeni

Artscape, National Arts Festival, USA four-week tour of open

BOOKKEEPER Sinazo Mboniswa

air venues including Hollywood Bowl; A Man of Good Hope ,

MARKETING CONSULTANT Siyandiswa Dokoda

Young Vic, London and BAM, New York. His accolades include Shirley Moss Award; Greatest

CSI COORDINATOR Nonkululeko Thabede PROJECT COORDINATOR Mahadi Mkwanazi

Practical and Technical Contribution to SA Theatre (1980), SA

REHEARSAL DIRECTOR Phumlani Nyanga

Institute of Technology Award; Outstanding Achievement as

TECHNICAL ASSISTANT Wesley Mabizela

a Technician, Administrator and Lighting Designer (1981),

PATRONS Justice Edwin Cameron, Advocate Nomvula Mokhatla, Dr Sibongile

first Vita Award; The most Enterprising Producer (1985) 10

Khumalo

Vita awards; best original Lighting Design. Made Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres by the French Government (1990),

VUYANI DANCE THEATRE WOULD LIKE TO EXTEND ITS HEARTFELT

received Gold Medal; Simon van der Stel Foundation (1995),

GRATITUDE AND APPRECIATION TO THE FOLLOWING:

Gold Medal; Theatre Development The SA Academy of Arts

FUNDER The National Lotteries Commission

and Science (1996); Naledi Life Achievement Award (2004);

MEDIA PARTNER Creative Feel

Fleur du Cap Lifetime Achievement Award; Arts & Culture

MEDIA SPONSORSHIP Kaya FM

Trust Lifetime Achievement Award; The National Order

AUTHOR OF CION Zakes Mda

of Ikhamanga, Silver (2011); Fleur du Cap Award for best

VENUE The Market Theatre

lighting design (2012) and International Fellowship of ALD UK (2016)

‘ Vuyani Dance Theatre is supported by the National Lotteries Commission’

Creative Feel / May 2017 / 41


SHANELL WINLOCK PAILMAN

NHLANHLA MAHLANGU

After completing her matric Shanell Winlock Pailman joined

Nhlanhla Mahlangu is a graduate in Theory and Practice of

Moving into Dance Mophatong’s one year Edu-Dance

Dance Teaching from Moving Into Dance Mophatong. He has

diploma course. After completing the course she was

over ten years of professional performance and administration

approached by Sylvia Glasser to join the full time dance

in theatre, dance, dance theatre, and dance education.

company where she started her official professional dance

Mahlangu has made great strides in the performing

career. Two years later she won a scholarship to Brussels to

arts industry as a choreographer, actor, singer, poet, dancer,

attend the school of Performing Arts Research and Training

teacher, administrator and composer. His extraordinary

Studios ( P.A.R.T.S.) under the direction of Anne Terresa

work has been seen all over Africa, North America, South

Dekeersmaker. A year later she returned to Johannesburg and

America, Asia and Europe. Of note is his extraordinary ability

worked with various South African choreographers including

to compose music from the Gods – his versatility as an artist

Gregory Vuyani Maqoma, PJ Sabbagah, Sello Peso, Moeketsi

has seen him being commissioned to work with numerous

Koena and Tracey Human, to mention a few. She has won

multi-awarding winning artists, including Richard Cock,

awards for most promising and most outstanding female

Gregory Vuyani Maqoma, Sylvia Glasser, Vincent Mantsoe,

artists for the FNB vita Dance Umbrella Awards.

Jay Pather, Des and Dawn Lindberg, Robyn Orlin, James

In 2000 she was invited to work with the UK based company the Akram Khan Dance Company where she

Ngcobo, Victor Ntoni and many more. He has worked across the spectrum of dance – dance theatre and dance education.

continued to live and work for 10 years. She toured worldwide and became the rehearsal director of the company. The AKC works and collaborations included artist such as

XOLISLE BONGWANA

Kylie Minogue, Nitin Sawney, Cloud Gate Dance Company

Xolisle Bongwana is an accomplished dancer who is

from Taiwan. London, Symphonietta, Aniesh Kapoor and

also versed in signing, composing, directing, acting and

Sidi Larbi Cherchaoi. On her return to South Africa in 2011

choreography. He began his singing and dancing career in

she choreographed a duet for two members of the Vuyani

Port Elizabeth around 1999 as a youngster. Xoli then went

Dance Theatre project for their season, as well as a group

on to work with the Dodgy Clutch Theatre Company as an

work for the Forgotten Angle Theatre Collaborative. To date

actor, dancer and singer, working with choreographer Robyn

she assists Johannesburg based companies as a rehearsal

Orlin and going on to tour in the UK and USA.

director and teaches dance classes.

THE MUSIC

Xoli has worked extensively with Gregory Maqoma and Luyanda Sidiya, in various festivals with Vuyani Dance Theatre and recently returned from a tour in Western

The soundscape and the music for CION is inspired by

Australia where he was performing in the Perth International

Ravel’s famous classic, Boléro. This is the music that we

Arts Festival 2017 as part of an a cappella quartet, Vuyani

have heard throughout our dance training and it has been

Ensemble, in the production of Exit/Exist featuring Gregory

interpreted many times by the musicians, dancers and

Maqoma. Vuyani Ensemble also performed as a separate

choreographers of our times.

entity in Perth, Albany and Denmark including a music

We are fascinated by the idea of building a composition from a single theme which would grow simply through

workshop for a mature aged group of musicians and choir. In 2015 Xoli was a composer and musical director in the

harmonic and in our case vocal ingenuity. The delicate

production SIVA, a dance work choreographed by Luyanda

sound of Iscathamiya is used as our starting point and the

Sidiya who was the Standard Bank Young Artist Award for

basic vocal quality. This gives us a historical irony because

2015. SIVA went on to be performed at the National Arts

Iscathamiya started as colonial response and later became

Festival in Grahamstown, as well as in China.

our heritage that can be used proudly to tell our history. In our exploration we want to be transported to the

Xoli’s passion for dancing is in by no means surpassed by his talent of composing music for artists like Luyanda

unknown, the beat box represents the relentless snare-

Sidiya’s solo Makwande and together with his own

drum that underpins the whole of the 15-minute work as

exceptional musical/singing abilities.

Ravel inevitably builds on the simple tune. We would like to

In 2016 he was nominated for Mail and Guardian 200

see what happens when we go beyond 15 minutes to one

Young South African. Xoli recently formed the group Ubuthina

hour and 15 minutes.

Ensemble with other vocalists. He continues to push his

– Nhlanhla Mahlangu

42 / Creative Feel / May 2017

boundaries in all fields as well as exploring other skills.


MARKET THEATRE STAFF: HONORARY PATRONS: Jules Feiffer, Athol Fugard, Dr John Kani, Arthur Mitchell, Winston Ntshona, Janet Suzman, Prof Zakes Mda SPECIAL AMBASSADOR: Dr John Kani COUNCIL: Mr Kwanele Gumbi (Chairman), Dr Sebiletso Mokone-Matabane, Mr Peter McKenzie, Mr J Brooks Spector, Mr Cedric Nunn, Mr Kopano Xaba, Ms Shado Twala MARKET THEATRE FOUNDATION SENIOR MANAGEMENT: Chief Executive Officer: Ismail Mahomed, Artistic Director: James Ngcobo, Chief Financial Officer: Christine McDonald MARKET THEATRE STAFF: Accountant: Fazel Mayet, Assistant Front of House Manager: Gabriel Royeppen, Audience Development: Anthony Ezeoke, Box Office: Siwe Hashe, Sonia

SBUSISO SHOZI

Teme, Brand and Communications Manager: Zama Sweetness

Sbusiso Shozi started his career under Mbongeni Ngema’s

Buthelezi, Cleaning: Bonie Sibanda, Samson Vilakazi, Christine

shows such as Sing Africa Dance, 1906 Bhambada The Freedom

Maseko, Mary Mathebula, Justice Bila Client Liaison Officer:

Fighter and Sarafina! where he earned some lead singing and

Tebogo Konopi, Simphiwe Boya, Relationship Stakeholder Manager:

supporting roles. He also did some international and national

Penny Morris, Head of Lighting: Nomvula Molepo, Human Resource

tours with a number of companies where he performed as

Manager: Perpetua Matshsa, Producer: Zodwa Shongwe, Production

a lead actor, singer and dancer. Shows such as Africa My

Managers: Hailey Kingston, Thapelo Peter Mokgosi, Project

Love, Makhulu, Drumstruck, Just for You, Shosholoza, Music

Administrators: Mvuzo Mfobo, Seipati Ncube, Project Co-ordinator:

in the Air, Soweto Entsha, Have We Been Heard, Long Way

Sipho Mwale, Reception: Busi Letwaba, Front of House Manager:

To Go, Voices from Kilimanjaro, Umshado and is currently

Mavis Nengovhela, Senior Front of House Manager: Thuli Mbuli, Senior

performing in Sarafina! as Stimela saseZola. Sbusiso has had roles in television shows and he

Publicist: Lusanda Zokufa-Kathilu, Senior Stage Manager: Motlalepule Makhate, Sound Technician: Ntuthuko Mbuyazi, Supply Chain

earned a lead role in the documentary Operation Certain

Management Assistant: Vickey Pienaar, Stage Managers: Emelda Khola,

Death and featured in Isibaya.

