Business Art April 2010

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BUSINESS ART APRIL 2010 | E-mail: subs@arttimes.co.za | Member of the Global Art Information Group

Joburg Art Fair ‘10 - Artlogic’s slickly produced annual jamboree has come to play a productively eclectic role in the cultural life of the city. - The highpoint of this year’s Fair were the Alfa Romeo talks series.

Joburg Art Fair visitors Agnus Taylor’s sculpture at The Everard Read Gallery Stand. Alex Dodd Johannesburg hasn’t hosted a biennale since late last century and in the meantime, in a spirit of calculated contingency, Artlogic’s slickly produced annual jamboree has come to play a productively eclectic role in the cultural life of the city. In his keynote address on Saturday afternoon, Klaus Biesenbach (Director of PS1 Contemporary Art Center, Chief Curator at Large at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, and Founding Director of Kunst-Werke Institute for Contemporary Art in Berlin) shot down the art fair as a trashy aesthetic supermarket, while celebrating the biennale as the holy ground of zeitgeist curatorial intervention. But in the makeshift context of this postcolonial city, the Joburg Art Fair complicates this tidy binary, servicing a whole range of different sub-cultural desires beyond the primary level of transactionality. For those who don’t usually frequent the city’s galleries,

there’s no doubting that this year’s Fair was an explosion of visual newness. An American art circuit regular was overheard enthusiastically exclaiming that the quality of work on show at this year’s Fair, way exceeded what she’d seen at the recent Armory Show in New York. But for collectors, arts writers and others immersed in the local art world, this year’s Fair wasn’t the spot to track fresh trajectories in artists’ oeuvres. A lot of the work on show had been seen before and, apart from a few exceptions, there wasn’t much evidence of gallerists using the Fair as a platform to showcase new directions or forward leaps in the careers of their artists. This is understandable in the context of an Art Fair, where you don’t get to see a full body of work by any one artist (barring the series of sublimely nostalgic outsize LPs exhibited by Siemon Allen courtesy of the gordonschachatcollection), but rather one or two selected items within a mix of other big name artists. Continued on Page 3

Wayne Barker’s, Super Boring is showing at the SMAC Gallery, Stellenbosch. The show is an exhibition of new work which draws on themes, techniques and strategies that Wayne Barker has been utilizing and developing over his entire career. The exhibition runs until 23 May 2010.

Among the plusses Art isn’t one Melvyn Minnaar reviews The Spier Contemporary 2010 But, for all the effort - not to mention all the glorious, yummy money spent and promised - they have, alas, not delivered. There are plusses to this ultraenterprising effort. Art that twists the knife in your gut, or frazzles your mind, is not one. If ‘contemporary’ is as loaded as it is offered in this ambitious showcase’s title, South African art is pretty much in limbo these days. Maybe that’s to be expected in the run-down space of cultural mediocrity our country has become - one where even the arts minister is, well, not very well informed. (Thankfully

nonesuch officials of our banana-republic-in-making were at the great opening party.) But even in this dilapidated state of the nation an optimist can hope that circumstances would elicit a few good, clever cultural kicks in the groin. Artists are supposed to do this. In this instance, they were sourced, it is claimed, from all corners of our beloved country. But, for all the effort - not to mention all the glorious, yummy money spent and

promised - they have, alas, not delivered. Either the Spier Contemporary 2010 signals that our pool of talent is so-so, or there was something wrong with the sourcing strategy. Or the team of selectors, who went through, it is said, more than 2 700 pieces of art submitted, has chucked the baby out with the bathwater. Continued on Page 2

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