D E
S I
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19
The primary event for dialogue between designers and non-design stakeholders in a s
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Keynote Sessions
Flve international experts will offer themed keynote addesses followed by a panel of designers representing the three disciplines of the IDA.
Economic Development
Internet
Biotechnology Urbanism
Finland
Barry Lam
Taiwan
Vandana Shiva
(Chinese Taipei)
Founder, Research Foundation for Science,Technology and Ecology
Esko Aho
Executive Vice President,Nokia / Former Prime Minister of Finland
Chairman & CEO, Quanta Computer Inc.
India
Panellists Emily Campbell , Director of Design, RSA (United Kingdom) Nila Leiserowitz , Managing Director, Gensler (United States) Valerle Jacobs, VP&Group Director,LPK Trends (United States) Ruth Soenius, Director Of User Experience,Siemens (Germamy) Bill Soenius, Duke University (United States) Cory Kidd, CEO & Founder,Intuitive Automata (Hong Kong) Susan Szenasy, chief Editor,Metropolis Magazine (United States) For complete programme information, including afternoon parallel sessions:
Peter Bishop United Kingdom
Former Deputy CEO, London Development
Agency
International Migration
Bob Elton
Canada
Chair of the Board of Directors, Immigrant Employment Council of British Columbia
Anthony Dunne, Dunne + Raby (United States) Marco Steinberg,, Design Director, Finnish Innovation Fund (Finland) Michael Murphy, Co-Founder,Mass Design (United States) Fred Gelli,Creative Director & Partner, Tatil (Brasil) Dr. Lee Kumpho, LG Design Center (Korea) Carlo Ratti, MIT SENSEable City Lab (Italy)
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summit format.
www.bowman.co.za
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CONTENTS 14 > T oday we would be kings: Frida Larios’ New Maya Language
26 > Making a move: A traveller’s companion to becoming a freelancer in the UK
38 > Rob Mills’ convergence of art and
technology
50 > The winners of Hiiibrand 2010
62 > H IV Positive: Iconic t-shirts that shape views and awareness on the pandemic
68 > Let's make condoms cool
76 > C reating complex objects of desire layer by layer
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84 > 3D what?
90 > Turning talent into success
98 > Supporting ideas into prototypes
104 > South Africa learns from the Swedes
109 > P RECIOSA illuminates another One & Only complex
114 > T he Upper East Side Hotel: Beauty by contrast
124 > R adisson Blu Gautrain Hotel: Symbolism in design
134 > AFGRI Head Office: Architecture that floats
EURO RSCG 4847/E
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144 > Waverley Office Park: Neo-African iconography
152 > 1 5 Alice Lane Towers: Raising the bar in corporate head office design
166 > 1 Protea Place: Reflecting a brand’s identity through architecture
178 > T o Egypt with love: An artist’s response to change
182 > P aul Stopforth: The man who retrieves the soap and sees in it a sliver of history
194 > Gerhard Marx: Cumulus
204 > Working with nature
quest for creative solutions
architecture urban design project management development planning computer aided design
9>
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© 2011 DESIGN>MAGAZINE
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ISSN 1814-7240
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Number 19, June 2011
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Today we would be kings: Frida Larios’ New Maya Language By Frida Larios | My journey to revive the
world how the Maya are one of the founding
visual language of the ancient Maya started in
six pillars of the civilised world, inventors of
2004 when I was studying towards a masters
the notion of zero and of one of the most
in Communication Design at Central Saint
accurate calendars in history. There is also a
Martins College of Art & Design in London,
lack of recognition of their intelligent and
located only two blocks away from the Brit-
advanced hieroglyphic language’s art form,
ish Museum which holds some of the most
within Mesoamerica (modern Mexico, Guate-
important lintels in the Maya world. I was
mala, Belize, Honduras and El Salvador) itself,
the first Salvadoran woman to study at Saint
and beyond its boundaries. Now, as an am-
Martins. How could I not look for my own
bassador for INDIGO (Icograda’s Interna-
roots within an institution, and city, with
tional Indigenous Design Network), it is my
marked avant-garde tendencies? It was my
privilege to promote part of this ancient
opportunity to show my peers and now the
culture through my design work.
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My New Maya Language is a unique system,
whether it is by instigating conceptual
in content and style, which rescues the ‘dead’
thinking through a 0–12 year-old child’s
written language created by the Maya across
game, T-shirts or simply by creating appre-
Mesoamerica as far back as 300 BC. My vision
ciation through my artworks, which to-date
for the New Maya Language is to recreate,
have been acquired by collectors around
re-compose and develop contemporary appli-
the world. Antonio Avia, Indigenous Educa-
cations in different media: art, product and
tion Director for the Organisation of Iberoa-
fashion design, brand identities, information
merican States had this to say about my
design, wayfinding and education systems
artworks: “… your work presents another
for archaeological sites and public spaces,
form of seeing, understanding, recreating,
as well as children’s toys. Through these di-
and above all, employing again in daily life,
verse applications I aspire to promote icon-
millenary means of expression. I am fasci-
ographic meanings, education and play,
nated by this new vision of the glyphs.”
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Before being historians, mathematicians or astronomers, the Mayan scribes were artists. Their writing not only documented the political life and other historical affairs, but were also works of art which manifested through different mediums: stone sculpture, ceramics, murals, calligraphic manuscripts, garments and utilitarian products. This makes me think that there is not much difference between a practicing artist or designer today and the Mayan scribes, right? The answer is: No. The difference is that our profession is not as valued today as in ancient times when, like Mayanist Michael D. Coe says, “artists could be kings.” It was indeed a royal profession. I aim to preserve the ancestral artists’ spirit at the time of creation, highlighting, and not merely reproducing their strokes. Aptly, renowned Harvard Peabody Museum’s epigrapher Alexandre Tokovinine described my work as follows: “Even though there has been a growing body of scholarly works devoted to the subject of Maya calligraphy, few artists systematically sought their inspiration in Maya letters beyond mere reproduction of certain glyphs and glyphic patterns, usually in the context of contemporary indigenous art. Frida’s project stands apart as an attempt to explore and reinvent Maya calligraphy as a symbolic and aesthetic system from an artist’s viewpoint. The New Maya Language creates its own world that blends Maya imagery and symbolism with Frida’s unique vision in a series of works which would make an ancient calligrapher proud.”
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The book I wrote, illustrated and designed the 120-page New Maya Language book so that people could learn about the original language of the Maya in a simple and practical way and to decode my new interpretation to others. The main chapter provides the formula for each of my pictograms, original hieroglyphs on the left page and the new hieroglyphs or result on the right. Finally I showcase various design applications. The foreword to the book is written by Harvard’s post-doctor Alexandre Tokovinine, who states: “Many signs of the New Maya Language retain similarities to their ancient counterparts. Yet the most fascinating part of the book is a series of works that borrow from the grammar of the Maya symbolic language to innovate completely new hieroglyphs corresponding to various objects, actions, and even abstract concepts. Frida’s works demonstrate that Maya glyphs still have the power not only to puzzle and astound, but to encourage new forms of artistic expression, that the Maya art and writing are alive as long as artists look at it as a source of inspiration and creativity.”
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Green Child Puzzle The symbolic pictogram called Green Child (or Mother Earth), consisting of a six-piece sustainable wood block puzzle, was originally designed and inspired by the birth of my son Yax (his name means the resplendency of the colours blue and green in Maya). The corn sprouting from a child’s ear symbolises Mother Earth opening up to the creation of life and preservation of our planet’s seeds. I included translations in Maya, Spanish and English at the back of each block piece.
Art The New Maya Language inspired me to create original artworks which I paint in gouache on high-quality watercolour paper. Many of these have found homes in different parts of the world. Featured at top right is Erupting volcano, London. Centre: Family at home, Leipzig. Bottom LTR: Ixchel goddess, Supernatural portal and Hacienda San Lucas symbol, Toronto.
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Hacienda San Lucas When the time came, after residing in London and living the city life, I decided to raise my now two-and-a-half-year old son at my husband's family eco-lodge, Hacienda San Lucas, in the mountains of CopĂĄn Ruins, Honduras. This offered me the opportunity to study the ancient hieroglyphs in their original habitat and become inspired by one of the most beautiful places on earth, overlooking one of the major Maya archaeological sites. We now live in Berkeley, California where my husband is a fellow at UC Berkeley Journalism Graduate School, but I am back at Hacienda San Lucas for the summer to meet-up with my muse for my next fashion and pictogram collection.
Gaia Gaia is the ceremonial and yoga center at Hacienda San Lucas overlooking the Copån Valley, and one of the major Maya archaeological site’s in Mesoamerica. The space was in need of differentiation from the main centenary-old Hacienda house, since many special events and weddings take place there. I designed a new brand identity inspired by the New Maya Language. A beautifully reclaimed wood-carved sign is currently being manufactured to be placed at the foot of the Gaia Hill, all in preparation for the major Maya Long Count Calendar ending on 21 December 2012.
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One of my other goals with the New Maya Language is for it to remain democratic and accessible, not only to northern hemisphere’s academics who are the ones who command the hieroglyphic writing knowledge, but to common Mesoamerican citizens. Above all I want it to be inclusive of native inhabitants of the region so that they have the opportunity to recreate themselves with it. A lot of these populations are illiterate and the New Maya Language touches their cognitive and emotional fibers. It is a language without words that makes them feel included in a world where the letters of the alphabet are their foremost barriers. I believe that designers in Central America – and in other developing regions – should immerse themselves in their historic roots to reinforce design with an individual identity instead of obsessing themselves with influences from Anglo-Saxon countries. There are indeed parameters at the time of designing or international design cannons, which in fact were born in the Anglo-Saxon world. But anchoring inspiration and identity in indigenous heritage is very different to searching for inspiration based on European or North American influences. Why not look for inspiration in what is ours, which, by the way, is very different to the rest? Ancient indigenous cultures had magnificent artistic development, anchoring themselves in their natural and social environment and respecting it. I firmly believe that if Central American designers had been able to continue to reflect their indigenous culture until our present day – a development defrauded by many conquests during the course of over 500 years – the roles would be reversed and it would be the Western world looking for reference in our culture. Today, we would be kings. <
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UYAL es una línea de
oductos para el cuerpo
e harmoniza el desarrollo
mano con mejoras
ológicas. Todos sus
gredientes son proveidos
ca y localmente. En el mundo maya
UYAL (nube) era un
mbolo de renovación
piritual y fue la
spiración para el diseño de
tipografía y el logo.
UYAL is a range of
dycare products that
rmonises human
velopment and ecological
provements. All its
gredients are locally and
hically sourced. In the Maya world
UYAL (cloud) was a symbol
spiritual renovation–the
spiration for the type and
go design.
WildHeart Vision WildHeart Vision is a media organisation based in Helsinki and Copenhagen that aims to gather the largest collection of indigenous knowledge from around the world. The organisation commissioned me to develop a pictogram, website (www.wildheartvision.com) and branded communications. The pictogram used is called tz’ak, a Maya hieroglyph that means ‘total’, ‘whole’ or ‘complete’. The word is represented by the sum of two parts, which in the Maya spiritual and physical world, where perceived to be either complementary or opposing, one could not exist without the other. WildHeart Vision’s logo depicts the stars and the moon corresponding each other in the night to embody the guidance of the ancestral wisdom carriers.
Identities The New Maya Language system has been applied in the development of various identity and visual communication projects.
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Los Sapos archaeological site
New Maya Language accessories
Graphic quality and available production budgets are constant constraints in the development of signage for public locations in most developing countries. The thousand-year-old Los Sapos UNESCO World Heritage archaeological site in Honduras needed a culturally relevant and affordable wayfinding design solution. I designed a single infographic carved in local stone by local artisans that now guides visitors along their way to the historic site.
I worked with local Maya stone-carvers to develop a unique style for my signature accessory line composed of jewellery, belts, bags and shoes based on my Maya symbology and use of ancestral local resources. The designs, apart from the use of leather and suede, utilise different shades of jade encrusted on limestone extracted from the same place where the Maya historically mined for their monuments.
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Harvesting Hands fashion collection San Francisco-based Explode La Mode approached me to complement my accessory line with fashion designs for their 2011 runway show in the heart of the famous Mission district. This was a significant trans-discipline career move for me and I addressed it with the same ethos of previous projects, using my graphic design background and the New Maya Language to treat pattern drawings. The result was a design-oriented, 100% handcrafted fashion line featuring New Maya Language pictographs, allowing clients to wear a story: the metaphoric language and history of the
Maya as interpreted through my eyes. The concept behind the collection is planting and harvesting seeds, building a home with your own hands and nourishing yourself and your family through eating beans on self-made ceramic vessels. I intentionally commissioned Salvadoran women to lovingly hand-sew and patch the garments to give the items unique dimensions and patched texture. This collaboration resulted in a fashion range that is hand-made, earth-toned in colour and modern â&#x20AC;&#x201C; marrying Mayan traditions with modern easy-to-wear sophistication. Photos by Tyler Orsburn.
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MAKING A MOVE: A traveller’s companion to becoming a freelancer in the UK By Matthew Schönborn | Daily trips on the
where the toilets flush in the opposite direc-
tube (the spiderweb network of underground
tion. I booked my ticket and said goodbye to
trains, as they are referred to in this city) and
perfect weather and pseudo-Tuscan housing
lunches in the park are some of the things
estates, and hello to one-way traffic, chavvy
that help me keep track of my daily routine.
bus stops and impossibly high rent.
Pounding the pavement and passing by the hipsters, the homeless and the endless sea of black coats and umbrellas, I realise that this is not what I am used to, having grown up in the
The first step is always the hardest to take
vast expanse of Africa, where space is sometimes taken for granted. One of the most ob-
My first job in the UK was actually testing video
vious things I noticed when I first arrived here
games for Electronic Arts. The role was simple:
over four years ago, was that everyone walks
play a game for 8 hours a day and find and list
to where they want to go...and they walk fast.
as many bugs as you could and punch-out at five o’clock. As much as I loved video games,
Back in 2005, I graduated from the University
the job just wasn’t for me as I felt unstimulated
of Pretoria with a degree in Information De-
and unchallenged. Also, earning £7.50 an hour
sign and the World was mine to conquer. After
was not going to help me buy my own Playsta-
spending a year at an advertising agency in
tion either.
Johannesburg, I decided that I needed a change. I had always wanted to travel to Eu-
My first proper design job in London was
rope with its ever increasing cosmopolitan
working for a small digital agency called DJM.
sensibilities and centre-of-the-world loca-
We specialised in pharmaceutical marketing
tion. So I moved to England – as many South
and design and I’ve lost count how many revo-
African expats do – and used it as a base to
lutionary new treatments we had helped re-
see the world from a different perspective
lease. So from a ‘make the World be a better
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3dtracking Being a freelancer means delving in industries not necessarily associated with 'high design'. One of the first freelance jobs Matthew did was creating a marketing campaign for worldwide vehicle management company, 3dtracking.
place’ perspective, it was quite rewarding to know that in some abstract way, I was helping people ‘feel better’ with the medicines I was promoting. The learning curve was incredibly steep as I had learned the value in multi-tasking and new technologies as I had coded many programmes and websites in Adobe Flash (learning by trial and error as well as with the assistance of online tutorials). I learned all about lighting, mise-en-scene, filming, editing, soundtracking and the packaging of self-produced videos. I learned how to prioritise workflows and optimise my weaknesses so that they wouldn’t become a hindrance. It’s not an easy ride in a small, yet successful studio, as you have to be on top of every aspect of the production process and be skilled in many areas in order to drive the business forward.
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Newspepper.com As a freelancer, Matthew often gets approached by startup companies looking for a corporate identity. One of these is Newspepper.com, a video production and social media management company that makes highquality, low-cost videos optimised for the Internet.
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After three years of paying my dues and moving up the ranks, I had seen the company grow three times in size and I had felt like I had learned all I could from that experience and therefore decided to have a go on my own. I wanted to know what it would be like being called a ‘freelancer’ – that mythic word which held strong adventurous connotations for my free-spirited and self-reliant mind.
Sifting through the chaff to find the grain Becoming a freelancer was a frightening decision for me to make. Not having the security of a monthly salary and paid holidays is enough to make many people jump at the thought. However, I also realised that I didn’t want to work for someone else for the rest of my life. I had reached a point in my career where I felt like I had learned enough to offer people genuinely valuable skills and I didn’t want to be the middle-aged creative who’s wings had been clipped and who’s neck couldn’t arch towards the sky. One of my mainstay client relationships has been with the founders of Internet startup, Newspepper.com. I found them on a job site in 2007 when I first arrived in London when they were looking for someone to help design their visual identity. “Exciting! Fresh! Innovative!” were some of the words they used to describe their new business which was to create rich video content for online distribution. I was invited for an interview at a bar in London’s Soho district which is an incredibly diverse part of the city and its central nervous system. The founder turned out to be a 21 year old journalism student, Hermione Way, who had an ‘idea’. I was suspicious. What 21 year-old had the audacity to think they could start their own company? I had reservations due to her age, but I opted to give it a go because I had nothing to lose.
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I helped newspepper.com develop an identity back in 2007 and as the years went by, the need to refocus their business plan meant they would also need to re-evaluate their branding. Through close collaboration with the board of directors, I developed an identity for the company and the process was incredibly smooth and rapid, and along with redesigning their website, everything was up and running within a month. A testament to how quickly things can get done with the right people behind the job. It can be quite daunting for a young and inexperienced designer as they are approached by new companies. They tend to promise the world, but more often than not, will pay you very little (if anything) as compensation. I can not tell you how many times I’ve read the words, ‘Deferred payment’ in job specifications. Those words make me cringe as I know there are many young designers who end up doing a lot of work for free, with ultimately very little to show for it. Nowedays I tend to steer clear of those ‘opportunities’ but I often did work for free, expecting a huge paycheck down the line as the company became successful, but never did. It was due to the optimism of my youth clouding my better judgement, but it did help me hone my skills in recognising a good opportunity when it presented itself.
Embracing passions with both arms and open eyes Perhaps my biggest passion outside of graphic design, is film. If I wasn’t a designer I would want to be a motion picture director. Thankfully, the UK has a pretty vast independent film industry and as such, De Zuiden Matthew set up his own design company, De Zuiden, in order to get more lucrative contracts and approach larger clients. Associating himself with like-minded individuals in different areas of design allows him to offer a wide range of services.
I was approached by a director and producer of a film after they stumbled upon my online portfolio. Their film followed a young woman’s struggle to deal with the choices which came as a result of an unplanned pregnancy.
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I designed the film’s logo to be used in both marketing material and the title sequence. It would also help dictate the art direction for the rest of the campaign including the website and DVD cover. The director had a strong idea of the concept and the style that she wanted for the film’s promotional poster. Since the catalyst of the film was a chemical abortion drug (RU-486), she (the director) wanted a pill bottle to be the focal point of the poster and have various scenes collaged in the background. I convinced her that having too many elements would result in the poster being unfocused and confusing and instead we should have the bottle isolated on a stark background. The extra touch was to have a still image from a key scene reflected in the bottle’s glass. It’s a ‘blink and you’ll miss it moment’, but it adds weight to the campaign as the messaging says quite a lot, but leaves you wanting more, which is what a film poster should do.
Pastimes and air miles Having a hobby outside of design is, I think, vitally important for maintaining a balanced perspective on the world around you. Living and breathing design 24/7 can make designers over-analytical and slightly obsessive in critiquing our environments. Marina Celeste De Zuiden was responsible for the post-production the latest music video from the artist, Marina Celeste of Nouvelle Vague fame. Utilising raw digital footage of Marina performing in front of a green screen and incorporating animated hand-drawn illustrations as well as Super 8 film footage, Love is the First Born takes the viewer on a nostalgic journey through suggested emotions and dreamlike wheat field imagery. Click here to view the video.
RU-486 Movie poster, DVD cover and website for the independent film, RU-486. A limited colour palette was used and minimal design, which is a feature of Matthew's style. Click here to view the trailer.
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King Willow Interests outside of design such as his band, King Willow, provide Matthew opportunities to develop other parts of his creative spectrum. Click here to visit King Willow's site.