Thulani Mngomezulu, Lebeisa Molapo, Technical Co-ordinator: Floyd

He is a musical director and a vocal coach for a number of shows he has performed in and also a director of his company, Show Zee Productions.

Dlamini, Ushers: Alex Magemane, Anthony Myanga, Bohlokoa Matlabe, Froas Masseule, Kabelo Kgang, Mfundo Maumakkwe, Nkosinathi Mnguni, Nonhlanhla Nhlapho, Nosipho Mntungwa, Phumlani Nkwanyana, Rose Ngwenya, Thato Gebashe, Tumelo Mana THE MARKET PHOTO WORKSHOP: Head of Photo Workshop: Lekgetho

SIMPHIWE BONONGO

Makola, Administrative Assistant: Babalwa Mtanga, Cleaner: Nthabiseng

Sowetan-born performer, Simphiwe Bonongo (1 Jan

Motaung, Coordinator Mentorship & Training: Bekie Ntini, Course

1987), had acknowledged his love for beatboxing in

Assistant: Lebohang Tlhako, Nathi Khumalo, Patrick Selemani, Phumzile

2003 where he practiced hip hop sessions in and

Nkosi, Courses Coordinator: Tebello Mohapi, Manager Administration &

around the Vaal Rand. Bonongo appeared in his first stage beatboxing

Operations: Busi Sithole, Manager Curriculum & Training: Maxine Thomik, Manager PP: Khona Dlamini, Officer Resources: Tswaledi Thobejane, PDP

performance in 2011, after moving to Johannesburg, in

Project Coordinator: Tsepo Gumbi, Projects Assistant: Flurina Casty, Sipho

the stage work Boom Bap vs Swag Rap with KiriPinKnob.

Gongxeka, Receptionist: Magadi Monaheng, Weekend Workshop Assistant:

Bonongo did more beatboxing work with the Song

Loyiso Oldjohn

& Dance theatrical company from 2014, featuring in the musical dance piece with Phuphuma love minors

THE MARKET LABORATORY: Education Officer: Clara Louise Vaughan,

(Ischathamiya group) and The Chants we Make.

Administrator: Thandeka Nheke, Venue Technician: Sibusiso Ndumndum

Creative Feel / May 2017 / 43


From live productions to film and television, the characters that we see are elevated by the theatrics in their costumes. Building personality with clothing is an art form on its own, one that Hayley Nebauer is incredibly skilled at.

A

rguably one of the most important roles in theatre, television and cinema is that of the costume designer. Costume designers’ stylistic contributions to the world of film

and, by extension, to our own worlds, is undeniable. Their work contributes to constructing the characters we love, enhancing the production’s setting via colour and texture, and in some instances, transcends the screen and informs our perception of style in our own lives. Major film, television and theatre awards around the world recognise costume designers for their ability to escalate a production, to make it believable, and to fully transport viewers to the desired time period or destination. Just as one hears the work of a composer and is transported to the memory of a scene, so too can the work of a costume designer bring a particular film or character to mind. One only has to remember the white halter dress Marilyn Monroe wore in The Seven Year Itch (1955), the black-on-black leather ensemble worn by Keanu Reeves in The Matrix (1999), or Hannibal Lecter’s orange jumpsuit and facemask from The Silence of the Lambs (1991) to revisit the visuals and emotions of their respective films. Creating unique costumes ideal to the needs of each director and production, Hayley Nebauer has worked as a costume designer for film, television and theatre since 2000. Now based in the UK, the Australian-born costume designer grew up in Tasmania and had an early interest in costume history and science fiction. Grimaud, a character from season three of The Musketeers for BBC, 2016. Illustration by Hayley Nebauer

44 / Creative Feel / May 2017


Milady, a character from season three of The Musketeers for BBC, 2016. Illustration by Hayley Nebauer

The projects she takes on reflect her particular interest in science fiction. From the dystopian short AIR (produced by Nebauer) with its detailed and clever ‘survival suit’ to the anthropomorphic ‘goat demon’ in A Lonely Place to Die (2010), Nebauer creates imaginative and interesting pieces that bring a sense of strange realism to the productions. Influences of contemporary architecture and industrial design objects are recognisable in her works, showing Nebauer’s ability to consider unusual elements and incorporate them into contemporary films or productions. Other recent exciting work includes the third series of the visual and swashbuckling BBC drama The Musketeers, the tenth series of cult hit Dr Who, highly acclaimed BBC miniseries Our World War (a WW1 Drama), Take Down, a thriller/drama feature film from director Jim Gillespie (I Know What You Did Last Summer) and Pinewood Films and TV drama Cyber Bully. ‘Whether looking at minimalist contemporary clothing, period-accurate costume or creating a new aesthetic specific to a new project, I always put the needs of the production first so that work created is right for the character, the story and above all, working effectively with overall creative concepts for the production in focus,’ says Nebauer. ‘Specialising in a design process called “Hybrid design”, I often use the friction between contrasting aesthetics and themes to generate new ideas, fusing and blending references in unexpected ways to create new, streamlined designs specific to each production.’ Colour remains a central focus of Nebauer’s work. A controlled and rich colour palette can define a production as strongly as the aesthetics themselves. Balance through asymmetry and the use of hard curves also define Nebauer’s more stylised works. ‘I love being part of the creation of telling stories, especially in the making of visuals that support this. I spent much of my childhood playing imaginary games or was up a tree – working in the film industry as an adult is like the practical application of this – we see stories we like, or that thrill or engage us and we invent the world around the characters to make it real. ‘I chose costume design because I love the visual richness and movement of costume. Something about putting on a costume and becoming something or someone else is appealing and intoxicating, creatively; to imagine and create a person in a place and flesh out the details around them.’ CF Queen Anne, a character from season three of The Musketeers for BBC, 2016. Illustration by Hayley Nebauer Creative Feel / May 2017 / 45


Loot

MAD about Jewelry Returns with 54 Artists from 21 Countries, to MAD

From 4 to 8 April 2017, the Museum of Arts and Design (MAD) in New York presented LOOT: MAD About Jewelry, the annual exhibition and sale of contemporary art jewellery.

Michelle Cangiano, Courtesy of the artist

46 / Creative Feel / May 2017


I

n its 17th edition, LOOT presented a cross-section of the most exciting cutting-edge art jewellery designs, while offering the public a rare opportunity to meet and acquire pieces directly from some of the most skilled creators in the field. A striking example

