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06 September 2005 by nathaniel

Artthrob and the south african arts media

I think it may have been yesterday that I posted the available job at artthrob. Admittedly, I’ve already heard a few comments about it (but none online), and just this morning I received an email from sculptor Sean Slemon (now overseas) on the rampage. Like myself – and many other South African artists – Sean was snubbed by Art South Africa, and mostly by artthrob, despite three solo shows and winning Sasol New Signatures. There is no doubt in my mind that the shows deserved and needed to be written about. For me, a writer had to basically beg to cover my solo show at the JAG for ArtSA, and a recent duo show with Marcus Neustetter was in neither publication, despite offers of writing from Colin Richards and James Sey – I don’t think I need to justify their talents as writers…. They were refused.

This is not simply a whiney, naive, “write about my art” complaint. We all know that there is bias, favoritism, etc, in every art scene. There is too much art to cover, and not enough writers. But there does need to be an effort of balance between artists, writers and editors. Right now, all the weight seems to be falling on the latter, and young and emerging artists (especially those not from Cape Town, where the base seems to be) are often left out. This is a problem widely discussed by young artists in Joburg (and elsewhere – for example, some of Andrew Lamprecht’s ending comments in artthrob), and if we want to open up this discussion beyond a very small, insular, hermetic group, then the editors need to take on board new writers, need to engage with their own decisions around who is being written about. I, among others, am asking for a true engagement with the spririt of critique, not just positive articles about the already known. Like our visual artists are oft asked to do, our writers and editors should be taking risks.

in the mail from Sean Slemon, quoted by his permission:

I saw you posted the ad for the Artthrob editor on your site…
I couldn’t help but get incensed about it because whoever becomes the editor needs to realize that their representation of Johannesburg reviews is dismal.
According to them there was only one show worth reviewing in Joburg last month!!!! ONE SHOW !!! [editor’s note: this is actually for the entirety of Gauteng.] There were plenty.
Yes I am upset because they didn’t review my show, and nor did Artsouthafrica either it seems. Even after staff from both publications made promises…

Just thought that this is and has been something of a debate in the South African art scene for some time now. These two publications have some strange crossovers in the people they employ which is problematic in that they are A-supposed to be competing to generate a dialogue, and B they employ some of the same people so where would the dialogue be if it existed. I think that these publications have a responsibility to South African artists and the artworld in general to review as much as they can and not only the shows of friends, or what they think is “suitable.” Flash art has piles of reviews, as do many other internationally acclaimed publications. Don’t not review a show just because the other one did. Thats how you start a dialogue. And this is not only about Arthrob or Artsouthafrica, this is also about the Mail and Guardian Friday section, and many other so called arts sections that never ever review shows that are very very good and deserve a review. [editor’s note: it seems that in the popular press, Die Beeld is the only paper that consistently covers exhibitions by both known and lesser-known artists; they pretty mucn trashed my JAG show, but I still appreciated the dialogue.]
….The selections of reviews are conservative at best….

I think I’ll leave the rest to those who know, those who want to make a difference, and those who disagree.

Posted in news and politics, pop culture, south african art, theory ·

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06 September 2005 by kaganof

otsile & ntsitsi

Posted in kaganof, south african art ·

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05 September 2005 by nathaniel

back to the real world

OK, so the Unyazi Festival was a huge success, I think, and I’ll be writing a report for rhizome sometime in the next few days. Watch their, and this, space for it.

Back in webland, nathaniel has gone and changed the flash movie on the front of this site to represent something a little more current – note that you may need to refresh, or even empty cache, to see changes. Oh yeh, and I also went and put the rest of the odys series online. They’re lo-res, so, why not, right? Click on the videos link in the lower right, and all six videos are there.

Me gonna gwan and start prepping my courseload for MCAD, as the online term starts early next week.

Welcome back.

Posted in me, music, south african art ·

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03 September 2005 by nathaniel

A R T T H R O B needs JHB editor / writer

A R T T H R O B seeks johannesburg editor

ArtThrob seeks new editor for Johannesburg from October. Responsibilities: listings, news, reviews.
Qualities needed: good writing skills, inititiative, ability to be extremely disciplined in meeting deadlines under pressure. Interested? Please send the following to editor@artthrob.co.za by September 22:

Introductory letter
CV
Sample review (need not be published)
Two contactable references

Posted in south african art ·

Archives

03 September 2005 by nathaniel

Halim and Pauline

Pauline Oliveros jamming in johannesburg

Well, I started my festival day by attending a workshop called The Expanded Instrument System, with electronic music pioneer Pauline Oliveros. For a frame of reference? She’s worked with the likes of David Tudor, Philip Glass, and John Cage in her time, and one of her favorite compositions involved 10 water bottle players, and 5 apple box players, in the sixties. Pauline was experimenting with loops, reverbs and delay well before most working musicians were born. At this workshop she told us a bit about her philosphies and styles, and used some software she’s been developing (shareware!) in Max/MSP.

And the coolest part? She’s extremely maternal and playful. When asked about musicians who dislike their sounds being changed so much, she simply responded, “Well, that’s ok. You either wanna play with me or you don’t. There’s room for more sandboxes.” When asked about non-musicans and how they work with her sounds, she said, “Well, after a while, people start to listen,” implying that when people listen, it’s the first step towards collaboration, play, making music and they can even “begin to improvise” their performance, represented sonically.

Halim El-Dabh was the big headline later that night; and what a sweetheart this guy is! He literally offered to compose music for the party if my wife and I wanted to marry again, and I spent about 30 mins just chatting away to him about his days as a farmer, and how had become an “international composer” overnight after playing with some wire recordings (and before that, he was neither international, nor a composer). The experimental to which I’m referring is circa 1944 (he playe dit alongside some recent work last night), and Halim is widely considered to be the first Electronic Composer (certainly the first African one, coming from Egypt).

Last night, Halim was collaborating with the likes of Blake Tyson, Pops Mohamed and some gymnasts on trampoline. But the real highlight was George Lewis doing some trippy trombone (pictured below, left – thanks Kaganof!). Man that was the highlight of the whole evening. Beautiful ambience that I never knew a trombone could produce.

And most of these dudes are cheeky, funny buggers ;)

Posted in art, art and tech, music, pop culture, south african art, technology, theory ·

Archives

03 September 2005 by kaganof

Unyazi Day 2


george lewis & zim ngqawana

Posted in kaganof, music, south african art ·
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nathaniel’s books

Interactive Art and Embodiment book cover
Interactive Art and Embodiment: the implicit body as performance

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Buy Interactive Art for $30 directly from the publisher

Ecological Aesthetics book cover
Ecological Aesthetics: artful tactics for humans, nature, and politics

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