I spend my free time as a guitarist/vocalist for the alternative rock band, King Willow. A brief history says that, after about a year of writing songs and practicing them, the band decided to produce a demo of five songs, recording them ourselves in my bedroom with pillows as makeshift soundproofing. I also designed a logo for the band, which needed to be strong, solid and have an imposing presence, much like itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s namesake. At the same time, from a
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practical level, the King Willow’s identity had to be
I find that doing design outside of paid work and
both bold and legible, so it would look good on a
personal expression helps me drive my passion for-
poster and t-shirt, as well as a festival banner or web-
ward. It’s easy to fall into the trap of just trying to
site. For the band’s demo cover artwork I had im-
find the next job to pay the rent and it can often
agined a dark horse, in the heat of battle as it strides
lead to unrewarding and menial projects for the sake
valiantly through the smoke and chaos of a war zone.
of money. You lose the focus and the passion nec-
It was a striking image in my head as a solitary stallion
essary to becoming a ‘great designer’. Also, having
charges ahead with pride even in the midst of de-
diverse interests such as music, photography and
feat. It was also a reaction to JMW Turner’s, Death
traveling help me keep my toes wet in expressive
on a Pale Horse, an image which had haunted me
design, a skill which is immediately recognisable
since studying Romanticism at university.
when differentiating oneself from the pack.
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It is only the beginning... Whilst I have already been in the UK for over four years and having started my own company as a freelance art director, I am only now starting to truly appreciate the opportunities available to me by living in a complex and cosmopolitan metropolis. I have been able to work for film producers, advertisers, startups, architects, bands, pharmaceutical companies and some of the biggest brands in the world and I can confidently say that I still have a lot to learn and many mistakes to make, but, more often than not the process is as rewarding as the outcome. <
Photography and travel Matthew says that photography helps hone his compositional skills and traveling expands his perspective of existence beyond the daily commute.
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Just Working Things Out in My Head, 2008. Pigment ink print. From experimental animation â&#x20AC;&#x201C; drawing and dance with Margarita Naydenova.
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Rob Mills’ convergence of art and technology
By Jacques Lange | After spending two decades
who saw potential and nurtured it. Someone dis-
working as an electronic engineer and broadcast
covered that I was good at English and useful in
industry manager Rob Mills changed tracks to follow
drama, both on and off stage.”
his muse. Today he is one of South Africa’s foremost fine art photographers focussing on contemporary
Mills went on to study Electronic Engineering at
and classical dance as his main subject matter. Mills
the University of Stellenbosch. “People thought this
works with a variety of photographic mediums
was the thing for me. Actually it was really just
ranging from classical fibre-based toned and digital
something I could naturally do. I had a feeling for
pigment prints to animation. He also developed a
design, a rapport with technology and hated things
signature technique comprising rice paper prints
that didn't work.” Mills’ creative interests however
waxed onto glass with beeswax using hot air and
persisted and he could never understand why the
brush. It is a unique process that produces an extraor-
Faculty of Engineering was a dreary grey collec-
dinary texture and translucence unlike any normal
tion of steel, glass and concrete blocks situated on
paper print.
the outskirts of campus while the Art and Music students got beautiful buildings to work in. “I re-
Mills was born 1958. His father was an engineer at the
member hanging around the Faculty of Arts long-
SABC who pioneered the South African FM radio
ing to be in there doing what they were doing.”
and TV network. “My father used to bring old bits of transmitter equipment home for us to take apart.
Following in his father’s footsteps, Mills joined the
Engineering was thus programmed in our brains
SABC after graduating. “Most of my work was in
from an early age.” Says Mills.
the field of audio research; luckily at a time when the SABC still commanded international respect
Mills struggled through school, bored and frustrat-
from the broadcasting community – at least from
ed with the prescriptive ways of Christian National
a technological point of view. My job took me into
Education, and doing the minimum to get by. “As with
music studios where the muse was not completely
most creative people, there were a few teachers
locked up in technology.”
40 >
Angel, 2000. Toned fiber print. One of the first works emerging from my work with Adele Blank's classes with the Free Flight Dance Company. Limited light with film and not so great lenses forced me to evolve a technique of abstraction which reflected an intuitive component. The instant delivery of the digital medium tends to prejudice this kind of â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;blindâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; technique.
Nymph, 2001. Toned fibre print. Another example of abstracting in an environment with impossibly cluttered backgrounds based on a collaboration with Free Flight Dance Company and Adele Blank.
Barre, 2003. Toned fibre print. Class with the SA Ballet Theatre. Ballet has something of an excruciating precision about it.
Working Feet, Yolandi Olckers (at age 23), 2007. Pigment ink print. Like initiation scars dancers feet show their journey. It was a privilege for me to do a portrait of a friend's feet, beautiful beyond pretty, full of strength, passion and shaped in service of her art.
41 >
The artificial barriers between science, technology and art have always been a problem for Mills. He believes that the world has reduced technology to utility. “The most profound difference I experienced when I pursued the role of an artist was that I was no longer ‘useful’. People bought the fruits of my efforts because they were moved in some way or found them beautiful. In other times, other ages the divide between utility and aesthetic was less of an issue.” Dance has also been an abiding presence in Mills’ adult life. “I married a dancer. We met through a
The Edge of Maybe 2, 2009. Pigment ink print from an animation collaboration (work in progress) with Kristin Wilson and Dance For All.
ragged band of ‘missionaries’ intent on bringing the arts back into the church.” In 1987 he left the SABC and he and his wife Pam joined a group fulltime, travelling, living in community (on a shoestring) and performing in churches around the country. He also earned a living by consulting as a design engineer. The birth of their first daughter and an offer from MNET lured Mills back into full-time employment where he spend a decade (1991-2000). “This was a intense and amazing time that saw DSTV and cellphones become part of South African life. As MNET grew and unbundled into Multichoice, spawning
Work in Progress, 2010. Pigment ink print. From an animation exploring identity and image. Collaboration with Kristin Wilson.
MTN along the way, the technology group I was part of, Irdeto, a Dutch company, focussing on conditional access technology for pay-TV operations.” Here Mills headed up the team that developed the custom chips and smart card descrambling for satellite receivers. He later moved into a more general management role looking after technology licensing in Africa and Middle East as well as management of the Johannesburgbased Development Office. Mills also reflects on the unexpected testing and grieving time when a board decision was made to move the key skills in Irdeto SA to Holland. “The
Hoverlings (working title), 2010. Pigment ink print. Choreographed work in collaboration with Kristin Wilson.
42 >
close knit family that we had built was suddenly
During this time Mills was also exposed to psycho-
being broken up. All hell broke loose. We had one
metrics and process psychology (al la Arnold Min-
suicide, an attempted suicide and a manic episode.
dell) through his interactions with psychologists
We had done too much of a good job making peo-
Maretha Prinsloo and Myrna Lewis. â&#x20AC;&#x153;In 2000, I set
ple's work the core meaning in their lives. This and
out with the intention of addressing the human
the illusion that a set of relationships could be
condition in the world of work, appalled by the extent
traded by strangers as a transferable commodity
to which so many people spend most of their pro-
made me seriously question whether I wanted to
ductive lives in some diminished state in a job they
be part of big-time corporate life anymore. Some
don't enjoy.â&#x20AC;? Mills then began freelance consulting,
18 months later I finally lost my temper in the
focusing on facilitation, organisational develop-
boardroom, hurling my PDA across the room and
ment, management coaching and assessment as
storming out. It was time to move on, otherwise I was
well as dabbling in thinking skills training.
going to damage more than a hand-held device,â&#x20AC;? explains Mills.
LEFT: Hecate's Emissaries from Dance Umbrella 2005. Pigment ink print. This is one of my favorite photographs. One would do well to befriend Hecate and heed her counsel when navigating the underworld.
RIGHT: Edge of Light 3, 2005. Waxed rice paper print with oils and graphite on glass featuring Kristin Wilson in Pieces of a Dream by Natalie Fisher. Working with the print, waxing it and painting on it somehow allowed me to own it more. Sometimes it is not enough to 'run an image through a machine'. One has to get a little more personal.
43 >
44 >
He explains that another part of his new life beyond the bonds of full-time corporate employment was his commitment to rekindle his life-long interest in photography and dance. “I set myself a project to explore movement which lead me to photographing Adele Blank’s Free Flight Dance Company. My wife was doing classes with them at that time and Adele kindly let me be a ‘fly on the wall’ in their studio. I fell in love again – at last I could engage with an aesthetic which moved me to tears and participate in my own Portrait, 2004. From a workshop with Jazzart and Ananda Fuchs.
way.” The work that emerged from this experience was received with enthusiasm and provided Mills with something that he could use to approach other dance companies. These pursuits grew rapidly and he started getting commissions from other dance companies. Encouraged by Fine Art photographer Bob Cnoops, Mills also started to exhibit his work and the rest, as they say, is history. Mills believes that photography gave him an entrance ticket to the world of dance. He explains that other well-known South African dance photographers like Suzy Bernstein and John Hogg are happy to photograph performances with a journalistic slant. “I however wanted CONNECTION. I wanted to get to know these people and show them how beautiful they are (oddly they often can't see it)... To make work together, rather than observe and reflect.” And so Mills pursued collaborations with dancers and choreographers which he describes as “conversations of two mediums, two different head spaces.” Mills speaks of hovering shyly in the background behind his camera. “I would describe myself as a gregarious introvert which confuses people. As I became more confident with my work and role in that environ-
Portrait of Thoriso Magongwa, 2006. Pigment ink print. A brilliant virtuoso performer and one of the few people I know who has developed narcissism to a fine and gracious art.
ment, and got to know people and became a little more known, this changed. If I photograph a performance or work going on in a studio environment, it is very much as an observer. Now, most often, I
45 >
Meditations from the Womb 2, 2008. Wax rice paper print on glass. From the animation About the Floor, a collaboration with Mari-Louise Basson. This body of work reflects the introduction of an industrial aesthetic which continues to emerge in my current work.
Breach of confidence, 2008. Pigment ink print. Part of The man in the Sensible Pants project reflecting on a journey out of corporate life to artist.
46 >
LEFT: Tango Lesson, 2001. Toned fibre print. I was invited to photograph a tango scene in Cape Town. The Argentinean tango is not much to look at, being more of an intimate personal negotiation to be experienced by the dancers.
observe as a friend rather than some outsider.” He prefers to develop a closer ongoing relationship with a few companies and individual dancers. “Photographing a performance where you need to be responsive to every move amounts to a very different
RIGHT: Waiting for Morning, 2007. Yolandi Olckers in Windows by Adele Blank and Martin Schönberg. One of those compositions one might like to take the credit for but it’s a performance that I was merely eavesdropping on.
experience than sitting and watching as a part of the audience. For some dancers it takes a while to let me in and to find their essence.” Mills says that his friend Myrna Lewis used to talk about his work as “seeing the breath of God" in the person – their essence. “It is more than documenting something. Its adding a layer of interpretation onto the work.” He notes that the Edges of light project which he did in 2004 is a good example of this. “I followed the development of the piece from conception to performance but not in a documentary way. I was the observer but the work was the result
47 >
of what the process of engaging in that way did
Mari-Louise Basson. The work grew from a chat
inside me – the personal mythologies it awoke.
during a rehearsal break. "I've got the day off on
Eventually I found myself putting paint and wax onto
Wednesday, let’s make an animation… And so it
some of these works as a way of getting more in-
started to take on a life of its own and something is
volved with them.”
made with whatever time resources and attention can be herded together. I was talking to Mari-Louise
He explains that it is quite different in a collabora-
about something I wrote in my personal journal years
tive setting since it becomes a synthesis where its
before about ‘a being in a box’ and so a work grew
difficult to actually identify what came from whom.
from shared ideas of life experience.”
“I would describe this as the incarnation of a conversation. I like to understand the universe as a huge
In contrast his work with Kristin Wilson originated
communion of subjects in conversation.” Mills says
from ideas around consumerism, fashion, masks and
that his most successful collaborative work tran-
roles. He says of Wilson that she has an extraordi-
spires when the conversation entails an exchange
nary, playful intelligence beyond her amazing ability
of ideas leading to a resolve to create something
to dance which she is very quiet about. “This has
new. He mentions About the Floor, a stop motion
been almost a three-year-long conversation of bits
animation as an example, which he created with
a pieces, coming together, workshopping stuff in the
internationally acclaimed dancer/choreographer
studio, making big plans, and plans falling through.
48 >
I'm not sure what will come of all this. We somehow just have not been able to finish anything really or do justice to the bits and pieces. Perhaps its time is not yet right. Perhaps its really just the process that was important. One can't cling to these things, chain them down. Its a confounding tightrope walk with opportunity and happenstance on the one side and dogged intent on the other.” While sharing details of his creative process and Concentration, 2010. Pigment ink print. There is just something about pipes...
techniques, Mills surprisingly confesses that he struggles with the concept of colour in his work: “It’s too normal and it does not make us look carefully enough. I think the current trend in social documentary work in colour loses something.” He says that he hardly ever leaves an art print untouched. “I went through a stage where I would keep one colour and de-saturate everything else. Most of my art photographs now have the colour manipulated in some way. I have no qualms about digital manipulation.” He comments that some people get precious about this, suggesting that this is somehow cheating or taking a
Gate, 2003. Photographic print. Namibrand, Namibia. An example of my discomfort with full colour images.
shortcut and therefore not ‘real art’. He emphatically states: “That's rubbish really. Art is about interpretation and incarnating intent. How you do that is up to you as an artist. Craft is perhaps a realm where one might be more faithful to a particular skill and one might ply a craft exquisitely in the making of art.” Having said that I like the idea of setting conscious boundaries and working within them.” An example of this is Mills’ increasing fascination with sequences of images and his explorations with the medium of stop motion animation. “I deliberately stick to static images and seek to reconstruct time – manually as it were. I have thus far resisted the pull to just grab
Commissioned pipe speaker installation for a fashion deli in Long Street, Cape Town, 2011.
a video camera and get on with it. In this respect I relate a lot to Paul Emanuel who makes photorealistic images by chipping away at exposed emulsion on photographic paper. Something extraordinary emerges.”
49 >
Power housing, 2010. Pigment ink print. Part of commissioned work for Bafokeng administration relating to environmental issues and mining. Abandoned, incomplete RDP houses under high tension lines.
Like most fine art photographers, Mills earns a fair
in to the muse in an alarming way. I'm getting better
share of his regular income from working as a com-
at it. It’s a constant struggle for me to re-frame a
mercial photographer, and he also does ad hoc
life of left brain programming.”
engineering consultancy, both of which he wittily refers to as ‘acts of survival’. He says that commer-
When asked how he perceives the future of fine
cial photography is great in many ways: “A commercial
art photography in South Africa, Mills claims that
commission has a clear beginning and end. You do
photography now holds its head high as a fine art
the work, process and deliver and that’s it.” By con-
medium. “I would say that South Africa now reflects
trast, “engineering consulting can mean good money
a global trend – around 60% of all fine art exhibited
but it normally involves high levels of responsibility,
is photography in some form or another. This was
lots of consequence and time frames of at least
not the case even five years ago. I think the South
months if not years.” According to Mills, most artists,
African art scene loads photography too much politi-
even some famous ones, struggle to make a steady
cally. The social documentary genre is very dominant
and comfortable living. “I like to think that the
because of our history. I sometimes think we are
world is changing and those with the capacity to
stuck in a social documentary rut – as if life has no
interpret, create metaphors and innovate will be
meaning without an enemy.” Mills feels that there
more valued than in the past.”
is still a difference between photography (photographers) and art using the medium of photography
Mills notes that he once asked prominent local artist
(artists). “I call myself an artist as a statement of
Roger Ballen if he ever found the nitty gritty practi-
intent rather than by virtue of some clamorous fol-
calities of being a practicing geologist working in
lowing.” Mills concludes with one of his Facebook
a mining environment interfering with his creative
posts: “Were that famous pen thrust into my hand
work. According to Ballen’s response it seemed not.
and a blank page drawn from your muddled depths
For Mills, however: “I have found that working and
I would write this: That possibility stretches in
a deterministic headspace of logic and reason some-
front like a skin, fragile, taut, threaded with life:
how shuts down a sensitivity and capacity to tune
Asking to be touched, perhaps even broken.” <
50 >
The winners of Hiiibrand 2010 New Graphic, one of the biggest and most influential
of the jury were Wally Olins (Chairman, Saffron
Chinese design publications recently announced
Brand Consultants, UK), Joe Duffy (Principal and
the winners of its Hiiibrand 2010 International
Chairman, Duffy & Partners, USA), Min Wang (Dean
Logo Design Award. Gathering submissions from
of School of Design at CAFA, China), Tommy Li
enterprises, design studios, designers and students,
(Tommy Li Design Workshop, Hong Kong), Bart
Hiiibrand rewards excellent logos and the compa-
Crosby (President, Crosby Associates Inc., USA)
nies that commission them. The award distinguishes
and Cristian Kit Paul (Co-founder and Creative Di-
itself from others as it only considers innovation,
rector of Brandient, Romania).
crafting and effectiveness of a single element, the logo or brand mark, rather than the extended visual
The jury first scored the entries individually before
manifestation of a branding programme.
all marks were added up to identify the top contenders. They then proceeded to deliberate which
This year Hiiibrand received 4 136 submissions
entries qualified for Gold, Silver, Bronze and Merit
from over 60 countries. Through a rigorous five-
awards. Each jury member then also selected a
month selection process, seven renowned interna-
personal Juror’s Award winner.
tional jurors made the final selection. The results provide an ideal opportunity to plot broad interna-
In the introduction to the jury’s report, Ljubicic
tional trends in logo design and the jury’s report
states that “Logo design form the basis for creating
offers valuable reflections on the complex world
a successful brand identity. It is the most important
of how brands are visually manifested through a
and often the most complex part of the visual com-
single element of the vast branding landscape.
munication process. A small graphic or typographic mark must contain a strong message and reflect an
Boris Ljubicic from Studio International in Croatia
organisation’s values for quite a bit of time.” He
officiated as the jury chairperson. Other members
says that the lifespan of a logo is sometimes as long
51 >
Gold | Agency: Bulldog
Silver | Designer: Nido (UK)
Silver | Agency: Brandberry
Designer: Ren Spiteri (Ireland)
Client: elephruit (Pakistan)
Designer: Valera Namazov (Russia)
Client: Birdlife Malta
Client: TravelWorld.su (Russia)
Silver | Designer: Nanbu Toshiyasu
Bronze | Designer: Tan Huang (China)
Bronze | Designer: Andre Weier
(Japan) | Client: Japan Graphic
Client: Gentleman Coffee (China)
(Germany) | Client: NALINDESIGN
Designer Association
(Germany)
Bronze & Bart Crosby Jury Award
Bronze & Tommy Li Jury Award
Bronze | Agency: Hulsbosch
Designer: Chen Huarong (China)
Designer: Lin Shaobin (China)
(Australia) | Client: Qantas
Client: Colour Bookstore (China)
Client: Guilin Gruel (China)
(Australia)
52 >
as 50 years and some cases even a century. “This means that the designer should think in advance of his or her time to ensure that the design solution has longevity.” According to Ljubicic, typographic solutions seem to be the easier route to follow, as it only entails reading of words. He however prefers free graphic signs that mean something through their shape or graphic quality and he states that “These kinds of logos often take more time to be memorised, but they stay in the memory longer.”
Bronze | Designer: Chen Yongxin (China) | Client: liyi Architects & Associate (China)
Commenting on the overall standard and his personal Juror’s Award, Ljubicic says that the professional category of Hiiibrand 2010 did not delver many extraordinary innovations. For him, the only entry that deserve a 10 grade is the logo for Ocean Art Pavilion, designed by Du Xiaoxiao, which won his vote for a Jury Award. “This work aesthetically combines the typography with a graphic composition of rectangular blue lines that depict the motion of the ocean and the white squares inserted in between evoke the pavilion.” He says that the designer man-
Bronze | Designer: Peter Vasvari
aged to create a unique narrative and a beautiful
(Hungary) | Client: Brandstack, LLC.
graphic which he describes as ‘a work of art’.
(USA)
Joe Duffy selected the logo for Diva parfumerie, designed by Pavel Surovy, as his Jury Award. "I love the simplicity of the logotype combined with the mark. They compliment each other perfectly. The double entendre implied in the mark (perfume and the female form) add depth, meaning and a sense of discovery to the identity," says Duffy. Min Wang's Jury Award went to the logo for 14th Yugoslav Theatre Festival, designed by Nikola Vukasinovic. “The dramatic design agrees with the theme of the activity it reveals. In the form of ori-
Merit | Agency: Babushke (Croatia)
gami, an anthropomorphic expression, the figure
Designer: Tina Bauer, Marija Juza,
14 represents a flash of humor with impressive visual effects,” says Wang.