of the evolving possibilities of jewellery as an art form, LOOT: MAD About Jewelry champions the vision and craftsmanship of outstanding art jewellers – most of whom had never before shown work in the United States. ‘This annual five-day pop-up store is a one-of-a-kind event,’ said Marsy Mittlemann, the 2017 LOOT Chairman. ‘I am thrilled to introduce these 54 contemporary jewellery artists to the New York City community. The opportunity to buy these unique pieces of jewellery, and to meet the artists while supporting the Museum and its mission, is very meaningful to me.’ Each year, collectors and jewellery enthusiasts flock to MAD’s LOOT event to learn about jewellers’ processes, materials, and concepts, and to purchase works directly from their makers. With all of the designers present on site throughout the exhibition and sale, LOOT is one of New York’s most unique museum experiences. Proceeds benefit MAD’s exhibition and education programs. This year’s edition welcomed 54 artists from 21 countries, the majority of whom had never been shown in New York. All were selected by Pomp following a full year of travel and research. For the first time, LOOT featured three artists from Iceland and one from Romania. There were also artists from Argentina, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Holland, Israel, Italy, Korea, Norway, Portugal, Spain, United Kingdom, and United States. ‘Each year, I seek to present materials that even I have not seen in my decades of work in the field of jewellery,’ said Pomp. ‘In each edition of LOOT, I strive to show as many different, unique materials as possible in addition to more traditional metals and semiprecious stones. The 2017 presentation included driftwood, neoprene, marble, sheer plywood, textiles, ceramic, aluminium, beading, and acrylic. A significant trend this year was the use of recycled materials, including china tableware, plastic bottles and shopping bags, and even skateboards.’ This year, over two dozen artists designed jewellery using natural forms as their subjects. Visitors had the chance to meet Finnish artist Inni Pärnänen, who makes floral designs using sheer plywood, and English artist Rie Taniguchi, whose jewellery depicts animals and birds. Fellow English jewellery artist Olivia Creber uses molten metal with minerals, while French artist Delphine Nardin uses sea glass, gold, and silver to design jewellery inspired by the ocean. Icelandic artist Helga Mogensen uses driftwood and visible threads to create unique statement necklaces. LOOT: MAD About Jewelry reflects the Museum of Arts and Design’s commitment to the exploration of materials and process, as well as its long-standing presentation of jewellery as an art form. MAD is the only American museum with a gallery dedicated

Olivia Creber, Courtesy of the artist

to the display of both temporary jewellery exhibitions and its own collection of contemporary and modern studio and art jewellery. CF

Creative Feel / May 2017 / 47


450 Scarifications, 2017. Mixed Media on Canvas, 250 x 200 cm. 870004

48 / Creative Feel / May 2017


Moroccan-born artist Booshra will be having her solo exhibition titled Muse at Candice Berman Gallery, Johannesburg from 29 June to 13 July 2017.

H

auntingly beautiful, Booshra’s colossal portraits have become iconic, shown internationally from Amsterdam, Belgium and Luxembourg to Miami and New York. With the surge of portraiture emerging as a genre in art, we have to ask ourselves what is the fascination with the study of the human face and its meaning, and how is Booshra’s work an embodiment of this era?

The subject in the portrait mesmerises, holds your attention and creates an almost uncomfortable self-

consciousness as you struggle to face the feeling of being seen. The gaze, challenging you straight on, forces you to acknowledge your presence and mirror our humanness. This non-verbal confrontation intensely distinguishes between the seeing individual and the individual as being ‘seen’. When standing in front of the portrait you are defined as separate from the ‘other’. This is the first lesson we learn as children, that we are separate from our parent. It is an almost painful state of awareness. Separation dissolves the symbiotic illusion in which we are nestled. From the moment our parents see us, to when we become conscious of how we are being seen by the world, to when we embrace how time’s narrative has inscribed itself upon our faces and bodies, we constantly struggle between the self as innate consciousness and the physical appearance of that self. There is a definite emphasis on the physicality of the portrait subject. As we trace our eyes along the features, the composition, the proportions, emotions, and attitude of the portrait subject, we scrutinise this physicality, desperately searching for an understanding of the person behind the eyes and how that person is revealed in physicality. Do we see this physicality as morally prescriptive? Is there a connection between proportion, balance, individuality and what is good? We are forced to reconsider these subjects not just as ordinary people, but as Muses who embody principles and values to which we can aspire. They become ideal figures setting examples of what strength and self-acceptance look like. Traditionally portraits intended to immortalise their subject and to place them above others. The scale of Booshra’s works as well as the direct gaze of the subject contribute to the importance of the interaction. They are not just ordinary people, by portraiting them they become our Muses. We look to them for inspiration, for calm, for strength and assurance. We need to consider what it is about them that needs to be recognised, respected and reconsidered. She is uplifting the nameless faces of the world. Her Muses are always self-assured totems to strength and independence. A rebel artist with a spirit that cannot be tamed, Booshra’s work is uncompromising and bold, almost defiant and embodies her strength of personality. Booshra has said that if she were not an artist she would be an ‘anthropologist-philosopher’, fascinated by the magnetism of the eyes. There is something to be said about the study of the human face at this particular point in time. We are struggling to make meaning out of our lives and struggling to find explanations to haphazard events. To whom do we look? The closest identifier is other humans. We desperately search the faces and gazes of others in order to better understand ourselves. We come to terms with the discrepancy between our physical bodies and our internal mindscapes. The distinction is unsettling, but it is a reality. There is always a part of ourselves striving to make meaning of things. To understand each scar and interpret each line. The inscriptions on the face proffer to reveal something about the subject but remind us of how we are seen in the world. The beauty of the subject can charm and hypnotise, but the truth is in our shared humanness. The Muse inspires the good and a striving for beauty and serenity. We come to realise that this beauty can be hidden in the most subtle of features, in the crevices of the subject and most importantly in the human interaction. CF

Creative Feel / May 2017 / 49


Cassina, exhibiting on the True Design stand

Mid-century Masterstroke Design Joburg, featuring Rooms on View makes its debut this May at the Sandton Convention Centre. The show promises to bring together an inspiring array of furniture and design ranges, among which, one style stands out‌ midcentury modernism.

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&Tradition, represented in South Africa by Crema

I

n the mid-1940s, a wonderful shift began to take place in the design world. Simple lines, geometric designs, bold colour, pared-down forms and a touch of whimsy crept into architecture and home décor, in a movement that over the next few decades would radically transform the industry.

After a brief hiatus, the mid-century style crept back onto our radars in the ‘90s, when

original pieces started collecting thousands at auctions. Design giants such as Kartell, Cassina, Flos and Moroso (who are all exhibiting on the True Design stand at the show) helped to make mid-century modern more accessible by selling masterpieces by the likes of Le Corbusier, Frank Lloyd Wright, Perriand and Rietveld, among others, directly to the public. Whereas for many years, they had to be acquired via architects or interior designers. It’s hardly surprising that such a powerful era of design continues to influence the industry today, guided by their design principles. &Tradition, Hay and Muuto (all represented in South Africa by Crema with showrooms in both Cape Town and Johannesburg) are three Scandinavian brands that encourage furniture design’s return to the innovative greatness of this era in a contemporary context. Locally, the likes of Skinny laMinx, with her playful patterned textiles, Urbanative, with their Afro-Midcentury furniture range and Andrew Dominic, paying gentle homage to the lines and angles of the 1940s, reinterpret the movement with a wonderful South African twist. Despite its name, the mid-century modern movement is not of an era. Well-designed and timeless, this style sits as comfortably in a modern home as it did in the 1940s, and its principles continue to guide designers today. Quite simply, the movement has proved that it stands the test of time. You can experience the mid-century design movement for yourself at Design Joburg, featuring Rooms on View at the Sandton Convention Centre from 12 to 14 May 2017. CF www.designjoburg.com

Creative Feel / May 2017 / 51


Darlings of local design In an inaugural show highlighted by unprecedented collaborations between South Africa’s most prominent design talents and brands, Design Joburg, featuring Rooms on View, is thrilled to announce the DARLINGS feature.

Studio19

52 / Creative Feel / May 2017


T

he DARLINGS feature space will showcase the latest

For the organisers, Media 10, it was important that the

designs from the ‘darlings of local design’, designers

show ‘be a showcase for South Africa’s entire design offering

whose work epitomises the energy and creativity

and not just those with the resources to exhibit,’ says the

that characterises South Africa’s bright design

show’s Event Director, Sandra Barrow.

scene right now. Design Joburg approached a few of the country’s

Brand-new designs and ranges will be revealed, including a new chair collection by Haldane Martin, new stools by

brightest stars and asked them to share their iconic or never-

Laurie Wiid, lighting from Studio 19, pinch bowl creations

before-seen creations. The lineup includes Capetonians

in brilliant tones of indigo from Zizipho Poswa of Imiso

Haldane Martin, Heather Moore of Skinny laMinx, Andile

Ceramics and a dynamic fabric collection by Heather Moore

Dyalvane and Zizipho Poswa of Imiso Ceramics, Andrew

of Skinny laMinx called Roof Garden, inspired by her water-

Dominic, Mema Design, Minima Design, Louw Roets, Laurie

wise rooftop garden.

