SA Art Times July 09

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THE SOUTH AFRICAN Issue : July 2009 Full free edition available at www.arttimes.co.za 1 Year’s subscription R 180 includes South African Business Art Supplement E-mail subs@arttimes for details

ART TIME TIMES S

Pieter Wenning Artists supplment inside

New Arts Axis for Johannesburg new outlet will become a platform for up-and-coming artists from outside their existing stable.

Arts on Main will foster experimentation and see artists and art institutions working closely, writes Mary Corrigall

Baring traces of its former life in the cycle of industrial commerce its face brick facade does little to betray its new incarnation as a multi-use arts hub. So it’s a surprise when one enters the Arts on Main development in the east of Joburg’s inner city to find oneself in the centre of an über trendy centre boasting a grassy courtyard studded with lemon trees. But it is still early days in this much awaited centre’s existence. The Canteen, a fashionable eatery, which flanks one side of the courtyard, is only one of a handful of establishments that is already up-and-running. But with a host of studios and exhibitions spaces nearing completion one is able to get glimpse into the future of this pioneering art centre, which will see a range of established artists, gallerists and art institutions

“As a leading contemporary gallery we really wanted to establish a project space. Our schedule at the Goodman is so busy that we don’t have the flexibility to work with younger artists and give them a chance to show,” observes Liza Esser, owner of the Goodman Gallery franchise.

settled in one destination. It is a first for Joburg. With assortment of arts practitioners working cheek-by-jowl, Arts On Main will more than likely foster an intimate ambience – or at least deepen existing associations. For example, the Goodman Gallery’s new project space at the centre is a stone’s throw from the kingpin of their stable: William Kentridge, who has snapped up a humongous new studio. Other artists from the Goodman stable such as Rosenclaire (Claire Gavronsky and Rose Shakinovsky) and Mikhael Subtotsky will also be nearby in more modest workshops.

Arts on Main is the brainchild of twenty-seven-year-old Jonathan Liebmann, an ambitious and astute property developer with a penchant for the east side of Joburg’s inner city, which has not to date been the target of revitalisation projects. He obviously shares an affinity with the visual arts – no doubt fostered by his familial connections (he is the son of Benji Liebmann of the Nirox Foundation) – but his plan to gentrify this industrial part of town was also dependent on setting up an arts related development. He is well aware that the gentrification cycle of cities tends to begin with artists. London’s Shoreditch and New York’s Soho are cases in point.

The centre’s edgy location seems to have encouraged residents towards embracing experimental art activities. Goethe on Main, a derivative of the Goethe Arts Institute, will be a venue for unconventional art initiatives such as its current exhibit, Trolleyworks, by social art activist, Ismail Farouk. The Goodman Gallery have envisioned that their new space will also facilitate alternative projects and installations and are, therefore, hoping that this continued on page 3

“Artists want to be part of regenerating a city. I think they also see the value in areas more than others. The structure and volume of space particular to industrial properties also An art collector views “The Centre vs. Periphery Ultimate Cage Fight” by Avante Car Guard at the Brodie Stevenson Gallery, Johannesburg. To see AVG Show see www.www.brodiestevenson.com

Johannesburg to get Kentridge’s Fire Walker

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A Cape Town Museum of Art?

Staff writer

Image : joburg.org.za

Published monthly by Global Art Information PO Box 15881 Vlaeberg, 8018 Tel. 021 424 7733 Fax. 021 424 7732

Melvyn Minnaar

The city of Joburg is to get its first Kentridge, in the shape of a monumental public sculpture, entitled The Fire Walker, the Weekender reports. The work is a collaboration with Gerhard Marx and will be constructed of laser-cut steel plates, standing 10 m tall. According to an article posted by Bongani Nkosi and Lucille Davie on Joburg.org.za, the piece will be up by the end of June, and will be positioned at the

The manner in which the Natale Labia museum was abandoned by Iziko is a blot on its hapless history as ‘flagship’ manager of Cape Town’s cultural institutions – with the overseeing department of public works and the one responsible for arts and culture as hapless accessories to the crime.

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South African National Gallery

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