Gordana Pavlek (Croatia) | Client: Croatian Chamber of Economy (Croatia)
53 >
Bronze | Designer: Zou Yu (China)
Bronze | Designer: Morandini (Brazil)
Bronze | Agency: G Design Studio
Client: Liu Shi Bambooweave
Client: BESC (Brazil)
(Greece) | Client: University of
(China)
Patras (Greece)
Joe Duffy Jury Award | Agency:
Merit & Min Wang Jury Award
Boris Ljubicic Jury Award | Designer:
Communication Agency (Slovakia)
Designer: Nikola Vukasinovic (Serbia)
Du Xiaoxiao (China) | Client: Ocean
Designer: Pavel Surovy (Slovakia)
Client: National Theatre Uzice (Serbia)
Art Pavilion (China)
Merit & Bill Darling Jury Award
Merit | Designer: Zhang Gongyu
Merit & Cristian Kit Paul Jury Award
Designer: Maria Adam Fernandes
(China) | Client: ODA (China)
Client: Diva parfumerie (Belgrade, Serbia) Client: Birdlife Malta
(Germany) | Client: Minimal (Austria)
Designer: Zhao Gang (China) Client: Tianwei Textiles (China)
54 >
Merit | Victor Ad Corp (Taiwan)
Merit | Designer: Věra Marešová
Merit | Designer: Liu Jiangping
Designer: Kuo Chugn Yuan (Taiwan)
(Czech Republic) | Client: Polyclinic
(China) | Client: BLACK FISH
Client: greenest (Taiwan)
Vinicni (Czech Republic)
(China)
Merit | Designer: Sun Dawang (China)
Merit | Agency: 2M2 Information UN
Merit | Jamfactory (Hong Kong)
Client: Ricetalk Chinese Fast Food
(China) | Designer: Wang Lingyuan
Designer: Andrew Tang (Hong
(China)
(China) | Client: N2 Multimedia Art Lab
Kong) | Client: Grin (Hong Kong)
(China)
Merit | GD Design Studio
Merit | Designer: John Carlson (USA)
Designer: Alexandra Bubnova (Russia)
Client: Happy Noodle House (USA)
Client: place (Russia)
Merit | Designer: Heino Prunsvelt (Estonia) | Client: The Ministry of Culture (Estonia)
55 >
Bart Crosby's Jury Award went to the Colour Bookstore logo, designed by Chen Huarong. croby says that it is "A simple, distinctive and memorable solution. It's curious and playful – not forced or over done like many of the others." Tommy Li chose the logo for Guilin Gruel designed by Lin Shaobin, as his Jury Award. “It is never an easy task to depict the beauty of Guilin's scenery Merit | Designer: Zhang Ning (China) Client: Pdad music bar (China)
in an icon, emerging not only the specific characteristic, but also elegant prospect,” says Li. Cristian Kit Paul's Jury Award went to a logo designed by Zhao Gang. He says that: "It was difficult to pick one as my 'best of show', but I finally decided for Tianwei Textiles, probably because my own background is based on rebranding of large entities and I know how challenging a high-stake program can be. The TT symbol is a powerful and witty monogram, accompanied by a simple and functional wordmark in a clear yet vibrant composition." Bill Darling's Jury Award went to the logo for Mini-
Merit | Agency: Sebastiany Branding
mal, designed by Maria Adam Fernandes. "It's a very
(Brazil) | Client: Ecolabor (Brazil)
functional solution for what it is: kids clothing. For
Merit | Agency: Bruketa&Zinic OM
Merit | Agency: G8 Design (Brazil)
(Croatia) | Designer: Imelda Ramovic,
Designer: Marcelo Pierro (Brazil)
Mirel Hadzijusufovic (Croatia) | Client:
Client: Grafica Comunicare (Brazil)
SOS Children's Villages Croatia (Croatia)
56 >
example, the 'continuous' line approach of the logo would translate well to stitching/embroidery. 'Minimal' is a powerful word when talking about design and impossible to ignore, especially when it is the name of your company! I like how the solution is expressive and yet true to the word 'minimal' – a hard balance to achieve. The style in which the logo is drawn could easily be extended to illustrations of the garments, secondary typography, animation, etc. Overall, the logo is a nice solution that achieves the right balance of function + emotion."
Merit | Agency: Piaochong Design (China) | Client: Old boat wood furniture (China)
The jury felt that there were few unique differences or innovations between the entries that received grades 8 and 9 and the rest. After reviewing the visual appearance of the top-ranked entries, the jury identified some common themes: – Works based on pure geometrical shapes (circles, squares and triangles) rather than typography and a smaller number based on free drawing or symbols featuring basic ideas in the shape of man, house, nature, game and hospitality and others; – Works based purely on typography; – Combinations of typography and free graphic
Merit | Designer: Stanislav Levin (Russia) | Client: Gaucho Wine Ltd (New-Zealand)
forms; – Works based on numerals. The jury particularly highlighted this as an innovative trend since the entries, particularly those from China, showed innovation and humour; – Nature, man and book remains a constant; – Photography is a lesser-used reference, and – Conceptual logos that reflect a special story. It was the latter approach that convinced all of the jury members to award the Hiiibrand 2010 Gold Award in the professional category for the logo designed for Birdlife Malta, designed by Ren Spiteri
Merit | Designer: Michael Spitz (USA)
from Ireland. The entry eloquently combines text
Client: Buzzdog Group (USA)
and image, resulting in a narrative that merges popular culture with ecological conservation.
57 >
Merit | Designer: Chen Yu,
Merit | Designer: Feng Jianjun (China)
Merit | Agency: Cubo (Spain)
Shen Weiwei (China)
Client: boxuepu workshop (China)
Client: Saragossa Council (Spain)
Client: sock (China)
Merit | Designer: Kirill
Merit | Designer: Shay Isdale (USA)
Merit | Designer: Agnieszka
Demidenko (Russia)
Client: SiteSteet (USA)
Ziemiszewska (Poland)
Client: muze cafĂŠ (Australia)
Client: Cast Away (Poland)
Merit | Designer: Liu Ming (China)
Merit | Agency: day day up design
Merit | Designer: Chris Trivizas
| Client: Aushi Language and
studio (China) | Designer: Hong Wei
(Greece) | Client: Pavlos
Culture School (China)
(China) | Client: greenest (Taiwan)
Papalamprakopoulos (Greece)
58 >
Student Gold | Title: heart medicine
Student Silver | Title: Dolonge
Student Silver | Title: EDS hotel
Designer: Natalie Dinnikova (Russia)
Designer: Zhuang Erqiang (China)
Designer Designer: Wang Zhiqi (China)
Student Bronze | Title: Broken Cocoon
Student Merit | Title: Birdie
Student Merit | Title: uchino
Designer: Huang Sheng (China)
Designer: Greg Cuellar (USA)
Designer: Zhang Jing (China)
Student Bronze | Title: Union
Student Merit | Title: dbc â&#x20AC;&#x201C; death by
Student Bronze | Title: PONZU Sushi
Designer: Lang Tian (China))
chocolate | Designer: Denise Franke
House | Designer: Keo Pierron (USA)
(Germany)
Student Bronze | Title: Ideas
Student Merit | Title: buy-zone.ru
Student Merit | Title: Loop Barcelona
Designer: William Sii (Malaysia)
Designer: Igor Ryabov (Russia)
Designer: Fran Rosa (Spain)
59 >
Commenting on the student category, Ljubicic says that: “I expected more experiments and more freedom in interpretation, which was not the case.” Overall, the report provided by the Hiiibrand 2010 jury does not bode well when we consider the creStudent Bronze | Title: Glass House
ative innovation of designers engaged in the devel-
Designer: Lang Tian (China)
opment of corporate identities and branding. The jury concludes that they would like to see logo designers step up on their game and experiment more when entering the Hiiibrand 2011 International Logo Design Award. Entries for Hiiibrand 2011 will be open in June. More information can be found at www.hiiibrand.com <
Student Merit | Title: Rooms Café Designer: Wang Haishan (China)
Student Merit | Title: Klima Bochenska
Student Merit | Title: Out Standing
Gallery | Designer: Filip Tofil (Poland)
Home | Designer: Hou Junwei (China)
Student Merit | Title: Oh Fashion Shop
Student Merit | Title: KEEP
Designer: Su Yue (China)
Designer: Trinity Tuen (China)
60 >
Creativity is unusual stuff: It frightens. It deranges. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s subversive. It mistrusts what it sees, what it hears. It dares to doubt. It acts even if it errs. It rattles established certitudes. It incessantly invents new ways, new vocabularies. It provokes and changes points of view. It impacts the environment and society.
Fabrica is looking for peop design, illustration, photograp music, interaction and writing At Fabrica people work toge At a maximum of 25 years o come from the four corners
ple — working in visual phy, product design, video, g — who share this vision. ether, not just individually. old, Fabrica’s residents of the earth.
(Art direction: Arianna Di Betta)
61 >
To apply for a Fabrica residency and full study grant you can upload your curriculum vitae, statement of purpose and a concise pdf presentation of your work at: www.fabrica.it/apply
62 >
63 >
HIV Positive: Iconic t-shirts that shape views and awareness on the pandemic By Dalli Weyers
The design most worthy of applause in post-apartheid
perpetrators sent a message to her boyfriend say-
South Africa can be described as simple, humble,
ing: “You can come fetch your dog. We are finished
under-designed and basic. Yet the same design
with her.”
speaks of courage, of audacity, of daring, of hope and of power. Effective, loved, cherished, feared,
In Fighting for our Lives – The History of the Treatment
ridiculed, challenged, despised, debated, worn,
Action Campaign 1998- 2010, HIV positive Zackie
torn, altered, exported – it’s place in our future
Achmat, co-founder of the TAC, retells how he
design museums and in our national art galleries is
came up with the design: “There is an apocryphal
obvious.
story about the King of Denmark wearing a yellow star in solidarity with Jews during the Nazi occupa-
The HIV Positive t-shirt issued by the Treatment
tion of his country. The HIV Positive t-shirt serves
Action Campaign (TAC) was by far ‘the most beautiful
a similar purpose. All people, irrespective of their
object’ in South Africa for an entire decade. With
status, can wear it and show solidarity with people
countless colours, shapes and sizes, different cam-
with HIV.”
paign slogans and pictures of deceased comrades printed, an estimate would be that South Africa
And so the t-shirt was born. It’s debut along with
has seen a minimum of 100 000 of these t-shirts.
countless other of its appearances also happened to be televised on Siyayinqoba Beat It!, South Africa’s
The first t-shirt was produced at the beginning of
only HIV magazine television show. Produced by
1999 after the brutal murder of Gugu Dlamini in
the Community Media Trust, the show, now in its
December 1998. Dlamini was murdered because of
eighth season, is watched by one million people
her HIV positive status. From KwaMashu, a township
every week. Providing reliable, scientifically-based
on the outskirts of Durban, she had publicly dis-
information, the show also became a vehicle for
closed her HIV status on World AIDS Day. After her
the t-shirt and all it stood for.
disclosure, Dlamini was accused of shaming her community and was repeatedly assaulted and threat-
On 12 December 2002, the father of the nation
ened. Her calls for police assistance went unheeded.
himself, former President Nelson Mandela was
Three weeks later, she was fatally assaulted. Her
handed a HIV Positive t-shirt by TAC member Mathew
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Damane at a Médecins Sans Frontières anti-retroviral clinic in Khayelitsha. Mandela immediately took off his shirt and donned the HIV Positive t-shirt over his vest. In doing so he not only demonstrated his unequivocal support for and solidarity with those infected and affected by HIV, he also demonstrated that his position was underscored by science and a commitment to the South African Constitution and human rights. The t-shirt had come to represent not only solidarity with people living with HIV, but also evidence-based science (as opposed to pseudoscience and HIV denial), the struggle for life and dignity and the socio-economic rights enshrined in
1
the Constitution. During the TAC’s Dying for Treatment Civil Disobedience Campaign in 2003 activist Charlene Wilson passed away. She was buried in a public funeral and laid to rest in her HIV Positive t-shirt in accordance with her wishes. Wilson’s feelings about the t-shirt can arguably be found in TAC member Beatrina Mhlongo’s view: “Putting on the t-shirt was my way of joining the struggle – a relief.” In short Mhlongo’s emotional experience from putting on the t-shirt for
2
the first time succinctly articulates that the personal is political, that joining the struggle for life, freedom and dignity was a homecoming and that the struggle itself imbues one with dignity. The tshirt had come to also symbolise a community, a political home and a common purpose. Forever altering our personal, communal, social and political landscape, there can be no denying that these t-shirts have had an indelible impact on South Africa and have been indispensable in breaking down the stigma and secrecy around HIV. Today they are iconic and continue to represent the struggle for human rights.
3
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1. Vuyiseka Dubula, TAC’s General Secretary, protesting outside a shebeen in Khayelitsha where, on 13 December 2003, Lorna Mlofana, a mother and a community educator, was sexually assaulted and then murdered when her rapist learnt that she had HIV. The TAC’s work has included protesting violence against women and advocating for a criminal justice system that works for rape survivors. Some versions of the t-shirt have reflected this agenda. Photo courtesy of Treatment Action Campaign. 2. The HIV Positive t-shirt, issued in various colours and addressing many issues, has been appropriated in countless ways. Here progressive traditional healers, in agreement that anti-retrovirals are the only treatment for HIV, don the t-shirt under their standard uniforms. The rainbow flag in the distance also succinctly illustrates the diversity of identities and communities included by the TAC in the struggle for life and dignity. Photo courtesy of Treatment Action Campaign. 3. The TAC has consistently gone beyond just demanding that governments meet their obligations and the t-shirts have also reflected this. Here the TAC along with partner organisations march to address the 38th Union World Conference on Lung Health that was held in Cape Town in November 2008. The dual epidemic of HIV and TB is one of the biggest challenges faced by the South African health system. Photo courtesy of Gavin Silber.
4
4. This poster for the TAC’s Stand up for our lives march in February 2003, which saw between 10 000 and 15 000 people march on parliament during Thabo Mbeki’s State of the Nation address, reflects the confluence of the symbolism of Nelson Mandela and the symbolism of the HIV Positive t-shirt. In a meta-textual manner this poster was also printed on the back of the HIV Positive t-shirts issued for the march. Photo courtesy of Treatment Action Campaign. 5. Since its inception in December 1998 the Treatment Action Campaign has underscored the centrality of active citizenship in a constitutional democracy. Given the levels of inequality that South Africa faces and the fact that the Constitution enshrines socio-economic rights the need for citizens to speak truth to power, here outside the national legislature, is paramount. Photo courtesy of Dan Kamen.
5
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Some additional takes/thoughts/musings on the HIV Positive t-shirt: quotes from Fighting for our Lives – The History of the Treatment Action Campaign 1998- 2010
6
“I am proud to be a walking billboard in TAC’s struggle for human rights.” – George Chauke “Seeing so many beautiful people wearing the t-shirt gave me back some hope and self-esteem. It gave me courage to disclose.” – Ntombozuko Kraai “The t-shirt symbolises the lives that have been lost and the sacrifices that have been made. It marks us as
7
people with a common purpose.” – Nomfundo Eland “Many activists have said ‘Come to my funeral in your t-shirts, tell people what I went through and what I did in TAC – spread the message!’ That’s what we do.” – Nonkosi Khumalo “The t-shirt promotes openness and breaks stigma. You’ll be challenged ‘ Are you HIV positive?’ Then you can start engaging with people.” – Thembeka Majali “It leads to discussions, whisperings, the internal acceptance that HIV is real, and a culture of coming forward.” – Philip Mokoena “People call me MaAIDS when they see my t-shirt and come with questions.” – Maria Khambule
About the author Dalli Weyers is a social justice activist, politics postgrad graduate and an Industrial Design dropout. He now aims to merge design and politics through soaring and eloquently written exaltations of the virtues of design and the role that it can play in Southern Africa where structural inequalities still relegate the majority of people to socio-economic hardship. He is the author of the blog www.reclaimfire.co.za <
8
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6. Having taken on an international presence the TAC’s HIV Positive t-shirt has appeared in Parliament in Cape Town and was worn by Grammy Award winning artist Annie Lennox on an episode of American Idol. In London it has been worn by the photographer and Turner Prize winner Wolfgang Tilmans and a former British High Commissioner to South Africa, Anne Grant. In New York it has been worn by Nkhensani Mavasa, from rural Limpopo, when she was the first openly HIV Positive person to address the United Nation’s General Assembly. Here it is worn, in rural Limpopo, by Nkhensani’s comrades while they read the latest edition of the TAC’s magazine Equal Treatment. Photo courtesy of Treatment Action Campaign. 7. Here former President Nelson Mandela wears the t-shirt. On his right is Zackie Achmat, co-founder of the TAC and the conceiver of the t-shirt. Photo courtesy of Treatment Action Campaign. 8. Taking the message to the communities through pamphlets and fliers but also through simply wearing a t-shirt. Photo courtesy of Treatment Action Campaign.
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Letâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s make condoms cool
By Anton Ressel
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Second skin – protection for your protection. Cow leather sleeve made for condoms.
A new product from the Cape-based
Protection for your protection
urban africa design studio is hoping to get people talking about condom-use and safe sex, by making it ‘cool’ to be responsible.
A new product on the market is hoping to do its bit to change attitudes to sex and condom-use amongst the youth by making it cool to be responsible. The sleek leather pouch, designed to hold up to three condoms, has been dubbed the Second
If a recent study is to be believed, nearly 50% of
Skin and is marketed with the tagline ‘Protection
teens in SA are sexually active by the time they
for your Protection.’
turn 16, but only 30% of them use a condom every time they have sex. Despite a high level of under-
Designer and urban africa founder Vincent Urbain
standing of HIV/AIDS and awareness of the dangers
believes that the product will help open dialogue
of unprotected sex, a combination of peer pressure,
amongst the youth around responsible sexual
learned sexual behaviour and the stigma around
practice. “The reality is that young people are hav-
condom use all contribute to these shocking sta-
ing sex and this is not something government or
tistics, according to the report.
anybody else can change. What we can change however, is their attitude towards safe and responsible sex. In many communities, condoms are not seen
70 >
as ‘cool’, and this is an area we can target. We are
show off to their friends and even buy as gifts for
striving to make the carrying and use of condoms
people they care about,” says Vincent.
the norm amongst our young people, by packaging them in a sexy, hip and personalised way.” According to Vincent, the Second Skin can be used as a keyring,
A love of leather
a necklace or attached to your belt. The genesis of urban africa is an interesting story. The slimline pouch, smaller than a business card
Born in Belgium, Vincent always had an interest in
holder, is made alongside urban africa’s mainstream
handmade work and especially handcrafted leath-
production of designer belts, bags, laptop sleeves
er items and accessories. The watersport fanatic
and other leather products. The brainchild of Urbain
graduated in Economics and decided to move South,
and design intern Jessika Balzer, the idea behind
landing in Cape Town in 2003 where he wind-surfed
the Second Skin was to create something small
and undertook different jobs. One of these was the
that could have a large impact on how people talk
distribution of rough handcrafted leather sandals
and act sexually. “We wanted to make something
made by Tanzanian crafters on top of the Cape
inexpensive that people feel proud to carry around,
Town train station.
LTR: Carré wallet, Bookie cow leather note/sketch book, Empire belt in veg tan cow leather, Clutch 'n swing cow leather clutch bag lined with goat or sheep napper leather and iPhone sleeves.
71 >
Since his childhood, Vincent Urbain had always been attracted to leather and handmade work. The 2011 urban africa product range consists of 31 pieces. The range is designed by Vincent, Reanne Gray, Jessika Balzer and all pieces are individually handmade by Vincent and his team. No two pieces look the same.
Vincent soon realised that more than distributing,
Sow. All of the pieces are individually handmade
he wanted to explore the intricacies of the world
and according to Vincent “no two pieces look the
of leather first hand and started making his own
same, unless you really want them to! Because we
pair shoes from hide. It took him three days and
all like to have something unique, our clients can
nights of non-stop work, but he was hooked! Com-
choose their own leather, stitching and rivet col-
pletely self-taught and hungry to learn, he then
ours and we will custom-make according to their
moved on to bags and armbands, and changed the
specs. The result is that our clients, whether one-
focus from working with hides to leather. The range
off buyers or large retail outlets, get exactly what
began to take shape, and in 2005 urban africa was
they want. In essence we are offering a tailored
born.
service in leatherwork.”
The business has grown quickly, and today urban
Pieces within the urban africa range include hand-
africa supplies nearly 100 outlets and exports its
bags, laptop sleeves, belts, wallets, books, foot-
high-quality leather creations to several countries
wear, keyrings, Blackberry and cellphone pouches
internationally. Ranges are designed by Vincent,
and now condom holders. Behind each design,
who frequently collaborates with other designers
there is the same core vision and design aesthetic
such as Reanne Gray, Jessika Balzer and Maraime
that underpins all of Vincent’s work – minimalist,
72 >
elegant, funky, timeless, understated but aspiring.
arrangement so that we all benefit. I see design as
“I am attracted to designs that allow for individual
a collaborative process, one that does not and
expression, but not in a loud or brash way. My
should not happen in isolation or a vacuum. After
work is never in-your-face, but I always try and be
all, many heads are better than one, no?” he says
original and a little bit edgy.”
with a smile.