Wiid; with Johannesburg design studios Lemon, Studio 19

With the very latest in design on show, DARLINGS is

and Aureum Design; and finally Durban represented by

poised to be one of Design Joburg, featuring Rooms on

Gareth Henderson and Douglas & Douglas,

View’s most beautiful features. CF

with more to be confirmed. Imaginatively curated by the HK Studio

www.designjoburg.com

design team comprising Candice Sheppard, Lianel Ackerman, Lindy van den Berg and Ashleigh Blackman, their challenge is to fuse the latest wares of all these creators into an imaginative feature stand.

Louw Roets’ Hombre Chair

Creative Feel / May 2017 / 53


Cecil Edwin Frans Skotnes Tapestry for the President Hotel R 200 000 – 300 000

William Joseph Kentridge Untitled Drawing for Mango Groove Music Video (Megaphone on Pylon) R1 800 000 – 2 500 000

STRAUSS & CO’S JOHANNESBURG SALE Strauss & Co’s forthcoming Johannesburg live sale includes a selection of important works by leading South African artists, including standout lots by stalwarts of the auction market, JH Pierneef, Alexis Preller and Irma Stern. The auction, which will be held at the Wanderer’s Club on 5 June, also includes a number of iconic works made in the 1990s.

A

period of political and cultural renewal for South Africa, the 1990s also marked a decisive change in the art market. Writing in the London-based magazine Modern Painters

following his visit to the first Johannesburg Biennale in 1995, musician and art collector David Bowie described the ‘pure exhilaration’ he felt encountering South Africa’s unheralded new talent and expression. Bowie described Kentridge’s contribution, a collaboration with Danish artist Doris Bloom, as the ‘whiteheat high point’ of his 1995 Johannesburg visit. Kentridge is well represented in the 1990s selection at Strauss & Co’s upcoming sale. Notable works include two charcoal process drawings from a 1994 music video Kentridge directed for the much-loved pop act Mango Groove. Mango Groove cemented their place in history by performing at the Union Buildings for Nelson Mandela’s presidential inauguration on 10 May 1994. ‘There was a real sense of hope, of possibility for change, and I think we need to remember that more,’ said Mango Groove’s lead singer Claire Johnston in 2012. The song Another Country was released in 1993 and commemorates the tragic events surrounding the 1992 Boipatong massacre, south of Johannesburg. Greg

54 / Creative Feel / May 2017


Jacob Hendrik Pierneef Farm Jonkershoek with Twin Peaks Beyond, Stellenbosch R 6 000 000 – 8 000 000

Maggie (Maria Magdalena) Laubser Basutoland Hills R 600 000 – 800 000

SPOTLIGHTS A DECADE THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING Marinovich, the internationally acclaimed photojournalist whose work also appears among Strauss & Co’s 1990s selection, witnessed the massacre first-hand. The two Kentridge drawings, which describe a drive-in screen and megaphone on pylon, both familiar motifs in his oeuvre, are valued at R1.8 – 2.5 million respectively. A special-edition portfolio of 41 Marinovich photos, made between 1990 and 1999 and entitled Dead Zone, carries an estimate of R250 000 – R350 000. Other artists included in Strauss & Co’s 1990s selection include Norman Catherine and Anton Kannemeyer. Catherine, whose work was collected by Bowie, is represented by the oil Predator (1993). The work is valued at R550 000 – 700 000. The Kannemeyer lots include a five-page panel Nag van die Wit Skrik (estimate R80 000 – 120 000) from the ground-breaking comic book Bitterkomix. They are signed under his alias Joe Dog. ‘We are very excited by this special focus within

William Joseph Kentridge Untitled Drawing for Mango Groove Music Video (Drive-In Screen and Megaphone) R 1 800 000 - 2 500 000 IMPORTANT SOUTH AFRICAN AND INTERNATIONAL ART

our larger sale,’ says Susie Goodman, Strauss & Co’s

Monday 5 June, 2017 | Venue | The Wanderer’s Club, Jhb

general manager in Johannesburg. ‘The exceptional lots

Preview | Friday 2 to Sunday 4 June from 10am to 5pm

we have consigned speak to a very particular moment

Walkabout | Saturday 3 and Sunday 4 June at 11 am

in our collective history, recording its sorrow and great

Enquiries and Catalogues

optimism. I am confident audiences will be heartened by

011 728 8246

this showcase.’ CF

www.straussart.co.za

Creative Feel / May 2017 / 55


Mexico performance, 2015 PHOTO Cesar Damian

Tumbling down a bunny-hole into Liza’s wonderland Liza Grobler’s April show at Everard Read in Cape Town, entitled Maybe Time can Fold, was ‘a tangible, textured, multi-coloured montage of time, place and space by the artist, to be explored at the audience’s leisure’. Art lecturer and historian, Lloyd Pollak, reviews the exhibition.

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Liza Grobler Crysalis, 2017

L

iza Grobler is a dazzler who always looks like a film star emerging from her stretch limo on her return from some ritzy Hollywood do at 4:00 A.M; the artist is all mascara, razzamatazz and flashy fashion

sense. She has fun dressing and she has fun with her art. An infectious sense of enjoyment is manifest in her every endeavour, and at her recent show, Maybe Time can Fold, at Everard Read’s Cape Town gallery, these are manifold, embracing silk embroidery, knitting and all the traditional ‘housewifely’ needlework skills which she subverts. Grobler eliminates any element of utility in her sculptural works, like Untitled which she transforms into a monumental epic creation that asserts a masculine audacity. This installation of tall columns rising from floor to ceiling – fashioned from, of all things, pipe cleaners, clearly demonstrates that her every piece resonates that uniquely Grobleresque quality of looking like nothing else that you have ever seen in your life. One is left so gob-smacked, all you can do is hurl adjectives at them. Her oeuvre is utterly unpredictable – fantastic, phantasmagorical, chimerical, amazing and off-the-wall – and always fireworks for the retina and the mind. An emphasis on tactility, her materials and their

kaleidoscopic textures and colours are the quintessence

unpredictability of the universe and the aberrant behaviour of

of her art, especially her two most resplendent creations.

time, place and space as described by the Relativity, Quantum

Crysalis – a weird, rounded, teardrop shape, about four

and Big Bang theories. She speaks of making the viewer

feet high and three in diameter – is improvised in a

‘become a granule in the process, a moment in the life of the

basketry technique employing industrial polyester,

universe as it extends in space and unrolls in time…’

mohair, hula hoops and dangling plaits of hair. Surprise is

In other words, her pieces aim to transform our

a constant, and here it stems from both the odd materials

consciousness. However, the intellectual content – the four

and organic sculptural form, even more from the two

dimensions, space, time circularity, the Nietzschean idea of

projecting feet and legs that suggest a human presence

history as eternal recurrence – is always presented with an

within this hairy carnivorous confabulation which verges

unfailing inventiveness and playful wit. The 49 abstract ink

on the surreal.

and pigment drawings address these concerns far more overtly,

Crows in Satpula Park, an abstraction that nevertheless

and consist of undulant parallel brushstrokes applied to both

evokes perspective, landscape and avian presences, is yet

dark and smouldering, and light, bright and airy grounds. All

another nonpareil. Executed in black velvet, silk, a variety

attest to a strong sense of pattern and rhythm, a flair for colour

of different fabrics, patterned and plain – all set off by

and, finally, a firm sense of order and discipline underneath the

Swarovski crystals that glitter and sparkle with brilliantly

appearance of an imagination running riot. Grobler’s instinct for

tinctured reflected light – its unbridled exoticism may reflect

interval and the play of solids and voids is also impeccable and

India, where it was conceived and executed.

achieves an almost musical quality. But there is also a darker side

So, what on earth is Maybe Time can Fold actually about?

to the artist that comes to the fore in What Remains, a suite of 49

Grobler claims that the goal of her art ‘is to confound all

works that look decidedly sinister, like hoary antlers, and evoke

expectations, make dreams tangible, take a step beyond

something primal and predatory, like fangs, claws and snakes,

reality and usher the viewer into a parallel universe. Hopefully

which immediately prompts shuddering recoil in the viewer.

this will shift the way the audience perceives and experiences

‘There is a strong sense of assertion. Every work boldly

reality and make them more reliant on feeling and intuition,

cries out, “this is me”. At last Grobler’s work has achieved

rather than reason.’ The artist proclaims, ‘ours is a colourful

a new coherence and vigour. Finally, the artist has come

and amazing world where universes explode, space collapses

into her glorious own,’ commented the gallery director,

into bottomless holes, time sags and slows near a planet, and

Charles Shields, and I can only concur that this devastatingly

the unbounded extensions of interstellar space ripple and

original artist surpasses most of her rivals, working far-out

sway like the surface of the sea…’ Her creations mirror the

on the cutting-edge. CF

Creative Feel / May 2017 / 57


KRUGERRAND:

Celebrating A Modern-Day Classic The Krugerrand brand has become synonymous with gold coinage the world over, since it was first introduced in South Africa on the 3rd July 1967.