The company is environmentally and socially con-
A recent addition at urban africa has been the de-
scious and Vincent and his team strive to work in
velopment of a series of leather workshops for
ways that are sustainable and forward-thinking. In
interested members of the public. The workshops
2010, the brand dropped the lining for most of its
take place at the urban africa studio in Roeland
pieces, making the bags lighter, softer and more
Street in Cape Town, which also doubles as a show-
flexible, but also to minimise the use of harmful
room and shop. Attendees can choose between a
glues and reduce wastage. In addition, urban africa
range of items to make, and the team at urban af-
partners with an organisation called Afrographic,
rica provides all materials, facilitate and teach the
through which leather animal keyrings are made
basic skills of leathersmithing. Participants can
by township women in Cape Town and marketed
then take home whatever they create.
and distributed by urban africa. The initiative has been a huge success and the keyrings are now sent all over the world, creating sustainable income
The business of business
and a sense of pride to these formerly unemployed ladies.
The success and focus of urban africa led to the company being selected as one of only ten partici-
A philosophy of collaboration and sharing of ideas
pants nationally in the ETU programme, a business development initiative funded by the Embassy of Finland and implemented by enterprise development specialists Fetola. Interventions include
An interesting thing about Vincent and his ap-
workshops, e-learning, market access opportunities
proach is the apparent lack of ego and ‘precious-
and mentoring. Vincent also received a marketing
ness’ around the design process. He is happy to
strategy through the programme that he is cur-
share his own ideas with others and actively en-
rently implementing. “Although it is the creative
courages collaborations. “We welcome designers
process that drives me, I studied Economics and
from all over to come and show us their designs
have an interest in business. I believe that there has
and ideas. If we like it and all are in agreement, we
to be a balance between the creative and business
will develop these ideas together into a final prod-
elements for any business to succeed,” he says.
uct. We will launch it on our site and show it to all our clients, and negotiate a royalty or some other
73 >
African dolls cow leather boxes.
74 >
LEFT: Eggtail blue stone wash bag in cow leather. CENTRE: Quotidien cow leather all around bag. TOP RIGHT: Fishtail cow leather bag. BOTTOM RIGHT: Tulip cow leather bag.
Corporate applications The same philosophy of openness, collaboration and social interest led Vincent to develop the condom pouches, and once again he strikes a balance between the creative and the business aspects. The pouches can be branded or embossed with logos, educational messages and other text or branding, which Vincent believes makes them a suitable product for corporates, NGO’s and other organisations that keen to help spread the safe sex message. “We are hoping that ‘hip’ brands and
75 >
organisations that target the youth will see the
sible sexual behaviour and sexual health in order
value in this product and the message behind it,
to increase the impact of the Second Skin and its
and approach us to do their own branded range of
message. “We need to get people talking about safe
Second Skin pouches. These can be distributed at
sex, to lessen the stigma around this subject. After
colleges, universities, concerts, raves – anywhere
all, sex is cool, fun and exciting – and so everything
young people gather en masse. They are a design-
that goes with it should feel the same way!”
er product with a great social message and impact, and initial feedback suggests they will work well
The Second Skin is being promoted through a number
as a promotional item or corporate gift.”
of channels, including urban africa’s website, via select retailers and outlets as well as corporate
Going forward, Vincent is planning to partner
and promotional gift agencies. Click here to visit
with existing organisations that promote respon-
urban africa's site. <
76 >
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Creating complex objects of desire layer by layer By Michaella Janse van Vuuren | My passion for
realised or 3D printed, layer by layer, by the melting
creating technically complex design and artworks
or depositing of manufacturing materials. This
has its roots in my schooling at Pro Arte High School
manufacturing process, developed in the 1980s,
for the Arts in Pretoria. Here I made marionettes
was initially intended for the manufacturing of cus-
that were highly detailed, using innovative con-
tom engineered parts and prototypes for industrial
struction and manipulation methods. Many years
product development. In recent years the technol-
on, my work has drawn me once again into a direc-
ogy has become accessible not only to engineers,
tion where the technical and artistic meet. Today, I
industrial designers and a select few, but also to a
work as an electrical engineer – my day job – and in
wider range of designers and artists like myself.
my private time I focus on designing 3D printing or
This change has been driven by the reduction in
additive manufacturing. I enjoy designing and I find
cost of the hardware and software needed to cre-
the limitations and difficulties a fascinating chal-
ate the large prototyping files and also decreased
lenge. I love the challenge of creating something
the cost to manufacture objects – mass or one offs.
that is planned and then designed on computer and
Increased Internet bandwidth has also made it pos-
seeing if my idea ‘printed out’ as I envisioned.
sible to send the larger files required for manufacturing and a number of start-up companies have
The intersection of art, design and technology is
emerged who now provide short-run manufactur-
currenttly undergoing a time of exponential growth
ing services for individuals who produce their own
enabled by digital manufacturing. Digital manufac-
objects. The designer/artist can now lie at the cen-
turing methods such as additive manufacturing
tre of this exploration. More than in any other dis-
have changed the way that objects are designed
cipline he or she has the ability to create and ex-
and manufactured. Additive manufacturing refers
plore without the limitations imposed by
to the process where an object that has been cre-
traditional sculpting materials and their inherent
ated in the virtual world of the computer is then
properties.
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I create my art by first imagining the object. This is then translated onto paper, and after a series of sketches transformed into a technical drawing. This drawing dictates the measurements and dimensions needed to translate the artwork into the computer. The scale of the sculpture, distances between parts and mechanical functionality have to be meticulously planned out before I move on to the computer. I use software programs to translate the idea into a printable digital design. Different software packages specialise in a specific type of functionality and there is no one program that fulfills all my design needs. I do the 3D sculpting in Zbrush, the creation of the moveable parts in Rhino and the 3D mesh checking in netfabb, to name a few key software packages. I move back and forth between programs to create the artwork. Zbrush is a digital sculpting program that allows you to do organic and or freeform sculptural shapes that are very difficult to create in traditional CAD software. Many of my designs have moveable parts. When I need to cut the parts or add mechanical pieces with precise dimensions I move over to Rhinoceros 3D. Rhinoceros is an entry level CAD program. When designing for 3D printing you have to keep in mind the limitations of the printing process. Unlike designing for computer rendering, a visual representation, modeling for 3D printing requires a lot more issues to consider before it is printable. The object needs to be watertight and manifold with no bad edges to name but a few. Software programs such as netfabb, Meshlab and Magics help to evaluate and repair 3D files, or meshes, so that the file can be printed. It helps to check your file throughout the design process for printing integrity as many hours or days of work can be lost trying to fix a file that has become unprintable. You also need
79 >
The Horse Marionette has fully functional joints and movable wings. Polyamide, 203 x 193 x 166 mm. Part of the Southern Guild Collection 2011. These images show a rendering of the 3D file that is sent to the printers. They illustrate how the individual parts of the marionette are placed in the 3D file so that no assembly is required afterwards. Once the powder is removed the marionette comes to life. Click here to see The Horse Marionette in action.
80 >
Rocking Springbuck. Polyamide, 183 x 156 x 51 mm. The Springbuck was designed with all itsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; moveable parts in a single 3D file. Rocking Springbuck has rotating gears and they move as the buck rocks. Click here to see Rocking Springbuck in action.
81 >
to comply with the process limitations. Some additive manufacturing processes allow for moving parts, some require that the object should be designed as a single solid piece. Parts that are designed too small will disintegrate in the build and moveable parts cannot be spaced too close or they will fuse and not be able to move at all. There are different materials available for 3D printing such as, steel, sand, alumide, resin, ceramics, glass and even human tissue. My favorite material and process is selective laser sintering. The polyamide or nylon material is well suited to creating movable parts. It is relatively robust, depending on the thickness of the part, and has the texture and look of coral. The design process is time-consuming and relatively expensive. I therefore have to design my sculptures to be as small as possible and I am always pushing the limitations of what is possible. There is also no room for error; one small mistake in the mechanics could mean that the entire design does not work as I intended. When a design is finished, I email the digital files to a local or international manufacturer. The sculptures are then built up by fusing thin layers of nylon powder. When the print build is finished the powder is removed and the object magically emerges from the heap of deposited powder. A few days later the completed sculptures arrive at my door ready to be unpacked. This is always a very tense moment. Did I think of everything? Will it come out as planned? All the planning and designing focuses on this one moment of pure joy when I hold a design that looks and functions exactly as I envisioned it.
82 >
Some of my most recent work, The Horse Mario-
functional joints and movable wings and when
nette, Rocking Springbuck and Birdman, were all dig-
strung up it comes to life. The Rocking Springbuck
itally designed in this manner. All the parts have
has rotating gears that move as the buck rocks. Au-
been placed in the same file with no assembly re-
tomata and mechanical toys inspired the Birdman
quired afterwards. The Horse Marionette has fully
sculpture. When the rod is pulled the beak closes
83 >
and his arms drop to the sides. When the rod is pushed his beak opens and the arms move outward. The Horse Marionette forms part of the Southern Guild collection that will be launched at the Johannesburg Art Fair in September 2011. <
Birdman. Polyamide, 220 x 60 x 40 mm. Automata and mechanical toys inspired Birdman. When the rod is pulled the beak closes and his arms drop to the sides. When the rod is pushed his beak opens and the arms move outward. Click here to see Birdman in action.
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3D What?
By Kenneth van Rensburg | My first encounter
printing is and why I could be getting so excited
with the 3D printing phenomenon transpired dur-
over the model of a steering wheel? (The second
ing a working holiday some years ago in the UK.
question is perhaps a little harder to answer…)
Being a budding industrial designer and a self-con-
Unlike many subtractive manufacturing processes
fessed car nerd, I jumped at the opportunity to
such as CNC, where material is carved or machined
visit the Jaguar factory in Coventry. Besides visit-
away from a block or billet of virgin material, 3D
ing the assembly plant the tour also included a
printing is an additive manufacturing process
visit to Jaguar’s R&D department, which turned
whereby the parts are built up, layer by layer. As
out to be the highlight of my visit. Waiting in an-
each layer binds to the previous one, the cumula-
ticipation, I hoped to see car designers sketching
tive thin layers are transformed into a three-di-
and model-makers vigorously fettling and working
mensional object. Crudely put, it’s what wasps and
away at clay models. Instead, an army of designers
swallows have been doing for ages – building up
greeted me from behind their computers and a
their nests, one layer at a time. This means that
dozen 3D printers were busy ‘growing’ physical
complex shapes, complete with negatives spaces
models of parts they had just designed. Within a
and tricky undercuts can be ‘grown’ into one single
couple of hours the designers could hold in their
piece in a very short space of time. By 3D printing
hands exact replicas of, say, a steering wheel, to
a model, valuable developmental time and costs
assess the part both visually and ergonomically
are saved, fast-tracking one's design to the market.
before committing to tooling and manufacture. To me this was mind blowing – like a Replicator
So why then is it referred to as ‘printing’, you might
straight out of Star Trek! Needless to say, I never
ask? 3D printing is really an umbrella term for a
expected to be running my own 3D printing com-
number of additive manufacturing processes. Many
pany only a couple years later.
of these processes use inkjet print-head technology to deposit layers of material or binding agents to
Now, if you’re not familiar with the technology,
build a 3D model. Unlike a desktop printer, which
you are likely to be wondering what on earth 3D
prints a 2D image onto a flat surface such as a sheet
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LTR: A layer of the binder for the SC20 boat model being deposited. After removing most of the excess powder, the SC20 emerges from the 3D printer. The finished 1-15 scale model painted and with laser cut detailing. The real SC20 after production in action
of paper, a 3D printer deposits a layer or cross-section
I, then identified a real local need to bridge the gap
onto the machine’s build bed. The bed then drops
between the design process and manufacture, i.e.
less than 0.1mm and a new layer is deposited on
prototyping. We were recently-qualified industrial
top of the preceding one. The process of building
designers when we were presented with the op-
the layers is referred refer to as ‘growing’ a model.
portunity to start a small business and 3D printing was an obvious choice. After meeting with various international agents it wasn’t long before our 3D
3D Printing in South Africa
printer was shipped and our company, Protoform Rapid Prototyping, opened its doors. Unlike in Eu-
Although relatively new to South Africa, the tech-
rope, we very soon realised that it was difficult to
nology itself has been around since the 1980s and
specialise since no single local market was large
the first machine was made commercially available
enough to support the fledgling local prototyping
by 3D Systems in 1986. The first machine only
industry. And so, casting our nets a little wider, we
reached South African shores in 1991 and only a
began marketing to industries outside of our pri-
handful of machines have since been available up
mary targets in design and engineering.
until the early 2000s. A handful of science labs and tertiary education institutions acquired the major-
One such industry was boat-building and some of
ity; with a small number used commercially, but
the first models that we produced were scale
largely in-house.
yacht models for the Dean Catamaran’s sales team. The company’s designer, Rudolf Jonker, im-
It was only in 2008 that I saw the first 3D printer in
mediately recognised that 3D scale models could
South Africa firsthand. My colleague, Jon Smith and
provide a huge advantage over their competition:
86 >
“I think for us, the model really made a difference
models, sculptures and props for the movie industry.
in finalising the last exterior design details. To be
By then, we’ve noticed is that 3D printing was often
able to show a scale-model to prospective buyers
misunderstood as a process strictly for engineering
before the first boat was even built gave our
prototypes, but this couldn’t be further from the
marketing people a big head-start in marketing
truth and since then, Protoform has assertively
the new boat.”
tried to make diverse potential users aware that 3D printing is also a powerful and creative tool. A
It wasn’t long before Protoform were supplying
3D printer can replicate almost anything that you
boat models abroad as well. Scandinavian Cruisers’
can model digitally, be it light fittings, shoes, artis-
founder, Nis Lorentzen, required 1:15 scale-models
tic sculptures – the possibilities are almost limitless
of his SC20 to assist with both development and
and 3D printed models can be used ‘as is’ or paint-
marketing. As Nis explains, "Building boats has a
ed and detailed for presentation. They may even
lot to do with a passion for boating and the sea.
be used to make moulds for casting in plastics and
Being able to transform 3D drawings of a new boat
metals and from a 3D printed master, one can easily
design into a complete painted scale model within
make low volume plastic components with accu-
just a couple of weeks, as opposed to the many
racy that competes with injection moulding. In
months it takes to build the real thing, is very ex-
conjunction with other technologies, such as 3D and
citing. It is like seeing your first baby being born”.
CT scanning, the possible applications are truly infinite.
By the end of 2008 Protoform was also supplying prototype parts to the automotive industry, mod-
One such creative proposal came to Protoform in
els for sand casting, training models, architectural
2008 when the prominent ad agency The Jupiter
TOP LEFT: An engineering model showing the level of detail that is possible with 3D printing. BOTTOM LEFT: 1-10 scale models of slurry valves used in the mining industry. TOP RIGHT: 1 of 5 plastic components for a large automotive client using the 3D print part as the master for the mould. BOTTOM RIGHT: 1-1 scale cylinder head for a passenger vehicle. RIGHT: Two of the 3D printed sculptures used for the 2009 Design Indaba advertising campaign.
87 >
Drawing Room approached us to realise their concept
three years Protoform has been supplying medical
for the 2009 Design Indaba advertising campaign.
models to some of South Africa’s leading maxilla-
They needed to make tangible a concept that
facial surgeons. A large percentage of their work
showcased the ideas and identities of thee innova-
entails reconstructive surgery to correct damage
tors in the form of sculptures. The sculptures
caused by tumors, gunshot wounds and severe
needed to be sufficiently detailed to convey the
damage caused by burns. Typically, the patient
personalities of the subjects as well as incorporat-
would be CT-scanned from which a radiologist
ing each innovator’s idea in the form of an object,
would prepare pre-operative planning models of a
emerging from their heads. In order to meet the
patient’s jaw or skull. We then 3D-print models
brief, the heads of the chosen three innovators
that are then used as templates by surgeons to
were scanned to create digital 3D copies. The
accurately create customised implants – these
models for their inventions were then digitally ma-
models can even be produced in as little as a day
nipulated, together with the scanned head models
in emergencies. According to radiologist, Carol
and made to appear as if emerging from the heads.
Spence, the time afforded by these models can
These were then 3D printed at life-size and assem-
easily save surgeons up to two hours of surgery
bled to produce fascinating, life-like sculptures.
time, and with theatre rates of around R100 per
The sculptures were photographed and used in a
minute, that’s a massive financial saving to both
number of applications and the campaign went on
patients and medical aid schemes. Apart from the
to win several advertising awards.
monetary savings, this dramatically reduce risks to the patients because it reduces time under anesthesia
Another unexpected but exciting application of
and ensures that implants that fit precisely. Previ-
3D printing is the medical industry. Over the past
ously, implants would have to be custom-shaped
88 >
and fitted under surgery. Carol is quick to mention
enthusiast, Jay Leno, has a 3D printer in his garage
that 3D prototyped models mean that surgeons
to produce spare parts for his classic car collection.
can now even fit implants intra-operatively, leaving the patient with minimal scarring.
So, perhaps in the future, if you broke a hose fitting, you could ‘grow’ a replacement overnight or that frustrating missing piece from a favourite toy
The Future
or gadget. Sure, for larger and more specialised modelling you’d still probably make use of a pro-
So, where is 3D printing headed? Well, for a start,
fessional service provider for their expertise and
it won’t be long before we have desktop 3D printers
high-end equipment. New materials for 3D print-
in small businesses and in homes. A basic RepRap
ing are being developed and experimented with
or Makerbot 3D printer already costs less than
almost every day – various metals (including pre-
what a desktop laser printer did in 1985, which to-
cious ones for jewellery design), new polymers,
day we find in almost every office and middle-class
ceramics, clay, sugar, sawdust and even pasta! As
home. For example, television celebrity and car
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FAR LEFT: Various architectural applications of 3D printing. CENTRE TOP: Sectional model of a patient's Maxialla. CENTRE BOTTOM: Pre-operative planning model for surgery. BOTTOM: Little mirrored Fiat 500's emerging from under the powder.
this develops and the technology becomes more
About the author
affordable, new industries will start up. Kenneth van Rensburg is an industrial designer For me, the most exciting development at present
and partner at Cape Town-based Protoform Rapid
is 3D-printed organs. Thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s right! Already, scien-
Prototyping. <
tists have developed prototype machines that could do that and I predict that in a couple of years doctors could be 3D-printing you or a loved oneâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a new kidney or heart valve using your very own cells as building blocks. Quite frankly, the possibilities of 3d printing are endless. If you can think it, it can happen. All you need is an idea.
90 >
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Turning Talent Into Success A Cape Town business development consultancy is making an impact nationally in the field of enterprise development and economic empowerment, with a special focus on the creative industries. Fetola, a Sotho word meaning ‘change’ or ‘changing’, specialises in boosting emerging entrepreneurs, creatives, grassroots projects and community-based organisations towards sustainability. Based in Westlake Business Park in the Cape and with a national footprint, Fetola was founded in 2006 by enterprise development practitioner and entrepreneur Catherine Wijnberg. “What makes us different” says Catherine, a Zambianborn entrepreneur and MBA graduate with experience in five sectors, “is that we teach what we call ‘the Business of Business.’ I believe the success of enterprise development lies in understanding the daily challenges faced by small business owners, and offering simple, practical and replicable solutions that are relevant whether one is selling craft, cars, creativity or cabbages. There are certain business fundamentals that need to be in place in any enterprise for it to be sustainable and successful, and that is what we focus on.” The organisation runs long-term enterprise development programmes as well as working directly with entrepreneurs and SMME’s on a needs-basis. Offerings are diverse and include mentoring, skills development and training, practical e-learning courses, systems development and strategic planning. “What sets us apart is that we have ‘walked the walk’, especially when it comes to the creative industries.
A selection of innovative lighting products designed and produced by Heath Nash, one of the notable participants who are benefitting from the ETU programme.
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Bamboo kitchen by Cabinetworks.
Luxury leather accessories by Majda Rabin of Chimpel.