I

ssued under the authority of the South African Reserve Bank (SARB), the Krugerrand is the world’s leading legal tender bullion gold coin, designed for investment purposes and a more premium version is produced in

limited quantities for coin collectors. The coins are minted by the South African Mint, a subsidiary of the SARB, in partnership with Rand Refinery. At inception, the Krugerrand was developed as a 1-ounce gold investment coin and interestingly, although

coins have only ever been available in fine gold, since the

Krugerrands are legal tender, they do not have a face value

expansion of the range in 1980.

(denomination). The value of each coin is directly related

In celebration of half a century of pioneering coin-

to the value of its gold content, based on the daily gold

making, the South African Mint has issued an alluring

price. Other gold bullion coins, on the other hand, have

range of collectable Krugerrands, in addition to the four

a face value (currency denomination – e.g. R50) that is

traditional gold bullion coins. Once-off, collectable coins

significantly below the value of gold. In South Africa, the

to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Krugerrand

SARB guarantees the purchase of any Krugerrand tendered

include new large coins in the massive 50-ounce and

for the ruling gold price on the day, whereas with other gold

5-ounce gold coins; as well as much smaller ones in the

coins, the issuing government only guarantees the face value

¹/20-ounce and ¹/50-ounce gold coins.

(currency denominated on the coin).

For the first time in 2017, the Krugerrand has been

In 1980, fractional bullion Krugerrands were

minted in metals other than gold; a Premium Uncirculated

introduced in ¹/2, ¹/4 and ¹/10 ounces, as well as the

fine silver coin, a proof-quality fine silver coin as well as a

collectable, proof-quality range of Krugerrands. The

highly desirable fine platinum 1-ounce coin.

58 / Creative Feel / May 2017


The iconic prancing springbok that the very first Krugerrand bore in 1967 has remained consistent on all new Krugerrands. Modern coin making technology has been used to enhance and accentuate the details of the design of all the new coins, across the various sizes in all different metals. The Krugerrand today is the world’s most recognised gold coin, having been the first in this category. While many other countries have followed in issuing gold investment coins, they have done so with 24 carat gold, while Krugerrand coins are manufactured from 22 carat gold. The alloy material in the coins is copper, which was chosen to enhance hardness and therefore durability of the coins. Krugerrands, therefore, live beyond any of their 24 carat gold counterparts, as they are harder and have stood the test of time. To honour the legacy of this South African icon, a book released in February 2017, Krugerrand Golden Jubilee was written by Professor Francois Malan. The book gives a definitive narrative on how the Krugerrand became the world’s favourite gold bullion coin and follows a neat chronological order of events while offering insights into the coin’s early life, tumultuous growth years through apartheid and sanctions to the legend it has now become. The complete range of 2017 anniversary Krugerrands,

CONTACT DETAILS Tel: +27 (0) 12 677 2460/2482

Krugerrand Golden Jubilee book and other collectable coins

Email: Coinworld@samint.co.za or

commemorating various flora, fauna and prominent South

numismatics@samint.co.za

African icons and events, can be found at the South African

www.samint.co.za

Mint’s retail shop, Coin World, and at the South African Mint premises on Corner Old Johannesburg Road and Brakfontein Interchange. CF

Creative Feel / May 2017 / 59




THE MARKET SQUARE

The newly built Market Square has brought an interesting new dynamic to the arts hub in Newtown. The award-winning architecture, with stunning interior murals created by Artist Proof Studio, is the new home for the Market Theatre Foundation as well as a campus for students at the

T

he Market Square, the new addition to the Market Theatre complex, features ultra-modern spaces that include a theatre, library, auditorium, rehearsal rooms, dance studios, boardrooms and offices. It is

appropriately located between streets named after two of the country’s foremost vocalists – Miriam Makeba and Margaret Mcingana. The latest addition to the Newtown cultural precinct also stands adjacent to Mary Fitzgerald Square in

Market Theatre Laboratory and Market

the middle of Lilian Ngoyi and Rahima Moosa Streets. Former

Photo Workshop.

historic 1956 Women’s March.

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Bree and Jeppe Streets were renamed in memory of the


The Market Square PHOTO Mpho Mokgadi – a graduate of the Market Theatre Photo Workshop

‘I had a long-held desire to create a platform in South Africa for young people who had fallen through the cracks of apartheid and who have been victims of Bantu education to find their voice to speak out about issues that concerned them and their communities – and to give them the skills to do this,’ says Dr John Kani. The Market Theatre’s training and developmental wing was seen by the founders as an artistic and academic space where tutors and students could imagine and create theatrical works that reflected their vision of a free and decent society for all. It also offered an intellectually stimulating environment where students from underprivileged backgrounds could interact with some of their role models in the theatre world. The Lab opened in October 1989 in a small warehouse under the highway in Goch Street, Newtown, where professional tutors ran practical as well as theoretical courses for aspiring actors. The Lab quickly became a platform for young artists to meet and engage creatively and collaboratively, first in apartheid South Africa and later in the new democracy. With the success of the drama school, other programmes were initiated, including the community theatre programmes that have resulted in the annual Community Theatre Festival and Zwakala Festival, which showcase performances from around the country and which have unearthed hidden theatrical talents. Today the Market Theatre Lab has developed into one of the premiere training facilities of its kind in Southern Africa. It has trained exceptional performers and theatremakers including Olive Schreiner Award winner Phillip Dikotla; three Standard Bank Young Artist of the Year winners, Monageng Motshabi (2016), Prince Lamla (2013), and Mncedisi Shabangu (2014); and SAFTA award winners Harriet Manamela, Warren Masemola and Lindiwe Ndlovu. Scores of Lab graduates are working in the theatre industry as actors, writers and directors, and many are household names in South Africa today.

The Market Theatre Laboratory has always trained

‘Work started on the Market Square in 2011 and we

actors and theatre-makers. Founded by Barney Simon

moved in in December 2016,’ says Christine McDonald, Chief

and Dr John Kani in 1988, it is the educational arm of the

Financial Officer of the Market Theatre Foundation. ‘Five

world-famous Market Theatre and was the brainchild of

long years, but worth the wait. 2016 was also the year that

Barney Simon, co-founder of the Market Theatre. The idea

the Market turned 40 and the Market Square was a special

for the Lab was born in response to the community theatre

gift to the Market for a special birthday. The gift was made

sector’s need for high-quality training, and to provide

possible by National Treasury through the Department of

a seedbed for the creation of new South African plays.

Arts and Culture who funded the R100 mil project. The

John Kani, then Associate Artistic Director of the Market

Market Square was the result of the collective effort of a

Theatre, raised funds from the Rockefeller Foundation to

talented team of professionals who put in far more that what

set up the Lab.

was expected and contracted for: Badat Developments –

Creative Feel / April 2017 / 63


The Market Square PHOTO Mpho Mokgadi Project Manager; KMH – Architects; Walker Marè- Quantity

Foundation, Ismail Mahomed, at the time of the opening of

Surveyors; Protection Projects – Fire engineers; ADA –

the Vanessa Cooke Computer Room.

Structural engineers; Interiors for Change – floorplan design and furniture layout.’ The latest addition to the Market Square has been

The Market Photo Workshop is now also housed in the Market Square and continues to play a pivotal role in the training of South Africa’s photographers, ensuring that visual

a state-of-the-art resource centre, the Vanessa Cooke

literacy reaches neglected and marginalised parts of our society.

Computer Room, named after the actress who starred

Since it was founded in 1989 by world-renowned photographer

in the Market Theatre’s first play, Anton Chekov’s The

David Goldblatt, the Photo Workshop has been an agent of

Seagull, in 1976 and was for many years the head of the

change and representation, informing photographers, visual

Lab. Cooke officially retired from The Lab in 2008. Dan

artists, educators, students and broader communities of trends,

Robbertse took over as education officer between 2011

issues and debates in photography and visual culture.

and 2013, when he handed the reins to Clara Vaughn.