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I was Programme Manager at the Cape Craft and Design Institute (CCDI) before opening Fetola,
The ETU SMME Accelerator Programme
while our senior consultant Anton Ressel was cofounder of Streetwires, one of the largest social
A recent Fetola initiative aimed at more estab-
enterprises in South Africa. All our consultants and
lished businesses is the ETU SMME Accelerator
mentors are business people themselves – how
Programme, funded by the Embassy of Finland.
can you teach entrepreneurial thinking if you have
‘ETU’ is a Finnish word meaning ‘benefit’. This pro-
never been an entrepreneur?” asks Wijnberg, in
gramme works with participants in the creative
reference to the theory-heavy, ‘chalk-and-talk’ of-
sector that are primed for growth, and includes
fering of many skills development organisations
amongst others, internationally renowned lighting
out there.
designer Heath Nash, high-end furniture and interiors business Cabinetworks, luxury leather acces-
The Legends Programme
sories designer Majda Rabin of Chimpel, Vincent Urbain of urban africa and fast-growing ceramics studios Imiso Ceramics and Zizamele.
Fetola’s flagship enterprise development initiative, the Old Mutual-supported Legends Programme,
Beneficiaries of both programmes receive a suite
was a Finalist in the coveted Mail & Guardian In-
of support including practical business skills train-
vesting in the Future Awards in the Best Enter-
ing and ongoing access to a business mentor. Both
prise Development Programme category in 2010.
programmes utilise an innovative peer-to-peer
Legends now supports 67 enterprises in nine prov-
email network resource, enabling beneficiaries to
inces, and has become one of the largest virtual
communicate with each other, share lessons and
incubator programmes in South Africa. Partici-
ask for advice and support simply by sending an email.
pants include craft and design organisations, fur-
This resource is also used by Fetola to distribute
niture manufacturers, skills training organisations,
weekly e-learning training on diverse topics such
NGO’s, community projects and a number of up-
as sales and marketing, finance, strategic plan-
and-coming young entrepreneurs in the film and
ning, administration and costing and pricing. The
design spheres.
overall intention is to help beneficiaries become more businesslike, competitive and sustainable.
If the figures are anything to go by, Legends is indeed having a significant impact in its aims to re-
“What we have found over the years is that many
duce poverty, create jobs and develop skills
creative people find the business side of things far
amongst its beneficiary network. Annual partici-
less interesting than the design and creative proc-
pant sales turnover increased from ZAR690 000 in
ess. My response to this – that is why there are so
2007 to ZAR2.385 million in 2010 – an increase of
many gifted designers in the poorhouse!” says Fe-
290%, while the programme has more than dou-
tola consultant Anton Ressel. “In all seriousness, it
bled in size from supporting 350 beneficiaries in
is rare to find a combination of creative excellence
2008 to over 1000 in 2011.
and business savvy in an entrepreneur or small business, but the reality is that creative talent alone is not enough to sustain a business. There are a number of fundamentals that must be in
94 >
place for any business to thrive, and this is what we try and impart through our work.” Fetola Project Manager Chantal de Kock believes that small business success begins with a solid self-belief and business vision. “Beyond this, the essential business foundations - sound financial and administrative systems, a good understanding of marketing and sales, a product or service with potential and a realistic gap in the market, are where the edge is created,” she adds.
Turning the light on One notable success story is the work Fetola have been doing with Heath Nash. A gifted designer with a growing international profile, Nash joined the ETU programme because he recognised that the business side of his company needed attention. “I have always found the design and creative process so much more stimulating than the financial or administrative side of things – obviously!” says Nash with a smile. “However, I found myself in a situation where I was working harder and harder but not really moving forward in a business sense. Sure, my profile was growing, but this was not translating into financial success and sustainability for the business, because this side of things was always second fiddle to the creative side. That has changed since I joined ETU and started working with Fetola, and the benefits have been almost immediate,” he says. The starting point was to empower Nash with information about his business that he could understand and embrace. This meant regular sales reports, management accounts and a clear picture of what his expenses and income were on a monthly basis. “I started seeing how much money was being wasted on inefficient production processes, unproductive staff and poor management of materials.
95 >
A small selection of the vast product range produced by ETU SMME Accelerator Programme participant, Imiso Ceramics.
96 >
TOP LEFT: Fetola interventions include workshops, mentoring and one-on-one business support. TOP RIGHT: Catherine Wijnberg, Director Fetola & Associates. LEFT: Fetola programme participant, Theresa Wormser of TW Ceramics.
A selection of products by ETU SMME Accelerator Programme participant, Zizamele.
97 >
The knowledge was like switching a light on!” says
Another recent innovation is the Fetola Volunteer
Nash. A thorough recosting of all his products, re-
Mentor programme, a national (and possibly inter-
sulting in a new and more competitive pricing
national) matchmaking programme that pairs ex-
structure and greater professionalism in the busi-
perienced business people and entrepreneurs
ness, followed this. “We are fortunate in that
with emerging entrepreneurs and organisations in
Heath learns very quickly and is determined to
need of business support.
strengthen his business knowledge. In fact, I think he actually finds the business side of his company
“Our Vision is to change lives for the better, for-
far more interesting and exciting than he ever im-
ever. We see the development of the SMME sector
agined he would!” says Ressel.
as absolutely vital to the growth and prosperity of our country, and feel privileged to be able to partner with corporates like Old Mutual and others
Innovation equals success
who share our vision. Our creative talent in South Africa is so huge, if this can be coupled with sound
Given its genesis and close links with the creative
business knowledge and skills, watch out World!”
industries, it is no surprise that Fetola prides itself
concludes Wijnberg.
on innovation. “We are always looking for new ways to increase our impact and do more for less,”
Click here to learn more about Fetola and the pro-
says Wijnberg. One example is the Mentor Hot-
grammes that they run. <
line©, a 24-hour email, sms and telephone hotline that provides fast access to experienced business mentors for beneficiaries.
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Supporting ideas into prototypes By Judy Bryant | Do you have an idea for a product
terial. If someone comes here with an idea, they
or design, and want to explore it further? If so, the
can develop it through to the prototype. Issues are
Product Support Space at the Cape Craft and Design
often not process- or material-specific; it is often
Institute (CCDI) could be your new playground.
a case of helping people through a problem-solving process.”
The CCDI has for some years housed, at its headquarters in Harrington Street, Cape Town’s only
“The goal is to have the appropriate technology
FabLab – an assisted DIY computer-aided design/
for what needs to be done, so equipment ranges
manufacturing environment. Now, this facility has
from basic hand tools and workshop machinery
evolved with more services, full-time staff and
such as a sander and a band saw, to more sophisti-
state-of-the-art equipment in an expanded space
cated, computerised equipment” adds Product
of about 300 m².
Support Facilitator Pieter Cilliers.
Alan Alborough, the CCDI’s Product Support Pro-
Existing FabLab machines, originally funded by the
gramme Manager, says it is a user-friendly environ-
Department of Science and Technology, have been
ment where users can experiment and progress
supplemented by additional machines budgeted
from idea conceptualisation to physical manifesta-
for by the CCDI. These are grouped into dedicated
tion, with the appropriate support, infrastructure,
work stations. Safety is paramount, and the staff
tools and equipment. “People have ideas, but
(trained in first aid) work closely alongside visitors
these can get lost because they are not nurtured
on a one-on-one basis.
and people don’t know how to develop them” says Alan. “We are offering a place where users feel se-
The Product Support Space is split into two main
cure and empowered to do what they want to do.
areas, the Research and Design Area and the Tool
We meet with users on an individual basis to help
Room. The Research and Design Area consists of a
them to solve problems around any process or ma-
central consultation and planning area, and com-
99 >
TOP & CENTRE LEFT: Mike Richards of Personality Pens at work in the Product Support Space. CENTRE RIGHT: The CCDI Product Support Space exposed Alison Prest to a new type of resin that enabled her to develop a suitable finish for her handmade flower vessels. BOTTOM LEFT: Lindy Greyling and Sibulele Tom working with the CCDI's heat press. BOTTOM RIGHT: Laser-engraved fabric and heat-transfer vinyl design by Carynn Underhill.
100 >
puters for research and design. The research com-
products or manufacturing processes include John
puters are for anyone to use free for product-spe-
Bauer, Alison Prest, Michael Richards and Walter
cific Internet research. The design computers are
Zandamela, to name just a few.
allocated for specific uses, so while some are for designing towards fabrication (machines such as
Ceramic artist John Bauer is inspired by salvaged
laser and vinyl cutters), others have programs such
items such as antique doilies, mint leaves and Chi-
as digitising embroidery software. There are also
nese New Year symbols and recreates these pat-
two computers with surface design software, ideal
terns in ceramics. John has been able to enlarge or
for creating patterns and designs for textiles and
diminish his patterns with input from the Product
prints.
Support Space, enabling him to push the limits of what he finds technically possible in ceramics.
The Tool Room includes a wide range of conventional hand and power tools, used for fixing, cut-
He has used the Product Support Space as a pro-
ting, marking, scoring, gluing, and working with a
totyping laboratory where he creates work on a
wide range of materials as well as the computer-
laser cutter that is later incorporated into other
ised machines such as the laser and vinyl cutters.
pieces. For example, he has over 1 000 doilies in
The latest purchases include a heat press for trans-
his collection and takes negatives and creates tex-
fers, a line bender for bending Perspex accurately,
tural reproductions that are true and can be en-
a small vacuum former for moulding thin thermo
larged or shrunken. This sets his work apart as a
plastics and a hot wire cutter for cutting foam into
craft producer as he achieves Photoshop-type re-
all kinds of shapes.
sults, while only using a doily once before putting it back into his archive.
Full-time staff available to work alongside visitors include Product Support Facilitator Pieter Cilliers
The Product Support Space staff have also helped
who joined the CCDI as an intern in 2008 after
John to create stamps of his signature, in different
completing his MFA specialising in sculpture; Prod-
sizes, including some in Chinese. These imprint his
uct Support Advisor David van Staden who free-
work. “Your signature is critical, because if some-
lanced as a graphic designer after completing his
one likes your product but can’t find your name,
BA (Fine Art) before joining the CCDI in 2007; and
they can’t order it from you,” he says.
Product Support Advisor Caragh Barwise who joined the CCDI in 2009 after studying industrial
John also specialises in combining Product Support
design, completing a jewellery course, and work-
Space technology with other techniques. For ex-
ing as a craft producer.
ample, his work could include layers of black and white ceramic, which he bruises on the surface and
Some of the craft producers and designers who
then reintegrates into a smooth skin, giving a ghost
have already used the facilities to improve their
image. The Perspex block from the PSS creates
101 >
TOP LEFT: Alison Prest experiments with resin during a mould-making session at the Product Support Space. TOP RIGHT: CCDI Product Support facilitator Pieter Cilliers. CENTRE LEFT: CCDI Product Advisor David van Staden (centre) shows Isaque Mohamed (left) and Dionisia Mambo from Mozambique some different types of heat-transferable vinyl in the CCDI Product Support Space. BOTTOM RIGHT: Ceramic artist John Bauer. LEFT: Ceramic works by John Bauer who has used the Product Support Space to expand technical boundaries in his work.
102 >
another image in this. John has shown how photo-
Craft producers from neighbouring countries have
graphic images from a driver’s licence photo can
also found inspiration at the Product Support
be used to achieve a fine level of reproduction,
Space. The Kellogg Foundation funded a series of
and says this technique could also suit craft pro-
workshops, residencies and an internship pro-
ducers making items such as soaps, biscuits and
gramme which was facilitated by the CCDI and in-
candles to make them appear engraved.
cluded a half-day introduction to the Product Support Space. The 2011 residency graduates included
Alison Prest is a floral designer and authority on
Walter Zandamela, a Mozambican artist and techni-
plants and succulents who opened the Soanesbury
cian working in various materials such as wood and
School of African Flower Design in Cape Town. Last
ceramics. After his session with the PSS, Walter
year Alison developed a range of plant vessels
continued to explore various materials, especially
made from recycled materials such as yoghurt and
wood, making a range of objects that combined Af-
margarine containers, papier-mâché and resin. She
rican and Asian cultures.
attended a mould-making session at the Product Support Space, and when struggling to develop a
Product Support Space access is on an appointment
suitable finish for her pots, the staff introduced her
basis. Click here for more information. <
to a new type of resin. This enabled Alison to develop her own mixture to finish her pots to the standard she desired. Her range has received publicity in respected décor and lifestyle magazines such as Elle Decoration and Visi. Michael Richards of Personality Pens started work as a draftsman in Durban and later took up wood turning. He now produces beautiful hand-turned and fabricated pens that were selected for the 2011 CCDI Handmade Collection, which launched at the iconic Design Indaba Expo. Product Support Space staff have helped Michael to improve his production ability, through making jigs (tools to control the location and motion of another tool) and templates for improved manufacturing.
103 >
TOP: The product support space includes research computers where people can search for internet resources. LEFT: Walter Zandamela from Mozambique experimented with wood products at the PSS.
104 >
South Africa learns from the Swedes By Stacey Rowan
In October last year, Raymond Ellerbeck, Director of C.O. Designs, accompanied by a group of 14 South Africans from within the furniture industry, visited Sweden on a one week study tour of the Swedish furniture industry. With the Swedes sharing a wealth of practical experience and knowledge, the South African furniture industry has learnt many lessons from the Swedish furniture industry. BELOW: C.O. Designsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Concept Desk is a fully functional workstation which aims to service the needs of designers in various industries. The desk includes a built-in lightbox as well as a utility rail which enables the designer to optimise the work surface. The desk incorporates various ergonomic features including a sit/stand desk frame which allows the user to conveniently and seamlessly alternate between seated and standing positions.
105 >
The South African furniture industry is under threat
giants in order to be competitive in the world mar-
and in decline. This could either mean a permanent
kets. Companies can rather stay optimally sized and
decline or an unfortunate but inevitable pruning of
nimble, able to adapt to change and collectively pool
‘dead wood’ in preparation for a restructured in-
marketing and logistic resources in partnership with
dustry that can sustain itself. Fortunately it is often
regional government. First we establish dominance
small adaptations done proactively that ensures
regionally – internally and then in Africa.
survival of any industry. The Swedish study tour is one such proactive move towards gaining knowl-
The good news is that these very dynamics are cur-
edge and new insights and creating solutions to our
rently active within the Western Cape, for example
declining furniture industry.
the Western Cape Furniture Initiative (WCFI), Design Indaba Expo and government-sponsored indus-
Hosted by the Tibro furniture industry cluster in the
try development initiatives facilitated by the DTI
Tibro district (consisting of about 70 furniture com-
and Productivity SA.
panies which manufacture a variety of furniture products predominantly for the interior contract
3. As the Swedish model proves, a well educated
market), the information gained exposed the South
population could be the silver bullet to ensure
African group to the industry as a whole. It covered
world competitiveness. Education drives innova-
responses to global trends, social and economic
tion and social cooperation and tolerance, a pow-
threats, technology and human capital develop-
erful formula for sustainable success. We have to
ment. The insights gained illustrated how the state
invest in the education of our people, apart from
of any industry is defined by the social and econom-
technical and literate skills which industry needs;
ic environment within which it operates. In this con-
it also brings life skills, creating stable communi-
text the discussion seemed to drift away from furni-
ties and a reliable, productive work ethic. Govern-
ture interests into culture, social commentary,
ment’s mandate is to manage schooling and terti-
economics and even politics, but all these influences
ary institutions, establishing a pipeline for industry.
shape the destiny of an industry and need to be un-
As an industry we must take responsibility for
derstood to ensure the furniture industry’s survival.
adult skills development within our work force, focusing on both hard and soft skills. Larger com-
Several lessons for the South African furniture in-
panies may have the HR resources to manage this
dustry:
while smaller companies lack the HR management knowhow. Government assistance and subsidies
1. South African small companies can grow into glo-
for SME’s are therefore poorly utilised and oppor-
bally competitive organisations, stay afloat and
tunities go to waste. As business entrepreneurs,
gain market share during an economic low tide. The
HR development should be recognised as a value
recipe is simple – constant improvement and in-
adding opportunity in a similar light as acquiring
novation.
new technology and machines. This will allow us to accelerate the development of our industry by al-
2. With industries, like our own furniture industry,
lowing technology and education to leverage each
clustering together and joining forces, individual
other. For example it can ensure that investment
companies do not have to grow into international
in production technology can be fully maximised
106 >
C.O. Designsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Ruotare Unit is based on a modular concept and its innovative rotating construction allows it to be used as a space divider, as a TV unit or to showcase products. Other configurations range from a compact home office space to a versatile hospitality server in corporate pause areas. The product is a result of successful collaboration between C.O. Designs and Chrome Cherry who conceptualised the product. It is manufactured from Hollowcore, a material that consists of a recycled cardboard honeycomb core that is five times lighter than solid wood material.
107 >
with the necessary expertise, as frequently sophis-
furniture industry in South Africa is a global player
ticated machines are poorly run and maintained
in international markets.
with many inbuilt features being underutilised due to an under skilled operators. Technology invest-
“The learning’s from the tour, whether they be glo-
ment need not sacrifice jobs as an educated work-
bal trends, social or economic are vital to under-
er can find job opportunities in other sectors.
stand when looking at the global furniture industry as a whole. All countries and therefore industries
4. Innovation through design – the modern con-
are part of the global village and therefore directly
sumer wants more than mere product functionality
affected by global economics, as willing or unwill-
– they want style, aesthetics, and fashion to fuel
ing participants,” says Ellerbeck.
their aspirations and define their lifestyle. Our furniture industry, like the Swedish needs to define its
C.O. Designs was established in 1994 with a primary
own brand, drawn from our unique African culture.
focus on servicing the furniture requirements of
The least attractive alternative is to emulate suc-
corporate clients. Their product range includes a
cessful international brands and trends, at the risk
wide spectrum of office furniture, desking, seat-
of relegating ourselves to the role of followers try-
ing, screening and furniture in common areas. The
ing to keep up with the leaders and innovators.
company has grown consistently both in size and
Apart from Sweden, USA, Italy, Germany and Japan
reputation by successfully applying a consistent
all have their distinctive furniture design signatures
customer focused strategy of offering more than
drawn from their environment and culture and
just office furniture. Their service offering includes
even developing countries like Indonesia have a
product design and development, workstation de-
unique particular style they are offering the world.
sign, manufacture and country wide delivery and
Our craft industry gives insight into the rich crea-
installation.
tive and cultural diversity we have. As South Africans we need to overcome our identity crisis and
As an established company within the local indus-
find our true selves.
try, they support development as a founder member of the Western Cape Furniture Initiative.
5. Market and brand our products locally and inter-
Through continuous improvement and training in
nationally. We are blessed with some of the world’s
conjunction with Productivity SA, C.O. Designs in-
most creative advertising and marketing agencies.
vest in skills development and help ensure the con-
Expand the ‘Proudly South Africa’ and ‘local is lekker’
tinuation of key industry skills.
themes in order to strengthen our local industry. “At C.O. Designs we feel that we are leaders in the All in all, key learning’s which C.O. Designs have im-
industry because we understand and learn from
plemented are simple: Constant improvement and
countries such as Sweden and we hope to contin-
innovation; cluster together and join forces in order
ue to apply, deliver and adapt to an ever changing
to be competitive on a global scale; education is key
market,” concludes Ellerbeck. <
for a competitive edge; innovation through design and market and brand products both locally and internationally. These are all vital to include in the business strategy and to implement to ensure the
109 >
PRECIOSA illuminates another One & Only complex Dubai now boasts the second One & Only hotel complex, One & Only The Palm, which opened on the artificial island of Palm Jumeira in October of last year. The interior of this stylish gem, which is again lit up by lamps and fixtures from PRECIOSA, is full of energy, emotion and sensuality.
110 >
LEFT: The One & Only The Palm's lobby lounge. RIGHT: Lobby fountain.
This colossal One & Only The Palm project, on which PRECIOSA worked for almost three years, is yet another example of the vast design abilities and production capabilities that this Czech company has in its repertoire. Nine hundred pieces and over 150 different types of luminaires were crafted by the hands of master glassmakers in the renowned Northern Bohemian glass region. PRECIOSAâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s versatility illustrates not only the diversity of design styles, but also the myriad of possible
111 >
lighting solutions. The unique designs created for
glass. In contrast with these abstract pieces are the
the One & Only The Palm perfectly harmonise with
curves of timeless classics, adapted to this century
each interior, so much so that they seem to be an in-
through the use of some of the most interesting
delible and integral part of each space. Contempo-
modern decorative components. Lastly, typical orien-
rary, traditional and Arabic design styles permeate
tal chandeliers are also present. Lanterns of various
the various rooms. To capture the spirit of recent
shapes, either alone or in excuisite clusters, are
trends, crystal spirals and globes were made to
further embellished with intricate laser-cut deco-
create the feeling of stepping into a sparkling ice
rative elements. Whether you meander outside or
kingdom. The most popular of trends in lighting today
inside of this large complex, you will encounter a
are also represented, including spectacular hang-
wide range of free-standing fixtures, table lamps,
ing sculptures composed of free-form hand-blown
and sconces which decorate many a wall.