The alumni of the Market Photo Workshop include

Cooke is still a member of the Market Theatre family

some truly impressive names like Jodi Bieber who studied

and continues to contribute to the creation of new

at the Market Photo Workshop in the early 1990s and has

productions. The most recent play she directed at the

gone on to win countless awards, most notably the 2010

Market Theatre has been a revelation. Written by Siphiwo

World Press Photo of the Year award for her portrait of

Mahala and starring Sello Maake kaNcube, The House of

Bibi Aisha that featured on the cover of Time Magazine.

Truth (2016) has been sold out since its premiere at the

Today Bieber also mentors students with their grants to

National Arts Festival.

produce projects, and she gives lectures and photographic

‘We want our alumni and the teachers that they work with to take full advantage of arts education through the digital space,’ said Chief Executive of the Market Theatre

64 / Creative Feel / April 2017

workshops all over the world. Zanele Muholi, who completed an Advanced Programme in Photography at the Photo Workshop, has


The Market Square PHOTO Mpho Mokgadi gone on to become one of the most acclaimed female artists in South Africa. Muholi’s interest lies in the black

Bureaucracy of Everyday Life, Haus der Kunst, Munich (2013). Mpho Mokgadi completed the Advanced Programme

female body in a frank, yet intimate, way that challenges

at the Market Photo Workshop. He was the second

the history of the portrayal of black women’s bodies

runner-up in the Pretoria News and Nikon South Africa

in documentary photography. She has won numerous

competition in 2012. Group exhibitions include New

awards, including the Fine Prize for an emerging artist

Black and White Photography (2013) at 6 Spin Street

at the 2013 Carnegie International; a Prince Claus

in Cape Town; the African Film Collective in 2012 at

Award (2013); the Index on Censorship – Freedom of

the Exposure Gallery in Johannesburg and at a group

Expression Art Award (2013); and the Casa Africa Award

exhibition by Market alumni at the Joburg Fringe in

for Best Female Photographer and a Fondation Blachère

2015. In the same year he presented a selection of works

Award at Les Rencontres de Bamako Biennial of African

at THATARTFAIR in Cape Town. He participated in the

Photography (2009).

Gwanza Month of Photography in Harare in 2014. As

Sabelo Mlangeni studied at the Photo Workshop from

part of a residency at Pro Helvetia, Mokgadi developed

2001 to 2004. He won the Tollman Award for the Visual

the self-published photozine titled It’s kind of a difficult

Arts in 2009. In addition to shows at Stevenson Gallery, he

task. His first solo exhibition, IN SITU, was held at ROOM

has held solo shows at Aula der Akademie der Bildenden

Gallery & Projects in 2016.

Kunste Wien, Austria (2014); Goethe-Institut, Johannesburg

The Market Theatre is currently conducting weekly

(2013); and Iceberg Projects, Chicago (2012). Notable group

90-minute tours of the precinct on Wednesdays and

exhibitions include Public Intimacy: Art and Social Life in South

guests can hear about The Market’s four-decade history

Africa at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco

through anecdotes gleaned from the playhouse’s

(2014); Apartheid and After at Huis Marseille, Amsterdam

anniversary coffee-table book, 40 Years of Storytelling:

(2014); Rise and Fall of Apartheid: Photography and the

1976-2016. CF

Creative Feel / April 2017 / 65


Zenzi and Miriam Makeba

A celebration of our nation’s Between 29 June and 8 July, some of South Africa and the world’s top young and established jazz musicians take to Grahamstown for the Standard Bank Jazz Festival. This year’s programme promises to be exciting and different and, as always, excellent.

‘W

e celebrate two exciting anniversaries

into jazz in Grahamstown, as Standard Bank Young Artists;

this year,’ says Festival Producer, Alan

or in the Standard Bank National Youth Jazz Band (SBNYJB)

Webster. ‘Twenty years of sponsorship

or Schools’ Bands (SBNSBB); or simply as youngsters having

of the jazz festival by Standard Bank, a

their minds blown by what they have seen on the DSG stage.

corporate funder who has altered the cultural landscape of

Welcome to a celebration of the past and future of our

South Africa in its support of the arts; and 25 years of the

nation’s jazz!’

Standard Bank National Youth Jazz Festival (SBNYJF) – a

Neo Muyanga is the 2017 National Arts Festival Featured

festival that has provided musicians, teachers and students

Artist, performing in various musical styles across this year’s

with key networking opportunities and exposed them to

festival. Born in Soweto, he studied the Italian madrigal

the world in a fashion unique in South Africa and possibly

tradition with choral maestro Piero Poclen in Trieste, Italy

the world, catalysing the growth of our national jazz

and in the mid-1990s he co-founded the acoustic duo, Blk

identity in the process.’

Sonshine, garnering a following throughout Southern Africa

Webster adds that the 2017 programme is ‘threaded

and internationally. His music is hybridised, playing along

through with musicians who have made their initial forays

the boundaries of the crafted and the improvised, or as he

66 / Creative Feel / May 2017


Jimmy Nevis

Kyle Shepherd

explains, ‘sound as a median between thought and practice.’

attended the Jazz Festival since he was 15 and been selected

The Neo Muyanga Trio, featuring Neo Muyanga (voice,

for the Standard Bank National Youth Jazz Band three times.

guitar), Peter Ndlala (bass) and Andre Swartz (drums), will

His sound is clearly rooted in church and South African

perform at the DSG Hall on Sunday 2 July at 12:00.

music and he hopes that, with every performance, a listener

Grahamstown is renowned for its unique opportunities

is given a musical biography of his life while also sending

for musical collaboration, which this year includes Tumi

them on a journey of hope, upliftment and encouragement.

Mogorosi and Gabi Motuba working with Swiss musicians,

Made up of musicians Benjamin Jephta (bass), Sisonke Xonti

Feya Faku also with Swiss, Zoe Modiga with Germans and

(sax), Marcus Wyatt (trumpet), Keenan Ahrends (guitar), Kyle

a host of other interesting opportunities. On top of that

Shepherd (piano) and Sphelelo Mazibuko (drums), the Sestet

are two international superstar performances – Israeli/

will perform on Tuesday 4 July at the DSG Hall at 19:30.

French pianist Yaron Herman with drummer Ziv Ravitz,

Jephta will also present ‘Akoustik Elektrik’, featuring

and Brazilian bassist extraordinaire, 21-year-old Michael

Sisonke Xonti (sax), Justin Bellairs (sax), Marcus Wyatt

Pipoquinha with his trio – as well as heavyweight South

(trumpet), Kyle Shepherd (piano), Bokani Dyer (piano),

Africans Judith Sephuma and Marcus Wyatt (with his

Sphelelo Mazibuko (drums), Eden Myrrh (voice) and

Bombshelter Beast) and the hip young bands of The Kiffness

Jitsvinger (MC). His second Standard Bank Young Artist

(with Matthew Gold), The Soil, GoodLuck and Jimmy Nevis.

performance fuses his love for jazz with hip-hop, electronic

The Benjamin Jephta Sestet has been together since

and rock music, reflecting the influence of popular culture

Standard Bank Young Artist for Jazz 2017 Benjamin Jephta

on young people in the 21st century. ‘Akoustik Elektrik’

recorded his debut album Homecoming in 2014. Jephta has

aims to blend or manipulate acoustic instruments with

precocious talent, having performed since the age of 14 with

electronic synths to create a sound that cuts through hip-

various orchestras and small ensembles in Africa, Europe

hop, electronic and jazz to form something fresh and new.

and Asia, and is a true veteran of Grahamstown, having

As with all of his compositions, Jephta is constantly dealing

Creative Feel / May 2017 / 67


The Soil with the concept of identity – as an artist or as a human

instrumentalist, playing at virtuoso level on all the brass,

being. Akoustik Elektrik will be #keepingitfresh on Friday 7

piano, saxophones and double bass. He has been guest

July at the DSG Hall at 19:30.

soloist with the London Symphony Orchestra and Berlin

On 5 July, Jephta will join Dutch guitarist/composer

Philharmonic, and performed with artists such as Dizzy

Anton Goudsmit; South African saxophonist living in

Gillespie, George Benson, Phil Collins, Ray Charles and

Norway, Shannon Mowday; and Norwegian drummer

Wynton Marsalis, headlining festivals such as the Montreux

Torstein Lofthus for Funk! at 19:00 at the DSG Auditorium.

and North Sea Jazz Festivals and playing in the world’s great

Anton Goudsmit is one of the most impressive and diverse

jazz clubs. Morrison composed and performed the opening

musicians on the Dutch music scene – a scene that is world-

for the Sydney Olympic Games, and in 2013 conducted

renowned for both its technical precision and its creativity.

the World’s Largest Orchestra of 7 224 musicians, setting

In addition to her Funk! collaboration, highly skilled

a new Guinness World Record. He also established the

saxophonist Shannon Mowday will also perform on Tuesday

James Morrison Academy of Music (partnered with The

4 July at 22:00 at the DSG Hall. The Standard Bank Young

Juilliard), has a pilot’s license and hosted Top Gear Australia.

Artist for Jazz in 2007 attended the very first SBNYJF in 1992

The James Morrison Quartet consists of James Morrison

with her father, a woodwind teacher in Cape Town and she’s

(trumpet, trombone - AU), William Morrison (guitar - AU),

come a long way in the past 25 years! Skilled on multiple

Harry Morrison (bass - AU) and Patrick Danao (drums -

woodwind instruments, she has specialised in baritone,

AU), their performance will take place at the DSG Hall on

bass sax and bass clarinet but has also become a renowned

Wednesday 5 July at 19:30.

composer and arranger with a focus on combining South

Not only is this year’s Festival Big Band a collection of some

African and Scandinavian music styles. She has performed

of South Africa’s top jazz musicians (led by Fredrik Norén,

all around the world in many ensembles, and is presently a

leader of the Stockholm Jazz Orchestra) but it is also a tribute

member of two top Scandinavian bands – Ensemble Denada

to the impact of 25 years of the Standard Bank National Youth

and Nils Landgren’s All-Star Big Band. She shares the stage

Jazz Festival – every South African member of the band (with

with musicians with whom she has collaborated in Africa

three older exceptions) was a member at some stage of the

and Europe, including Jeroen van Vliet (piano – NL), Shane

Standard Bank National Youth Jazz Band! The James Morrison

Cooper (bass) and Torstein Lofthus (drums – NO).

Quartet & Festival Big Band is made up of James Morrison

The artist that has taken Alan Webster ‘17 years of

(trumpet - AU), William Morrison (guitar - AU), Harry Morrison

pleading to get here’, James Morrison from Australia, will

(bass - AU), Patrick Danao (drums - AU) and Sax: Shannon

perform on 5 and 6 July with the James Morrison Quartet

Mowday, Justin Bellairs, Marc de Kock, Sisonke Xonti, Mike

and with the James Morrison Quartet & Festival Big Band.

Rossi; Trumpet: Fredrik Norén (SE), Marcus Wyatt, Robin

James Morrison is undoubtedly the world’s greatest multi-

Fassie-Kock, Sakhile Simani, Marco Maritz; Trombone: Andreas

68 / Creative Feel / May 2017


Africa Plus

Linda Sikhakhane

Rotevatn (NO), Justin Sasman, Kelly Bell, Murray Buitendag;

is Michael Phillips on bass, Leagan Breda on drums and

Piano: Bokani Dyer. This exciting performance takes place on 6

Lindelani Lee (percussion).

July at 19:30 at DSG Hall. Performing on 30 June and twice on 1 July, Andy Narell

The last time Zenzi Makeba Lee performed in Grahamstown was with her grandmother. That performance

has spent more than a quarter-century exploring the

decades ago has stuck in her mind as special: ‘There was,’

subtleties and complexities of steel-pan playing and grafting

she says, ‘such a vibe in Grahamstown and an appreciation

them to the jazz idiom. Narell introduced the steel drums

of jazz as art.’ Born in New York, Makeba Lee grew up

to jazz as a solo instrument, playing not only Caribbean

surrounded by music, singing as backing vocalist for her

and Latin melodies but R&B, funk, and straight-ahead

grandmother, Hugh Masekela and Dizzy Gillespie, and then

jazz. Never satisfied with the musical status quo, Narell

studying at the Manhattan School of Music, majoring in

continuously pushes the boundaries of musical innovation

composition and vocals. She received a KORA Award for

and performance. On 30 June and 1 July Narell, with Louis

‘Most Promising Female Artist’ and as a prolific composer

Mhlanga (guitar), Peter Sklair (bass), Vusi Khumalo (drums)

she has contributed towards several internationally

and Tlale Makhene (percussion), presents a fascinating

awarded albums, such as her co-written songs for Miriam

collaboration of steel pan fused with World Music and jazz.

Makeba’s GRAMMY Award-nominated album Homeland.

Both performances take place at the DSG Hall at 22:00 and

She continues to record and perform internationally and

12:00 respectively.

in March this year released her latest album, entitled Wipe

For his second performance on 1 July at the Standard Bank

Your Tears, to critical acclaim. Makeba Lee performs again

Jazz & Blues Café at 22:30, Narell explores jazz standards and

with Afrika Mkhize (piano), Michael Phillips (bass), Leagan

African and Caribbean fusions with guest musicians.

Breda (drums) and Lindelani Lee (percussion) on 1 July at

You don’t get a more aristocratic South African jazz

17:00 at the DSG Hall. CF

pedigree than the marriage – personal and musical – between the granddaughter of Miriam Makeba and the son

These incredible musicians are just a taste of what this year’s

of Themba Mkhize. Zenzi Makeba Lee and Afrika Mkhize

visitors can expect. For ten days, the Standard Bank Jazz

have carried the family musical torch further, with Makeba

Festival in Grahamstown (incorporating the Standard Bank

Lee a well-respected vocalist with a career forged in New

National Youth Jazz Festival) will present a programme of some

York and Mkhize the mercurial winner of the Standard

of South Africa’s top jazz and jazz-inspired musicians alongside

Bank Young Artist Award for Jazz in 2012 with a prolific

their international colleagues from the Netherlands, Switzerland,

record of performance, composition and production. The

Norway, Sweden, France, Israel, the US, Australia and Brazil. For

Standard Bank Jazz Café will be a very pleasant place to be

the full programme, visit www.standardbank.com/naf,

for late Friday night jazz on 30 June at 22:30. Joining them

www.youthjazz.co.za or www.creativefeel.co.za.

Creative Feel / May 2017 / 69


Book Reviews Recently published

The Hearts of Men | By Nickolas Butler | Publisher: Picador, an imprint of Pan Macmillan | ISBN: 9781509827916 Camp Chippewa, 1962. Nelson Doughty, age thirteen, social outcast and overachiever, is the Bugler, sounding the reveille proudly each morning. Yet this particular summer marks the beginning of an uncertain and tenuous friendship with a popular boy named Jonathan. Over the years, Nelson, irrevocably scarred from the Vietnam War, becomes Scoutmaster of Camp Chippewa, while Jonathan marries, divorces, and turns his father’s business into a highly profitable company. And when something unthinkable happens at a camp get-together with Nelson as Scoutmaster and Jonathan’s teenage grandson and daughterin-law as campers, the aftermath demonstrates the depths – and the limits – of Nelson’s selflessness and bravery. The Hearts of Men is a sweeping, panoramic novel about the slippery definitions of good and evil, family and fidelity, the challenges and rewards of lifelong friendships, the bounds of morality—and redemption.

The Artist’s Way | By Julia Cameron |

I am Pandarus | By Michiel Heyns

Cult Sister | By Lesley Smailes

Publisher: Macmillan, an imprint of Pan

| Publisher: Jonathan Ball | ISBN:

| Publisher: Tafelberg, an

Macmillan | ISBN: 9781509829477

9781868427758

imprint of NB Publishers | ISBN

The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron

I am Pandarus is a retelling, from a

9780624080404

provides a twelve-week course that

modern perspective, of the story of

After matric Lesley took a gap

guides you through the process of

Troilus and Criseyde, as previously

year to the United States. Before

recovering your creative self. It aims

told by Chaucer and Shakespeare.

she left, her mother, in jest or

to dispel the ‘I’m not talented enough’

The narrator in Michiel Heyns’ lively

premonition, said: ‘Don’t get

conditioning that holds many people

iteration is the go-between, Pandarus.

married and don’t join a cult’

back and helps you to unleash your own

But the novel opens in a gay bar in

– but Lesley ended up in what

inner artist. Its step-by-step approach

present-day London when an editor at

is considered one of the most

enables you to transform your life,

a publishing house, recently abandoned

dangerous existing cults in

overcome any artistic blocks you may

by his lover, is accosted by a charismatic

America. In this book Lesley shares

suffer from, including limiting beliefs,

stranger. The stranger turns out to

the story of her life-changing years

fear, sabotage, jealousy and guilt, and

be the modern avatar of Pandarus,

with this group – living out of a

replace them with self confidence

intent on getting his version of events

backpack, an arranged marriage

and productivity. The Artist’s Way

published; countering the unflattering

to a Brother, having home births,

will demystify the creative process by

portrait of him that Shakespeare has

threats of losing her children and

making it a part of your daily life.

given to the world.

surviving in strange, glorious ways.