112 >
LEFT: The 101 Marina Restaurant & Bar/Lounge. CENTRE: All day dining at Zest, the resortâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s main restaurant. TOP RIGHT: Specialty restaurant. BOTTOM RIGHT: All day dining.
Luxurious decorative chandeliers from PRECIOSA can also be seen throughout the One & Only The Palm. They both create and complement the atmosphere of the reception, restaurant, wellness centre, beach lounge, bathrooms and, of course, the individual hotel guest rooms and villas.
About PRECIOSA PRECIOSA is one of the worldâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s leading producer of cut crystal, specialising mainly in the production of machine cut chatons, beads, stones and
113 >
Specialty restaurant
other fashion jewellery components of top quality
The Czaricyno Palace in Moscow, the Emirates Palace
and in a broad variety of shapes, colors and sizes.
Hotel and the Yas Hotel in Abu Dhabi, The Address
The company’s headquarters is based in Jablonec
Downtown Burj Dubai, Regency Casino Mont Parnes
nad Nisou in Northern Bohemia, a region with hun-
in Athens, One & Only Cape Town, and the over-
dreds of years of glass making tradition.
haul of historical lighting fixtures in the rooms of Prague Castle, the seat of the Czech President, to
PRECIOSA produces crystal trimming chandeliers as well as contemporary decorative lighting fixtures in the town of Kamenický Šenov. It also produces custom-made lighting fixtures for a wide range of prestigious buildings such as theaters, hotels, luxury palaces and private residences. Examples of prominent lighting projects executed by PRECIOSA in recent years include the Bolshoy Theater and
name just a few. <
114 >
The Upper East Side Hotel: Beauty by Contrast By Stacey Rowan & Shiree Darley
The open spaces of the hotel have numerous layers of unconventional materials, rhythmic patterns, vibrant colours and lighting and are adorned with indulgent accessories.
115 >
Le Corbusier, a Swiss architect and one of the pioneers of Modern architecture or the International style once said: â&#x20AC;&#x153;I have decided to make beauty by contrast. I will find its complement and establish a play between crudity and finesse, between the dull and the intense, between precision and accident. I will make people think and reflectâ&#x20AC;Śâ&#x20AC;? This statement aptly describes the overall design concept of the Upper East Side Hotel where key interior architectural elements partition and break up the space, creating a somewhat ambivalent atmosphere, a sense of mystery and surprise when what you think you are seeing may not be what it seems.
116 >
The Upper East Side Hotel, a newly revamped 4-Star
With Architecture designed by Design 360 Archi-
City Hotel completed earlier this year, is set in one
tects for Redefine Properties, the client, the Up-
of the oldest suburbs in Cape Town – Woodstock –
per East Side Hotel features open plan, double
which is located between the docks of Table Bay
volume and combined lower ceiling public hotel
and the lower slopes of Devil’s Peak, just East of the
areas accommodating the reception lobby, conver-
City Centre. This urban renewal area is served by
sation lounges, a trendy dining area with cocktail
two railway stations, resulting in an industrial set-
Bar, businessmen’s library, cigar bar and outdoor
ting to the area. Woodstock’s dilapidated charm is
dining terrace.
what has made it such an excellent contingent for the inner-city revival that has recently taken the
Darley Interior Architectural Design (DIAD) – the
suburb by storm. The Upper East Side Hotel is only
hotel specialist interior design team – designed and
one aspect of this revival, with various other com-
created the interiors for the public areas of the Up-
ponents including Loft Apartments and a vibey
per East Side Hotel working within the parameters
Shopping Centre forming part of this urban renewal.
of the existing structure. This involved developing the architectural framework by conceptualising and
LEFT: Furnishings are custom designed, fabrics selected and accessories sourced to create conversation and relaxation lounges. RIGHT: Open plan spaces are skillfully zoned using raised platforms, stone boxes, screens and postbox frames to create intimacy, but not total separation.
designing the interior spaces, space-planning, accommodating the client/operators requirements, themeing the dining and bar areas and selecting and detailing all finishes, shop fitting, paneling and lighting – all within a pre-determined budget and very fast track programme. Furnishings where cus-
117 >
tom designed, fabrics selected, artwork commis-
bar and relaxation have been combined and
sioned and chandeliers and accessories sourced.
planned within the main public areas maximising,
These were all than procured and installed by the
where available, the generosity of the volumed
DIAD team including project management of the
spaces which are framed by mezzanine levels, and
shop fitting installation.
then playing on the intimacy of the existing low ceiling areas. Rather than closing off and separat-
DIAD found design inspiration from the up-and-
ing the amenities – the design philosophy was to
coming Woodstock location with its underlying
accommodate all recreation within “one space”.
industrial nuances. With the Upper East Side Hotel
This led to the challenge of distinguishing the dif-
aimed at a more youthful market, both interna-
ferent open plan spaces and creating intimacy but
tional and local, as well as seeking to encourage
not total separation.
resident and corporate based professionals to frequent the dining and bar venues, the interiors
DIAD achieved this by skillfully zoning the areas
needed to be stylish and chic. The architectural ap-
with raised platforms, stone boxes, screens and
proach is slick and minimalist so DIAD decided to
postbox frames. Different colour palettes of play-
create a young vibrant interior filled with unusual
ful light, texture and fabrics where then juxta-
diverse spaces – so that patrons could have inter-
posed. The design concept was kept coherent with
active or individual experiences.
the monochromatic black and white background embellished with a signature language of design
From an interior design perspective, the various
patterns which were repeated in different applica-
visitor activities such as arrival, eating, business,
tions throughout the areas.
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Dining options offered are 2 and 4 seaters, casual bar style seating and comfortable intimate banquette style seating.
The overall concept produced the creation of numer-
Design Concept
ous layers of unconventional materials, rhythmic patterns, vibrant coloured fabrics and lighting,
The interiors where inspired by the black and white
adorned with indulgent accessories, providing the
film era and artwork of the “Roaring Twenties”, a
clientele with visual discoveries and illusions pro-
boisterous period characterised by rapidly changing
gressing from space to space.
lifestyles and the fast pace of technological advancements. The economy in the 1920’s soared after the First World War; much as Woodstock has during this renewal and revamp period, departing from the history of a slightly seedy neighbourhood. Nightclubs and decadent restaurants were chic
119 >
places to meet and be seen and this is what DIAD
recognised as an art form in the 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s and its black
set out to create for the Upper East Side Hotel.
and white depictions established a strong motivation to create a base theme of a monotone archi-
The 1920â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s art, artists and illustrators were an ad-
tectural backdrop.
ditional source of inspiration to the DIAD team whilst establishing the design concept. The two
Hence, the overall background of the interiors is
art movements which had their genesis during the
detailed and fitted out with refined black and
1920â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s were Surrealism and Art Deco. Surrealism
white finishes in opulent designs and patterns.
began in post World War I avant-garde literary cir-
These are then layered and splashed with bright
cles and featured elements of surprise with unex-
colours and a variety of contrasting finishes to
pected juxtapositions. Photography also became
bring in the funky vibe. The spaces are adorned
120 >
and layered with clean-lined furniture in iridescent
drop displaying one of the commissioned artwork
fabrics, cascades of crystals and bold patterned
pieces.
wall coverings. A contemporary take on the excitement of the 1920’s era, this design theme gener-
Surreptitiously tucked behind the custom de-
ates the thrill of the excess and indulgence of a
signed high backed banquet seat is the dining ven-
theatrical pastime.
ue – Liberty’s – featuring a versatile conversation piece – the contemporary styled Butcher’s Block which is transformed into two large tables cen-
Design Walkthrough
tered in the restaurant for the breakfast buffet set-up and then placed in a mirrored niche, ele-
Strolling through the internal shopping plaza from
gantly decorated with ornate black accessories
the Porte Cochere, past the café style terrace
during the lunch and dinner services. Dining op-
seating, one enters a double volume, open spaced
tions offered are 2 and 4 seaters, casual bar style
entrance lobby. The crisp white stone reception
seating for the single businessmen with laptop
desk with a soft glowing blue circle patterned
space and comfortable intimate banquette style
glass insert, contrasts against the black reflective
seating.
floor and is set against a paisley wallpapered back
121 >
The white stone walls contrast with against the black reflective floor. The young vibrant interiors are stylist and chic, with a minimalist look.
From the dining area, the guest moves through a
and the wall of clocks all to their own time creat-
screen opening into the private library area with
ing a timeline spin.
oversized acid green reclining chairs for comfortable TV viewing or relaxed reading, with generous
Glam with loads of funk is the only way to describe
selections of complimentary novels which line the
the cocktail bar â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Estreet. An enormous mirrored
oversized, glamorously accessorised book shelves.
and glass back bar dwarfs the barman below, exaggerating the double volume surrounds and creating
Featured behind a sandblasted glass door is the
a deceptive myriad of 3D reflected images. With
cigar bar with translucent glass wine displays sur-
the brave use of the strong black and white stripe
rounding the guest with an extensive selection for
wall covering, the mirror sparkles with the reflec-
personalised choice from cognac to champagne.
tion of cascading crystal chandeliers and laser cut
The focal wall is lined with a voluptuous, full
patterned screens, creating a constantly animat-
height plum banquette seat and intimate tur-
ed, lively space which varies according to the light-
quoise tub chairs nestle around funky timber and
ing levels. The vibe here varies with the adjust-
glass tables. A sense of humour has been added to
ment of the lighting which glows from the bar
this space with the polished chrome horse head
panels as well as ceiling recesses, between trendy
sculptures surveying the room from floating niches
cocktail to decadent nightclub.
122 >
Inspired by the 1920s era – with the deliciousness
With photography being a recognised art form in
of excess and indulgences, the monotone black
the 1920s, its black and white depictions estab-
and white background is layered with colour, deca-
lished a strong motivation to use the monotone
dent textures, over scaled patterned wall finishes,
architectural backdrop that DIAD explored, then
crystal chandeliers and ornate accessories, with
bringing in the layers and splashes of vibrant col-
the slickness of the design detailing creating an
our with fabric selections and lighting panels –
undeniable sense of glamour.
these all inspired by the fashion of the day. The inspiration of Surrealism and Art Deco is evident
Reasoning behind the design
in DIAD’s design with the circular patterns creating a consistent theme with the counter fronts, screens
DIAD set out to break some of the rules on contem-
and carpet designs set against a variety of indulgent
porary design, creating an alluring and whimsical
patterns and the blending of man-made materials
interior, but with careful attention to detail, comfort
of backlit art-glass, laser cut screens, polished techni-
and scale, providing an expressive inner–city living
stone and mirrored stainless steel.
destination with vibrant, interactive spaces.
123 >
Opulent designs and patterns, splashed with bright colours and layered with clean-lined furniture bring in a funky vibe.
However DIAD have still put an emphasis on sim-
interactive space that never sleeps. The challenge
plicity, functionality, efficiency and economy.
of establishing distinct paths for functional hotel
Open spaces were retained and similar finishes
operation and food and beverage services, within
used throughout to create a unified interior with
the open plan spaces, without imposing or intrud-
a definite continuity created by the consistent use
ing on the guests, was managed with the skillful
of different material combinations in different
partitioning of the space using key architectural
applications.
elements. These included laser-cut screens and postbox frames manufactured from a combination of materials of metal, sandblasted glass and tim-
Key Elements and Design Innovation
ber, giving rise to a play on positive and negative spaces with their patterning and filtering of lighting, creating a design vernacular unique to this in-
One of the key innovative features of this project was DIADâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s creation of a gathering place within the hotelâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s public spaces where clientele can do business, dine, relax and socialise, encouraging an
ternational award winning hotel.<
124 >
Radisson Blu Gautrain Hotel: Symbolism in design By Stacey Rowan
125 >
Being spoilt for choice, guests can enjoy a cocktail on the outdoor pool terrace.
Given the crucial nature of its locality, The Radisson
or a train station can be viewed. The room numbers
Blu Gautrain Hotel, located in the heart of Sandton
on the door are designed as a digital clock, similar
next to the Gautrain rail station, bears symbolism in
to those in trains, and on the 3rd floor next to the
its design. Based on the theme of a train station,
guest lift a different design, influenced by a sub-
the concept of the hotel design is represented
way, was used. This all keeps in line with the Gau-
through the many train-like design symbols used
train theme and it promotes rapid link,” says Jesper
within the hotel, with every element ‘talking to’,
Henriksen, General Manager, Radisson Blu Gautrain
and giving reference of, the Gautrain that faces op-
Hotel.
posite it. For the architects – Tower Design Studio Architects, “Radisson Blu Gautrain Hotel is designed according
led by Werner Alberts – the design had to draw
to a train theme. The floor colours with red levels
people in from the train station, whilst capitalising
and yellow levels symbolise different train routes.
on the idea of the international traveller who is
The lines on the carpet represent a railway and at
used to the idea of public transport.
the end of each corridor a picture of a train, subway
126 >
Not only were the architects responsible for creating this symbolic design, but international interior designer Maria Vafiadis, of MKV Design, also contributed to putting this design concept on the fast
Setting a new architectural standard in the South African hospitality industry
track. According to Maria, the use of a local theme should never be unoriginal. If it is, then the hotel
The five distinct brands under the prestigious inter-
itself risks becoming just an imitation of the Gau-
national Rezidor Hotel group sport a unique style
train, failing to celebrate the theme itself. Cleverly,
and feel â&#x20AC;&#x201C; from world-class luxury at Regent; a fash-
MKV Design made their design for the hotel refer-
ionable stay at Hotel Missoni; cosy hospitality at
ence trains, but in the most subtle way. One exam-
Country Inn and dynamic ambiance with Park Inn â&#x20AC;&#x201C;
ple of this entailed the parquet flooring, used ex-
and the Radisson is no exception. From the archi-
tensively throughout the public areas using an
tecture with its classic, clean lines right through to
African teak, being laid in the manner of railway
the trendy dĂŠcor, the Radisson Blu Gautrain Hotel,
tracks and sleepers instead of conventional
managed by Radisson Blu Hotels & Resorts, sets a
straight-laid planks.
new architectural standard in the South African hospitality industry.
127 >
Tower Design Studio Architects can take ownership
masculine, bordering on imposing. However, with
of this new achievement. The brief given to the ar-
the architectural design of the hotel being of a sim-
chitects entailed designing a high rise, mixed-use
ple, clean, modern and plain style, it creates for a
development that could accommodate a hotel, a
contemporary feel, decreasing its heavy appear-
retail component as well as office space. In order
ance on its surroundings.
for this to be achieved, the design had to be flexible enough to accommodate all these aspects, together
Another unique architectural feature of the hotel is
with underground parking garages.
its roof space usage. Being both in demand and in short supply in Johannesburg, roof space has be-
A central core (or rigid spine) within the building
come an architectural trend. Cleverly, the Radisson
was created, which is used to support structural col-
Blu Gautrain Hotel quickly followed this trend, with
umns which flow to the perimeters. Due to budget
its creation of ZAR, a funky new bar venue, located
limitations, pre-cast panels for the exterior of the
on the top of the hotel.
new hotel were put in place. With all this structural mass, and the buildingâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s high density bulk, the
It is through these achievements, amongst many
Radisson Blu Gautrain Hotel may be described as
others, that the Radisson Blu Gautrain Hotel has
LEFT: The interior, with its elegant furniture, is sophisticated, modern and avant-garde. CENTRE: The red carpet colour, combined with its straight lines, represent a train route â&#x20AC;&#x201C; another feature contributing to the symbolism in design. RIGHT: Artwork pieces, by local artists, are placed throughout the hotel, integrating South African culture and heritance into the hotel.
128 >
EXCELLENT CUT DIAMONDS. AFRICA’S FRIST LUXURY
HQ Store: 150 West St CNR Maude St, Sandton Shop 16, Sandton Eye, CNR West & Rivonia Rd, Sandton T: +27 11 384 5600 www.africanromance.com
Sumptuous cuisine is provided for at the up-market restaurants within the hotel.
129 >
now set a new architectural standard in the hotel
MKV Designs used a monochromatic colour palette
industry – all this being accomplished within two
together with modern classic furniture, which adds
years, from design to completion.
a distinctive elegance. MKV Designs made sure that the new experience of
Original interior, international brand
this hotel had its own authentic story; that it works
Even though the Radisson Blu Gautrain Hotel be-
The Radisson Blu Gautrain, although being created
longs to the Rezidor Hotel group (which holds simi-
from an international brand, with a European per-
larities throughout its hotels), it was important for
spective, had to still integrate local South African
MKV Design to achieve interiors that are original
culture and heritance within it. This was achieved
and distinct. Through viewing the inside of the ho-
through placing local artwork pieces within the
tel, with its glazed elements and flow of public
hotel, which were created entirely by local artists.
spaces, it is evident that the flow and movement of
The ‘proudly South African’ artwork, a mix of dif-
the station areas is picked up in the interior design.
ferent media as well as conventional paintings,
According to Maria Vafiadis, the Radisson Blu Gau-
aides in combing the international brand with its
train is sophisticated, modern and avant-garde.
local setting.
as a hotel and that it has its own “soul”.
Guests can also relax in style at the lobby bar.
130 >
Spoilt for choice with World-class amenities
all with breathtaking views over Sandton, are available. “We have a penthouse, standard rooms, business class rooms, a junior suite and a corner suite
With all the world-class amenities that the Radisson
available.” Modern amenities such as free high-
Blu Gautrain Hotel offers – including a fitness cen-
speed wireless Internet are available within the
tre; cocktail lounge; boutique retail emporium; up-
rooms. Not forgetting a breakfast buffet after a
market restaurants; haute couture clothing bou-
good nights rest.
tiques; a relaxing spa; trendy hair salons and ZAR, guests are spoilt for choice. With sumptuous cui-
For those on business time, the Radisson Blu Gau-
sine provided by Central One Bar & Restaurant and
train Hotel offers its business visitors versatile con-
cocktails by the outdoor pool terrace, in addition to
ference spaces, seating up to 235 delegates, and
all of the other offerings, guests needn’t leave the
state-of-the-art meeting facilities which include
hotel.
free high speed internet and the latest audio-visual equipment. This hotel provides for both business
Visitors are ‘spoilt for choice’ because “…We’re a multipurpose building with a variety of options under one roof,” says Jesper. For those just wanting to relax in their rooms, 216 – Maria Vafiadis designed – contemporary rooms,
and leisure.
The outdoor terrace and pool with a view of surrounding Johannesburg.
131 >
Shop with full wallets
Guests can now shop with full wallets using ATM’s, within the hotel, supplied by ATM SOLUTIONS, the
Not only is the hotel a success in itself, but, equally
proud preferred ATM supplier of choice. More and
important, the retail arcade, within the hotel com-
more South African hotels and hospitality groups
plex, has proven to be a success as a high end brand
are installing ATMS due to the safe, convenient
in its own right.
and instant access to cash they provide for the hotel’s guests. Aside from the convenience of cash,
The shopping arcade, consisting of stores that
their ATMs add value to any location, like the
range from exclusive coffee shops to high end lux-
Radisson, as they are designed and manufactured
ury goods stores, is a crucial aspect of the whole
to be visually appealing. ATM Solutions, leaders in
architectural design. Like the hotel, the arcade
ATM operation and deployment, installs bank
was also designed with the ‘train’ theme in mind.
branded ATMS for eight of Southern Africa’s larg-
The entrance of the shops sits directly opposite
est banks and has been in the industry for over ten
the road from the station, and as such, the high
years deploying over 4000 off-premise ATMs to
end stores had to appeal to international travel-
date, which are supported through a dedicated net-
lers who wanted to shop in a hurry. Fundamental-
work of service centres and technicians through-
ly, the shopping space, in terms of design, had to
out the region.
echo that of the hotel – to create a cohesive whole.
132 >
Easy reach
Blu Gautrain Hotel will take only 15 minutes from the airport to reach the hotel’s doorstep. This is
Apart from these fantastic amenities, the hotel’s
another factor that makes the hotel unique from
prime location, situated on Rivonia Road, allows
any other hotel with the hotel group.
guests to enjoy visiting Sandton City, multinational corporations, Nelson Mandela Square, the Sandton International Convention Centre, Gautrain Station,
“Yes I can!”
various shopping upmarket shopping malls and the Johannesburg Stock Exchange, all of which are in
As part of the Rezidor Hotel Group, guests to the
walking distance.
Radisson Blu Gautrain Hotel not only enjoy all that the hotel has to offer architecturally, but they are
In addition, departing from the O.R. Tambo Inter-
also assured of impeccable treatment and atten-
national Airport and travelling by Gautrain at
tion based on the Group’s worldwide “Yes, I can!”
speeds of up to 160 km/h, visitors to the Radisson
service excellence philosophy.
133 >
216 Maria Vafiadis designed contemporary rooms, with breathtaking views of Sandton are available.
“Yes I Can!, the service culture that has become a
Responsibility and Teamwork.’ All in all, the hotel
way of life to those that work there, has built serv-
offers excellence, both in the spheres of excellence
ice excellence within the Rezidor Hotel Group and
and in architecture.
has been proven to successfully contribute to a proactive, creative service performance and to
When considering the response from guests who
higher guest satisfaction. This makes Radisson, in
have stayed at the hotel, Jesper concludes: “There
terms of its service, different from any other hotel.
has been a positive response from guests who find
As Jesper mentioned: “Yes I Can!” embodies the vi-
the new age accommodation vibrant; the location
sion and philosophy of Radisson SAS – being the
convenient and the service to be excellent, of which
cornerstone of the hotel’s commitment to building
we pride ourselves for.” <
one-on-one relationships with our guests and a personal unique service approach. The ‘H.E.A.R.T. of Radisson SAS’ underlines the approach that it all comes from positive attitude and from the heart – being the abbreviation for 'Host, Engaged, Always,
134 >
135 >
AFGRI HEAD OFFICE
Architecture that floats By Stacey Rowan
When it comes to the AFGRI Head Office, the architects â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Paragon Architects â&#x20AC;&#x201C; can be seen as magicians. They have waved their architectural wand and have defied gravity, creating a building that holds the illusion of levitation. With its stark white contrasting colour and large glass curtain walls, the AFGRI head office is an immaculate floating apparition.
136 >
LEFT: The basement levels and four office levels are all supported by columns. RIGHT: As an immaculate floating apparition, the building holds the illusion of levitation.
137 >
When it comes to the AFGRI Head Office, the archi-
The curved louvers seem to flow with the movement
tects – Paragon Architects – can be seen as magicians.
of the traffic, while screening the occupants in the
They have waved their architectural wand and have
building from the noise and any direct sunlight. Pri-
defied gravity, creating a building that holds the
vate seating areas were also created on the South
illusion of levitation. With its stark white contrast-
side of the building, taking full advantage of the
ing colour and large glass curtain walls, the AFGRI
wetland area,” says Estelle Meiring, Project archi-
head office is an immaculate floating apparition.
tect & associate, Paragon Architects.
Located between the John Voster and Botha Avenue
AFRGI Head Office comprises two square-shaped
off-ramps in Centurion, the AFGRI head office, the
basement levels and four office levels, all supported
first building in a future office park complex, is nes-
by columns. The basement is dedicated to parking
tled next to the N1 highway. As the site is visible
and effectively lifts the levels of office space off the
from the highway, this, for the client, gave rise to an
site. Pushing the basement out of the ground meant
opportunity. With the environment being the big-
that the ground level had to be raised higher than
gest influence of design, this was a chance to show-
the usual office floor, which in effect, made it ex-
case an image of a forward-thinking company,
tremely light. The lightness was achieved by weaving
through the visible architecture of the building.
curved glass walls along the slab. The glass itself only has fins, rather than an aluminum structure,
“The brief, from M&T Development, was to design
which would have weighed the façade down.
a building that would take full advantage of the exposure to the highway, while maintaining more pri-
Post-tensioned slabs from the first floor to roof level
vate external seating and landscaped areas. The build-
were used. Concrete slabs were cast as post-ten-
ing we designed turns its louvered North façade
sioned structures in order to speed up the construc-
towards the highway – it is striking and sculptural.
tion process. Conventional slabs were however
138 >
139 >
The building, in its design, is striking and sculptural.
used on the ground level and for the basements.
ceramic tile facing, known as azelejos quebrados, was
The gable walls were then constructed as in situ
made popular again by Santiago Calatrava in recent
concrete structures and the curtain walls installed
years. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The broken tile cladding that was used is, we
on the edges of the slab. The design of the support
believe, a first in South Africa and we are very pleased
work for each completed wall slab was most critical
with the outcome.â&#x20AC;?
for successful construction of the gables and had to be specifically engineered. The engineers designed
The atrium, at the centre of the kappa-shaped struc-
the support work for 2m-high wet concrete with all
ture, houses the lift and the toilet core. Two pavil-
the weight if the shuttering and rebar. A platform
ions of offices, joined at the hip and set at a rakish
was built from the ground floor to the beginning of
angle, are cocooned in a curvaceous concrete skin.
the wall being cast. Support work is then erected
They sit above the lifestyle zone spread on the ground
from the platform up to the curved shuttering. As
floor. The glass line follows a different tune of its
each new section of the wall is cast, it juts out further
own, shielding compressed and expanding spaces
over the platform. The support work is then shifted
from the sun, weather and noise. Where the glass skin
and realigned to support the next wall slab until it
is too indecently exposed to the sun, a curvaceous
cures. This process is repeated six times per wall. The
second skin of laser-cut shimmering aluminum lou-
gable walls, top and bottom slab edge and soffit,
vers, tailored to suit, covers the denude areas.
were then cladded in white broken tiles. This broken
140 >
LEFT: An external view of the building at night. CENTRE: Where the glass skin is too indecently exposed to the sun, a curvaceous second skin of laser-cut shimmering aluminum louvers, tailored to suit, covers the denude areas. RIGHT: Two pavilions of offices, joined at the hip and set at a rakish angle, are cocooned in a curvaceous concrete skin.
â&#x20AC;&#x153;All the materials that were used are standard and readily available, however, they were used in innovative ways. It took lots of faith from the client, lots of planning from the main building contractor, lots of inspection and feedback time for us on site and, lastly but most importantly, a very skilled and dedicated tiling subcontractor,â&#x20AC;? adds Estelle. Considering the colour palette used, externally and internally, Estelle explains: â&#x20AC;&#x153;the external colours were kept simple. The curtain walls have a dark grey appearance, due to the performance glass used, and the shells are covered in crisp white tiles. The internal colours
141 >
were also, in general, quite simple, with flashes
Obstacles overcome
of colour to give interest.” After a geographical investigation of the site, the It is through the use of all these materials, the col-
team realized that piling, instead of a conventional
our palette and the implementation of the different
raft foundation, had to be used due to the dolomitic
design elements that makes for an utterly unusual
conditions. “The soil conditions meant that we had
Paragon-designed building, which boasts an overall
to use a special type of pile in certain areas and this
floating effect. Leaning to the more sculptural side
caused quite a large delay to the start of the project,”
of Brazilian Modernism, the building’s distinctive silhouette has already made waves in the architectural industry.
says Estelle. When discussing other challenges, she comments: “The East and West in situ concrete shells were also quite a challenge, both structurally and from a building contractor’s point of view. The construction of the scaffolding alone was quite a process and it ended up looking very much like a skate boarding half pipe.”
142 >
143 >
The atrium, at the centre of the kappa-shaped structure, houses the lift and the toilet core.
The difference between mediocre and great Although the building is owned and developed by M&T Development, the building was also designed according to AFGRI’s requirements. In terms on
link between the different areas.” When designing for any development, the purpose of the building and its future function takes top priority in terms of the list of things to keep in mind. “AFGRI is well suited to its function. We have created a building filled with natural light, that feels spacious and in-
designing for an office, one thing that distinguishes
viting and offers a lot of lifestyle components,
between a mediocre office building and a great one,
while still retaining privacy and quietness where
is “how usable the office plates are; how many people
needed,” says Estelle. Fulfilling its purpose as a work
can be comfortably fitted onto one plate,” says Es-
environment, the building also has a basement park-
telle. She continues: “We achieved a highly efficient
ing, canteen area with internal and external seating,
plate by placing the bathroom core and lifts in the
meeting rooms and training rooms.
atrium space, linked with bridges from the two office plates.” Another factor to consider when designing
When it comes to AFRGI head office, there is no com-
for an office is good communication. As Estelle ex-
parison. What makes AFGRI interesting, according to
plains, “people from different departments need to
Estelle, is that “…it has an aesthetic that cannot be
be able to reach each other without passing through
compared to anything else built in South Africa up to
long corridors. This was achieved by the central
now. We really enjoy the fact that the general public
atrium, with its link bridges, allowing natural light to
seems to be noticing and discussing the building; eve-
filter into the floor plates, while creating a covered
ryone has an opinion about it,” concludes Estelle. <
144 >
Waverley Office Park: Neo-African iconography By Stacey Rowan
145 >
With the expectations of becoming one of the most prominent office park developments in the Southern Sandton area, the Waverley Office Pwark needed an architectural image that was suitable for a development of this nature in a 21st century Gauteng environment. That architectural image would arise from Neo-African iconography.
146 >
The iconography chosen for Waverley Office Park,
Designed by Messaris Wapenaar Partnership Con-
while it takes its inspiration from international de-
sulting Architects, along modern building princi-
velopments of this kind, is to be distinctly neo-
ples, the vision for Waverley Office Park was to
African. It is hoped that the combination of the ele-
create a visually striking building with layers and
ments, colours and materials used and the overall
depth that ensures a positive work environment
design (that reflects an emerging Africanesque ar-
which maximises on, and fuses with, the positive
chitecture) will in some way inspire the way forward
elements of the site and surroundings, blending
in the quest for something truly architecturally
with the outdoor elements.
South African. The landmark office park features a visually specWaverley Office Park is developed by New Order
tacular duo of symmetrical office blocks, linked by
Investments, a joint venture between property de-
an arch, which is also the focal point of the devel-
velopers and investors Vlaming (Pty) Limited, Devcon
opment. The arch, which is tiled with high-grade
Projects (Pty) Limited and Top-Flite Properties
porcelain tiles, serves as a welcoming and direc-
(Pty) Limited.
tional element to visitors, who enter the office
147 >
park through an under-stated gatehouse. To com-
slick and modern feel through the use of these
pliment the tiled arch, the base of the building has
curved layers, which are set off against the crisp
also been tiled with high grade porcelain tiles, cre-
sharpness of the full height glazing of the corners.
ating a heavy base.
A glazed curtain wall on the outside of the building also helps to achieve this slick and modern
Once in the park, the buildings surround a boule-
feel.
vard, creating an internalised park-like environment. In this environment the architectural ele-
In addition, the buildings have been designed using
ments, while closely matching those of the external
cavity wall construction and deep set narrow fenes-
ones, are brought down to a more human scale.
tration on the majority of the elevations to address the African climate. This has the effect of
The horse-shoe shaped buildings within the devel-
dramatically reducing the climate control required
opment have a curved outer â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;shellâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; in layers paying
in the buildings, and consequently contributing
respect to those developments of architects like
enormously to the environmental considerations
Renzo Piano and the like. The building achieves a
surrounding the development. The West facing
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façades have sun screens, which double up as signage support for the freeway. The materials used for the construction are local, and as environmentally friendly as is possible in the context of a development of this nature. Although the developers and designers deliberately steered away from plastics and any noxious types of material for the project, it was up to the end users to decide how far they were prepared to go to pursue the environmental considerations, which the design has initiated. The developers also recommended the omission of geysers from this project altogether, however, the choice lay with the user, as to whether they are prepared to go with recommendations of this nature, and as to how they ultimately â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;liveâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; in the buildings in terms of waste management and the like. Technically the project uses traditional concrete frame construction, with brick infill, aluminium windows and sheet metal roofing. The developers usually approach new technologies, used within different projects, with a degree of caution, until they are proven over a period of time. This park was no exception. The building methods and materials are chosen to insure the longevity of the buildings within the park. Apart from the exterior, after consulting with in-
of suburbia took the developers a great deal of
terior designers, it was decided that the interior
time and effort, as did the town planning.
should feature a neutral palette and background with focal areas. High grade finishes were incorporated, and now set the tone for the rest of the
Considering the end user
development When developing Waverley Office Park, the deOverall, the challenge in the planning of this particu-
sign of the final product was constantly chang-
lar office park lay in the fact that the precinct consists
ing, not only to meet the changing extent of
of blocks of suburbia. The consolidation of these blocks
the park, and phasing of the town planning , but
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also the specific needs of the end users of each
Located in a busy node, various elements were in-
building. This was done, whilst retaining the integ-
corporated into the design to absorb and deflect
rity of the original concept for the park.
noise without affecting the tenants. In this way, the building acts as a transition zone between the bus-
When building any development, the end user must
tling highway and leafy residential zone. Curved
always be considered â&#x20AC;&#x201C; in this case, the office ten-
walls, layers on the outside of the building and win-
ants, like the personnel of the Gauteng Gambling
dows are strategically placed to help eliminate
Board Head Office. Prime office space is still avail-
noise distraction, creating a peaceful working envi-
able for tenants who require areas ranging from
ronment. The horse-shoe shape design of the build-
250sqm up to 2 400sqm.
ing, which creates an enclave, also helps create
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depth of separation from busy streets and intersections to create a level of privacy for the office tenants. Corner windows allow beautiful scenic views of surrounding parks, as well as the energy point of Corlett Drive, which creates a comfortable work environment. Apart from the measures undertaken to create a harmonious and well designed indoor office space, the developers also concentrated on the outdoors, in order to create a well-rounded office park for all who work at the park. Waverley features green outdoor spaces, with indigenous trees for tenants to enjoy and relax in. Terraces that appear on the ground and lower ground floor help tenants to interact with the outdoor spaces located within the office park. In addition, a coffee shop is also available for personnel. To add to the nature-like atmosphere of the office park, a pond was created within the development as a means of attenuating stormwater. Although the attenuation of stormwater was first seen as a challenge, the pond now offers an opportunity to create an area that will enhance the outdoor space of the office park, benefiting the tenants.
more natural setting,” says Jan Vlaming, Vlaming
Designed to flourish in urban node
(Pty) Ltd. With the site having close proximity to the M1
Perched in prime position on the corner of Corlett
highway, Melrose Arch and with excellent vis-
Drive and the M1 Highway, the park is centrally lo-
ibility accessibility from Corlett Drive, this of-
cated between the highway and surrounding resi-
fers corporate tenants maximum benefits
dential areas, creating “…a space that draws from
from the great highway frontage, maximising
the energetic node whist having the pleasure of a
on its location in a busy node and creating
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branding opportunities. With this in mind, value underpins the Waverley office Park. “Every element of its surroundings and the maximisation of opportunities were taken into account when the office park was designed,” says Vlaming. “Waverley Office Park will offer the perfect environment for a harmonious and productive workplace, whilst still offering a dynamic location close to all amenities.” <
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15 ALICE LANE TOWERS: Raising the bar in corporate head office design By Stacey Rowan | The bar has been raised in corporate head office design in South Africa, with the completion of the 15 Alice Lane Towers, memorable for its iconic building form composed of two curvaceous towers and a glass and aluminium faรงade. Not only have the standards of design been raised, but, as a high-rise building, this development has also redefined and reshaped the skyline of metropolitan Johannesburg.
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Completed in late 2010, 15 Alice Lane Towers now
Set atop a six-storey parking basement structure,
provides ultra-desirable head office space for the
the two towers rise 17 storeys into the Sandton sky.
new occupants, Deneys Reitz Attorneys. Designed by
Located at the western edge of the Sandton Central
Anthony Orelowitz, Raj Patel and Andrew Butcher,
acropolis-like setting, the building’s silhouette,
from Paragon Architects, for co-developers Zenprop
and curved façade, is at its most striking when
Holdings and Tiber Projects, the office tower is an
seen across the lush forests of Johannesburg’s
exceptional high-profile addition to the area of
north-western suburbs.
Sandton.
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The glass-and aluminium-clad towers are linked by
aluminium boxes set around deeply incised glass
a dramatic canyon-like, vertical atrium space that
lines.
is only six metres wide at its narrowest point. Each tower has glazed wings which cantilever 2.5 m
Walkways and bridges spiral upwards and are ar-
past their gable ends. North and south facades are
ranged in a fan-like pattern, which create a dramatic
wrapped in a highly patterned skin of seemingly
internal environment. These walkways connect
random panes of clear, dark grey, and white trans-
the two towers below an atrium roof with voluptu-
lucent glass. The resulting effect is one of a scale-
ous funnel-like skylights. Internally, the lobby of-
less building, in which it is almost impossible to
fers high ceilings and generous volumes to create
gauge the number of floors. East and West fa-
a sense of opulence on entry, and extends into the
cades are constructed to exclude direct sun, with
many floors of premier office space. The interior
sculptural hand-formed warm metallic-coloured
fit-out for Deneys Reitz was undertaken by Paragon
Main Contractors (Tel): 011 430 7700 (Fax): 086 502 2404 tiber@tiber.co.za 12 Desmond Street Kramerville Sandton
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Interface, the space planning and interior fit-out
Occupantâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s requirements
business in the Paragon Group. Marilize van Dyk, Kirsty Schoombie and Leanie Roestorf made up
With the leading law firmâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s existing premises no
the Paragon Interface team.
longer big enough for its expanding business, Deneys Reitz needed to move to a larger building.
Viewed from all angles, the building presents a highly
A number of companies proposed their develop-
patterned and highly abstracted surface of architec-
ments to Deneys Reitz Attorneys and ultimately
tural elements that change constantly with the chang-
Zenprop was selected for their ability to deliver to
ing time and atmosphere of the day. Low-energy glass
the practiceâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s specific requirements and do so at
and basic rules of orientation and common-sense
an appropriate market rental.
detailing assisted in minimising energy usage, together with control and building management sys-
The requirements sought by Deneys Reitz were
tems that are now becoming industry standards
precise: the efficiency and environmental friendli-
amongst responsible developers and tenants.
ness of the building, quality of space and facilities
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site
Head Office (Centurion) Tel: +27 (0)12 667 2780 Fax:+27 (0)12 667 4104 96 Koranna Ave Doringkloof, 0157
info@insitegroup.co.za www.insitegroup.co.za
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for staff and clients, and to be located within the Sandton location. With seven of South Africa’s major law firms all located within a kilometre of each other
Iconic architecture and environmental impact
within the Sandton Central node, the attorneys wanted to stay within this area – which has become
15 Alice Lane is not only iconic in its design, but it
the central financial and legal district of Johannes-
is also pushes the boundaries in the environmental
burg.
principles that were used during construction. Careful thought and environmental consideration
The building offers the requisite infrastructure in
was given to every element of the building – from
terms of functional offices complemented by ad-
its position in the heart of Africa’s most vibrant and
equate consulting rooms and an auditorium to
prestigious business hub, to the building’s energy
host seminars.
footprint.
Alice Lane Office Towers also meets the practice’s
Material selection, the placement of the building
need for future expansion options within the build-
itself and attention to detail were used to achieve
ing. With some 500 staff members the building of-
the best possible energy performance for this
fers the occupants the space they require, with room
high-rise commercial property. Both the eastern
to spare for future expansion.
and western facades are thermally insulated with
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punched windows to reduce glazed areas; and the
glazing comprising Eclipse Advantage Grey with and
northern and southern facades are double-glazed
without a stripe; Armourplate® Eclipse Advantage
to cut energy costs. The design ensures that the end
Grey 6mm Toughened Safety Glass; complement-
wings of the northern and southern façades are
ing Armourplate® single glazing comprising
shaded with blinds to reduce the heat load. The
Eclipse Advantage Grey and 6mm Armourplate®
building’s green nature is highlighted by its loca-
clear; Armourscreen ® Low Iron 6mm Toughened
tion in an extensive green-scape surrounded by
Safety Glass. This was the first major installation
reflective ponds and water elements.
of the GraphixArt™ range of glass in an architectural project. The glass was manufactured at Advance Armour Glass in Isando.
Glass printing technology The project uses glass printing technology new to
Quality clay brick production
South Africa, and innovative facade assembly techniques that minimise scaffolding costs and ensure
15 Alice Lane Towers is one of the latest high-pro-
that more of the building cost ends up in the built
file, high-rise structures where Oconbrick’s leader-
product, and less in the building process itself.
ship in quality clay brick production was harnessed.
Glass South Africa (GSA) supplied the glass from
More than 1 500 000 Oconbrick clay stock bricks
the new GraphixArt™ range. Various glass types were
were rolled onto the Sandton site since construc-
used which included 24mm Insulvue®; double
tion began. The first delivery was on 1 April 2009,
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and the last truckload from the company’s Meyer-
office block in Sandton, also designed by Paragon
ton plant unloaded on 4 November 2010. Through
Architects.
the 18-month construction period, priority deliveries to building contractor, Tiber Bonvec, were
“These are all high-profile corporate projects
done regularly and met deadlines.
which carry specifications for brickwork of equally high quality,” says Nico Kemp, operations director,
15 Alice Lane Towers was one, amongst many, of
Oconbrick.