70 / Creative Feel / May 2017


TURN UP THE QUIET The multiple GRAMMY® Award-winning jazz pianist and world-renowned singer Diana Krall’s highly anticipated new album Turn Up the Quiet will be released on 5 May by Verve Records.

Y

ou only need to hear a few bars of Diana Krall’s new album Turn Up the Quiet to sense the joy the

most beautifully chosen orchestrations by Alan Broadbent. A quintet with Karriem Riggins on drums and Tony

artist took in making this recording. The first

Garnier on bass features the fiddle of Stuart Duncan on ‘I’ll

words Krall sings are, ‘Lately, I find myself out

See You In My Dreams’, while Marc Ribot provides some

gazing at stars’. Minutes later, the same voice asks, ‘Isn’t it

of his most lyrical guitar playing with the band’s exquisite

romantic?’ with such tenderness that it is hard to disagree.

version of ‘Moonglow’.

‘I have thought about these songs for a long time,’

The third ensemble on Turn Up the Quiet with guitarist,

says Krall. ‘Being in the company of some of my greatest

Anthony Wilson, bassist, John Clayton Jr. and drummer, Jeff

friends in music allowed me to tell these stories just as I’d

Hamilton provides some of the most hushed and cinematic

intended. Sometimes you just have to turn up the quiet to

performances of the record; ‘Sway’ suggesting the story that

be heard a little better.’

continues after other movies have faded to black.

Diana Krall is first and always a jazz pianist. This time

Krall has always reached back into the riches of the past

out she is most determinedly the bandleader. She has chosen

to animate and inhabit songs in the present moment but

the repertoire, conceived the ensemble arrangements and

here on Turn Up the Quiet, she shakes any remaining dust

gathered three distinct bands for these sessions.

from some of the finest leaves in that greatest of songbooks.

Turn Up the Quiet is a co-production with Tommy

Themes of love and hope are to be found in her choices

LiPuma, producer of many of Krall’s most acclaimed albums,

but this is no mere escapism. Turn Up the Quiet is the work

including, All For You, The Look Of Love and Live In Paris. The

and play of a woman in the best days and nights of her life.

record was once again peerlessly engineered and mixed by Al

Diana Krall is the only jazz singer to have eight albums

Schmitt at Capitol Studios in Hollywood, California. Turn Up the Quiet begins with the trio of Krall, bassist,

debut at the top of the Billboard Jazz Albums chart. To date, her albums have garnered five GRAMMY® Awards,

Christian McBride and guitarist, Russell Malone, who take

eight Juno® Awards and have also earned nine gold, three

a marvelous ride through ‘Blue Skies’. This lineup returns

platinum and seven multi-platinum albums. Krall’s unique

near the close of the record to be at the very heart of Johnny

artistry transcends any single musical style and has made

Mercer’s ’Dream’, which is also graced by one of the album’s

her one of the most acclaimed artists of our time. CF

Creative Feel / May 2017 / 71


THEIR FINEST DIRECTOR: Lone Scherfig STARRING: Gemma Arterton, Sam Claflin, Bill Nighy With London emptied of men now fighting at the Front, Catrin Cole lands herself writing copy for propaganda films that need ‘a woman’s touch’. Her natural flair quickly gets her noticed by dashing movie producer Buckley whose path would never have crossed hers in peacetime. With the country’s morale at stake, Catrin, Buckley and a colourful crew work furiously to make a film that will warm the hearts of the nation. As bombs are dropping all around them, Catrin discovers there is as much drama, comedy and passion behind the camera as there is onscreen.

72 / Creative Feel / May 2017


GEMMA ARTERTON SAM CLAFLIN

THEIR FROM

NIGHY

FINEST AND BILL

LONE SCHERFIG, THE ACCLAIMED DIRECTOR OF AN EDUCATION AND ONE DAY

THE SPIRIT OF THE NATION IS IN HER HANDS

13

AT CINEMAS 2 JUNE Creative Feel / May 2017 / 73


encore Dave Mann is the managing editor at Between 10and5 and co-editor of

Ja. magazine. He has been awarded a 2015 Eastern Cape Arts Award for his writing on the arts in Grahamstown, and a 2016 BASA gold award for longform journalism.

Name three artworks that you love and why.

exclusionary and that the internet is beating them at their

Visual art: Moses Tladi’s Highveld Summer Rainstorm. It’s a

own game, which is making for some exciting new ways in

beautifully macabre painting, rich with emotion. Looking at

which art is being presented and consumed, locally. Artists

it always helps me feel calm.

themselves seem to be realising more immediately when

Music: I’m currently obsessed with Jumping Back Slash’s

they’re being used as an aesthetic or as a tool for profit by ad

‘Khula Naye’. It features vocals by a singer/songwriter

agencies and the corporate hellbroth, and they’re pushing

named Hlasko who is just incredible.

back against it which is brilliant to see.

Illustration: Hannah Shone’s illustrated series This Must Be The Place. It shares a name with my favourite Talking

Name one thing you think would improve the arts and

Heads song and is a wonderfully simple body of work. I

culture industry in South Africa.

have the title artwork ‘This Must Be The Place’ hanging

Complete democratisation of the arts: The breaking down

above my desk. It reminds me that home is less of a place

of the idea that art is this sacred, upper echelon medium of

than it is a mindset.

communication or understanding. The sooner we realise that art is simply another way of understanding the world, the

Name one artist you would love to meet.

sooner we can break down the largely elitist structures that

Ernest Hemingway. He’s dead now so it’ll never happen, but

surround it.

I’d love to ask him where he got all that courage from! What is your most treasured possession? What are you reading at the moment?

Probably my camera. I can’t do much in the way of brilliant

Zadie Smith’s On Beauty when I sit on the balcony at home,

photography, but I do love documenting my life and the

and Haruki Murakami’s Kafka on the Shore when I’m in bed.

people in it through more than just words.

What is in your car’s CD player?

What do you regard as the lowest depth of misery?

A cacophonic mix of exclusively local electronic artists,

Advertising. Always advertising.

bands, instrumentalists, and vocalists. What is it that makes you happy? If you could change one thing about yourself, what

My partner, Youlendree. Music. Good writing. New art. My

would it be?

little family of plants. Having the time to really appreciate

I’d like to finally master the act of writing more instead of

all of these things.

sitting around and whining about how I never write enough. Describe a defining moment in your life. How have the arts industries in South Africa changed

Reading a piece of writing and thinking, ‘I’d quite like to do

over the last ten years?

this with my life.’

Arts media has died and come back to life a thousand times, always reinventing itself, but never in a very sustainable

Name one goal you would like to achieve in the next

fashion. That’s okay though, it seems to keep the writing

twelve months.

fresh. Artistic establishments such as theatre houses and

Get some writing published that’s more than just me

galleries are starting to realise that they’re historically

waffling on about how much I love art. CF


e Johannesburg’s premier event showcasing the leaders in décor and design. From 12 to 14 May, DESIGN JOBURG, featuring Rooms on View, will transform the Sandton Convention Centre into the continent’s most coveted and inspirational design destination. With roomsets and collaborations at the heart of the show, DESIGN JOBURG will provide a three-day platform for visitors and exhibitors to mingle and discover the very latest trends and innovations. ASSOCIATE SPONSORS:

Creative Feel / April 2017 / 75

IMAGES COURTESY OF: (CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT) KOHLER, ST LEGER & VINEY, STUDIO 19, GENERATION, CREMA


The Legacy Endures Half a century of craftsmanship and modern technology combine in the 2017 Krugerrand anniversary range. The new gold, silver and

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