Oconbrick’s production and delivery challenges, at a time when new corporate headquarters, hotels,
Another big order for Oconbrick has been 2.5-million
shopping malls and business complexes were rising
bricks for a mosque, school, clinic and shopping
above the city horizon.
centre in Midrand.
Large clay stock brick orders have included 2-million
Although the current downturn in the building
bricks for ABSA Towers, the bank’s new three-block
construction industry has seen a slowing demand
Africa corporate headquarters in central Johan-
for bricks, Oconbrick is maintaining production
nesburg, and roughly the same quantity was re-
levels that continue to ensure ‘off-the-shelf’ avail-
quired for construction work at The Zone commer-
ability of stock.
cial and shopping centre in Rosebank. Other important projects are the expansion of the Hobart
“We understand that some clay brick suppliers
Road retail centre in Bryanston, and the Station
have been forced to scale back on production,
Place hotel and retail complex and Protea Place
leading to some supply shortages, but Oconbrick
Décor Wallcoverings is engaged in the development, production and distribution of high quality and well thought out wall coverings. We are market leaders in the southern African contract and hospitality market. Thanks to a varied and comprehensive range of colours and designs, our products greatly enhance the appearance of every possible interior in the contract market.
DÉCOR INTERIOR CONTRACTS Décor Interior Contracts is the contractual division of Décor Wallcoverings, and have been involved with the installation of wallcoverings for over 40 years. We have built up a very strong, reliable association with all the major construction, architectural, design and project management companies throughout the country. The following are just some of the major clientele and contracts that we have been responsible for: • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Standard Bank Nationwide Absa Nationwide Liberty Life Corporate Anglo American Sheraton Hotel Group Southern Sun Intercontinental Hotel Rosebank Hotel Mount Grace Hotel Radison Hotel Group Momentum Life Rand Merchant Bank Microsoft Sappi Head Quarters Value Logistics
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
New Head Quarters – South African Intelligence The Hilton Hotel – Johannesburg Melrose Arch Hotel Sandton City Refurbishments Ellerines Group (6 brands) Trevenna Business Park (Pretoria) Waverley Office Park Vodacom MTN Cell C Nedcor Lindsay Keller Attorneys Werksman Attorneys Nokia Nashua Mobile
Our expertise in handling all types of wallcoverings is second to none. Head Office – 201-205 President St, Johannesburg • PO Box 1056, Johannesburg, 2000 Tel: +27 (0) 11 402 1960 • Fax: +27 (0) 11 402 7674 • E-mail: decorwp@global.co.za Cape Town – Wallpaper Inc., The Palms Centre, 145 Sir Lowry Rd, Woodstock Tel: +27 (0) 21 465 6547 • Fax: +27 (0) 21 465 1711 • Cell: +27 (0) 82 920 4174 Pretoria – Cell: +27 (0) 82 594 1594 • Cell: +27 (0) 76 812 2164 Durban – Linda-Lee Smith, 45 Claribel Rd, Morningside, Durban, 4001 Tel: +27 (0) 31 564 7775 • Fax: +27 (0) 86 648 3591 • Cell: +27 (0) 82 780 1368 Eastern Cape – Windovert, 130 Paterson Rd, Northend, Port Elizabeth Tel: +27 (0) 41 484 4670 • Fax: +27 (0) 41 484 5981 • Cell: +27 (0) 82 556 8895 • Cell: +27 (0) 82 954 2743
www.decorwp.co.za We are also proud of our BEE Status with a recognition rating level 3.
Décor stands for quality both in technology and design. A variety of designs and durable materials form the basis of our exclusive and original collections. With this, we optimally satisfy the aesthetic and functional requirements of offices, hotels, financial institutions, and corporates to name a few. Long lasting success is characterised by our constant strive to present the latest trends. One of today’s major trends is the advent of digitally produced and printed wallpapers, which make it theoretically possible to get anything you want. Avant-garde art, ecological, wild and crazy retro designs are some of the latest choices in ART wallcoverings. At Décor Wallcoverings we offer a huge repertoire of great diversity, either from existing collections or bespoke.
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continues to have a healthy order book,” says
Commissioned and built entirely within the hard-
Kemp. “Even though we are not running at full ca-
est economic recession that the world has seen,
pacity, we are well-equipped to meet all current
this building is a statement of faith in the future of
and future demand for bricks.”
Johannesburg, and a measure of what can be achieved when well-integrated teams meet around singular
In addition to commercial and private develop-
challenges. The best design and management skills
ments projects, Oconbrick’s order books identify
of all involved companies were focused on this
infrastructural projects too – typically schools, uni-
project, and exceptional value and skill is embedded
versity buildings, and other public educational facili-
in a building that would have been difficult to build
ties in the region.
at this cost and with this level of technical ambition in a more pressurised economic environment. <
Investing in Johannesburg The development of 15 Alice Lane is a continuation of Zenprop Holdings and Tiber Projects’ company strategy to be invested in Sandton, South Africa’s premier office node.
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1 PROTEA PLACE Reflecting a brand’s identity through architecture By Stacey Rowan
In architecture, especially when it comes to a company’s identity, first impressions are everything. At first glance, the space or building in which a business occupies tells a lot about the business itself and the people that work within it. Occupied by Cliffe Decker Hofmeyr, 1 Protea Place is an iconic structure that reflects the law firm’s progressive brand identity.
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Photo by Andrwe Bell
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Although 1 Protea Place was designed predominantly for long term value for the developer Zenprop, the needs of Cliffe Decker Hofmeyr were also a major design consideration. As a result, the building now provides the best possible solution to the tenant’s specific requirements. “The intention of the design team was to deliver a contemporary building with crisp, clean lines, for both parties,” says Korina Holley, project architect, Paragon Architects. 1 Protea Place consists of seven parking levels, of which five are underground, and nine office levels which rise above the visible parking podium. “The basic footprint of the building is composed of two towers enclosing a central atrium, set atop the heavier base of the parking levels. The central atrium has east and west facing glass walls. The eastern atrium wall opens up over a water feature, allowing pedestrians to enter the building by crossing the water surface.” Korina continues: “The internal atrium admits generous amounts of natural light into the building and its office plates and provides active awareness of both the interior and exterior environments of the building.” Thus, a very open and airy feel is created within the offices. The atrium wall of the southern tower rakes out towards the centre of the atrium, and adds a dramatic effect to the otherwise rational composition of the two towers. “Strip skylights in the atrium roof provide an ever changing play of light within the atrium volume. The two towers are connected by link bridges spanning across the atrium space. The towers are covered by a large floating roof that soars over the eastern entrance façade,” explains Korina. The west façade of the north tower and the east façade of the south tower form a combination of the light see-through glazed faces and Its prominent shape makes 1 Protea Place one of the most iconic structures in Sandton. Photo by Andrwe Bell.
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the solid M1, and concrete, elements. According to Korina, the solid strips are randomly interspersed with vertical strip windows setting up a dynamic relationship between the elements. “The material choice for the solid strips on the west façade of the north tower and the east façade of the south tower went through a long development process but our choice of material ended up being a panel made up of M1, an organic composite material consisting of a mineral crystal base and a water-based acrylic resin.” The floors and columns are cast concrete and the façade comprises of glass and M1 panels in a curtain wall system. The primary massing of the building is articulated through the use of a limited material palette giving due prominence to the sculptural effects of the architecture. The facades are shaped according to their orientation and function as an integral part of the building. The main form of the building is light and glazed, contradicted by a solid sculptural offshutter concrete tower in the South West. “To enhance the sculptural massing of the building, glazed facades are expressed as one mass with as little differentiation between the vision and spandrel panel as possible. Being exposed, the glass has to comply with strict performance figures. Thus the choice of glazing became a very important decision and the final choice of a blue grey low e glass by Guardian was based on many stringent criteria,” says Korina.
A new way of applying M1 – a first in SA M1 was used as a unitised façade cladding element on the 1 Protea Place development. “This is the first time in South Africa where this material has been used in this application,” says Korina.
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The glass and M1 panels are ever-changing in their appearance, depending on the light angle and every facade has a unique feature making it an interesting structure viewed from all directions.
She continues: “The lightness and versatility offered by the M1 material makes it an ideal façade cladding material. The pre-moulded M1 panels are fixed into the unitised façade cladding system, purely as a decorative element.” M1 has many unique properties contributing to its strength, durability, weight to strength ratio, nontoxicity, ease of manufacture and its ability to comply with the test requirements of the construction industry, specifically those in regard to performance in fire and under impact. Another benefit is its low toxicity both in its component parts and in its manufacturing process, making it a ‘greener’ product than most conventional cladding materials.
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“The actual material has been used quite exten-
Designing for offices
sively around the country in the form of mouldings for casinos as well as for sculptural purposes. We
Designing an office space is different to designing a
are thus assured of its performance and ability to
shopping mall or hotel. One needs to consider the
withstand weathering. Both architects and devel-
function of the space and how the building will be
opers are very excited about the product as any
well suited to its purpose. “As one of the tenant’s
shape or material can be emulated by the M1 –
requirements, the floors for the office building,
which opens up a lot of design opportunities for the
and the shape of the office plates, needed to be
future. Due to its superior quality and more envi-
designed to provide the tenant with flexible, and
ronmentally friendly quality to glass reinforced
efficient, space planning in terms of combining cel-
concrete (GRC), the manufacturers are expecting
lular offices and open plan seating. This is achieved
M1 to replace most GRC applications used exten-
by having large open spans between columns and
sively in tall buildings around the world,” adds
providing flexible glazing modules for cellular of-
Korina.
fice configurations. Service co-ordination between all the electrical and mechanical requirements in an office building is a major part in the design and often has design implications,” says Korina.
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Not only does the flexible space planning and service co-ordination aide in creating a good working environment for the employees, but other facilities within the building, also contribute to a happy work force. Employees can eat at the canteen which opens up into a common internal atrium space and external deck or they can enjoy a drink after a hard day’s work on the eighth floor bar, which opens up onto an external balcony. Meeting rooms, amongst other facilities provided, are also available.
A splash of natural colour The interior palette has been chosen carefully to add warmth to the environment. “Natural colours and materials in the tiles, timber wall cladding and details are offset against the clean glazed lines of the atrium. The close relationship between the architecture and the interior finishing is carried through to the detailing, furnishing, fittings and artworks, to create a seamless whole with carefully chosen points of drama and interest. The internal palette of materials is corporate yet warm and non-clinical in contrast to the clean modern exterior of the building, reflecting the tenant’s progressive identity,” explains Korina. The exterior palette is grey based with the dark grey M1 panels, the off-shutter wall and the blue grey glass on the remainder of the façades.
Dedication overcomes challenges The process of building a development always comes with its challenges, and resulting solutions. “The site being so tight provided many
The exterior palette is grey based with the dark grey M1 panels, the off-shutter wall and the blue grey glass on the remainder of the façades.
174 >
challenges. The restricted access and movement of materials into and out of the site was a determining limiting factor in the construction sequence of the underground portions of the building. This programming and sequencing decision had an extensive impact on the sequence of architectural and other design work. The very tight programme was another challenge – Murray and Roberts had one and a half years to complete the building. The building was completed on time due to a very dedicated site team and a well organised programme,” says Korina.
Location, Location, Location Occupying a prominent site in Sandton, the required 16 000m2 of accommodation had to fit onto a very tight and restrictive site, which proved to be the most challenging requirement of the client’s brief. “The shape of the site became the main design driver with regards to determining the shape of the building. In order to accommodate the necessary size, the building’s footprint needed to take on the shape of the site to maximise on coverage. The design of the building has successfully utilised the site to its full extent, yet still provides a lot of light and greenery. The resulting building appears to be a self-evident planning solution, without seeming like it has been forced into a tight space,” explains Korina.
Going green With local architectural trends now pointing in the ‘green’ direction, architects on the 1 Protea Place also contributed to the ‘going green’ movement. “The design team in conjunction with the developer, who had an interest in the building being designed
175 >
Occupying a prominent site in Sandton, the required 16 000m2 of accommodation had to fit onto a very tight and restrictive site.
as ‘green’ as possible, have endeavoured to incor-
occupancy sensing; double-glazing to vision panels
porate as many ‘green’ elements into the building as
and roof insulation,” says Korina.
were financially feasible. The main elements included solar hot water (solar panels on the roof will generate the building’s hot water); evaporative cool-
An interesting structure
ing in the atrium to control the air temperature and the glass which was used extensively on the façades
“Its prominent shape and material palette makes
is a low e glass with some of the best performance
1 Protea Place one of the most iconic structures in
figures of any low e glass type. Other ways in which
Sandton. The glass and M1 panels are ever-changing
we went ‘green’ include: the top basement levels
in their appearance, depending on the light angle
being designed to allow for natural ventilation;
and every façade has a unique feature making it an
the office plates being designed to allow as much
interesting structure viewed from all directions,”
light in and views out as possible; using M1 clad-
concludes Korina. <
ding material – which has a low toxicity both in its component parts and in its manufacturing process;
120374
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Rich aroma. Refined taste.
Find your inspiration
An artistâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s response to change
TO EGYPT WITH LOVE
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The recent popular uprising and resulting democratic revolution in Egypt inspired many people around the world. Many visual artists whoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s work focus on the everyday living conditions in transforming societies have actively participated in the historical evens and through their creative work ensured that it was captured for generations to come. One such artist is Hossam Hassan who took to the streets and documented the trying and tense moments of the revolution. Inspired by his exhaustive documentation of the events, designer and artist, Hassan has subsequently produced a body of work titled Egyptian Revolution Collection, which form part of the To Egypt with love exhibition with fellow emerging photographers Alaa Taher and Bassem Samir. To Egypt with love was first exhibited at the Safar Khan Gallery in Cairo in March and April before travelling to the famous Palais Porcia in Vienna in late May. Hassan, aged 32, was born and raised in Cairo. He says that the busy, multicultural city with its rich heritage inspired him as a youngster to explore the world around him and trained his imagination to aspire to the undefined and to reach to the stars and beyond. After graduating from the Faculty of Applied Arts at Helwan University in 2000, he worked as a graphic designer at a multinational advertising agency before setting up his own design studio in 2005. Since then, Hassan developed a deep interest in calligraphy and its relation to fine art. He assertively honed his knowledge and skills by particiTOP LEFT: We changed Egypt. TOP RIGHT: Our future to be. BOTTOM LEFT: We made history. BOTTOM RIGHT: People's revolution.
pating in numerous graphic, fine art, photography and creativity workshops. These diverse learning experiences enabled him to develop a signature style that now allows him to produce daring
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and innovative graphic and mixed-media artworks on canvas which he exhibits at various private galleries and art showrooms. In recent years, Hassan has developed a loyal following among art collectors and his works now form part of collections in Egypt and the Middle East. Merging his passion for art, his talent as a painter and his innovation in graphic design, Hassan captured his vision and experiences of the radical transformative socio-political events that transpired since early 2011. Through his Egyptian Revolution Collection we witness the beauty, pride and passion of the great land of Egypt and its proud people. “Initially I had started taking pictures while protesting as a personal record. Then I started taking pictures and considering how I was going to translate these images into posters or onto canvas. The experience was extremely spontaneous, just like the revolution.” He says that he was also intrigued by the fluid and inspiring nature of the revolution. Shooting uncontrollably, he found it hard to stop taking pictures while the events were unfolding. Throughout this riveting process, the artist assembled his photographs, like pieces of a puzzle, to create a series of ultimately revealing digital art and mixed media compositions. “The whole country was in a state of flux and I felt that it was impossible to encapsulate the events in single frames.” Hassan explains that his intension was to capture the essence of power and emotion and to portray unique moments from the revolution. Using his signature graphic technique, he combined hundreds of photographs to transform his canvases into large and complex scenes that capture the feelings of every person revolting in
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Tahrir Square in Cairo. He says that the resulting artworks portray the feelings of the huge crowds and each work signals a different message and moment as the revolution unfolded. “The strong impact of people gathered together, all for one aim and all united with the same dreams and hopes are what made this revolution impressive to the rest of the world.” An important feature in Hassan’s Egyptian Revolution Collection is the incorporation of calligraphy. He combined calligraphy and words that people used in Tahrir Square with digitally altered photographs and bold splashes of colour, resulting in visually complex layers that challenge viewers to look closer and engage with the works on various levels. He says that: “My aim is that from the minute you stand in front of my artworks you cannot feel anything other than but being part of the real events. The works convey the power of the crowd. You can hear the noise and you can feel the essence of revolt. I want to make people see things that their eyes usually don't see, engage them and show them images that reflect what they feel.” Hassan concludes that the success of the To Egypt with love exhibitions in Cairo and Vienna is just the beginning of his aim to spread the miraculous revolution in Egypt all over the world and to commemorate it aesthetically. “The world has been watching the Egyptian revolution closely. Therefore I believe that it is my duty as an artist to represent the inspirational glory of the revolution and to honour those glorious days forever TOP LEFT: A story to tell. TOP RIGHT: We died to live. CENTRE LEFT: Days to remember. CENTRE RIGHT: Days of departure. BOTTOM LEFT: Leave! Leave! BOTTOM RIGHT: To freedom.
by showing the world that Egyptian culture is in a continuous state growth and transformation.” <
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PAUL STOPFORTH The man who retrieves the soap and sees in it a sliver of history By Judith Mason
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Some decades ago, a certain man died while being
like the proverbial banana peel. To go down in a hail
interrogated by the South African Police’s security
of bullets or be hanged by the neck until dead is
branch. That he had slipped on some soap in the
something. But to die as a result of a silly accident is
shower was the official explanation, just one of
to be stripped somehow of the last dignity afforded
many risible excuses offered by the police for the
one. In such cases, we quickly bury the dead and they
deaths of people in their custody. Some in detention
are soon lost to our collective memory. Paul Stopforth
‘fell down stairs’ or ‘leapt out of windows’, and ordi-
is one of the guardians of that memory, and he will
nary carbolic soap seemed peculiarly dangerous.
not allow us to forget.
Soap is not the stuff of martyrdom. It is slapstick,
LEFT: Paul Stopforth with one of his mature students, Catherine Krupnick. CENTRE & RIGHT: Installation views of Torture and Deaths in Detention, 1977. Mixed media.
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TOP LEFT: The Interrogators , 1979. Mixed media on paper and wood panel. TOP RIGHT: Freedom Dancer (The South African), 1992. Oil on cut-out birch plywood. Collection of the Constitutional Court of South Africa, Johannesburg. BOTTOM: End of Empire, 2002. Wall drawing, mixed media. The Schoolhouse Gallery, Provincetown, MA, USA.
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Spurning grand gestures, he is the artist of the quiet icon, the man who retrieves the soap and sees in it a sliver of history. From the first shocking lifecasts in his 1978 exhibition at The Market Theatre Gallery, where the falling, wretched figures performed a ghastly ballet of statesanctioned abuse, to more recent work in which mundane objects testify to the grandeur and sordidness of the struggle, Stopforth has addressed himself to this history, even as it is unfolding. The soap was there in that first exhibition, at the top of the steps. To pick one’s way through those figures was to become complicit, drawn into the moral core of the installation. When, later, Stopforth drew Steve Biko’s bruised corpse, the viewer felt that she was at the autopsy, spinning a web of lies and justifications with the police, yet weeping with Biko’s family beside his naked young body. Even thirty years ago, Stopforth did not edit out the bad stuff. He gave us the facts and expected us to respond with whatever humanity we could muster. Following this early work, Stopforth created, in the 1980s, several quasi-portraits of the factotums of the apartheid system. The people portrayed in The Interrogators were self-caricaturing in the Stroessner/Vorster/Pinochet mold – dark glasses, grimfaced with mustaches like duelling scars. Stopforth used a limited palette and dark backgrounds, and he enlarged the figures to create the impression of so many Big Brothers watching, bloated with power. Looking at these images some decades later, at their insidious forensic clarity, one recalls the interminable menace of those days. By the late 80s, Stopforth was regarded by colleagues and critics alike as one of the most unTriangle, 2007. Gouache on wood panel.
compromising interpreters of our moral quagmire. Then, in 1988, he emigrated to the United States. He taught for the School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts University, and in 1996 was appointed
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Healer #1, 2003. Mixed media on paper.
to the faculty of the Visual and Environmental
(The South African) (1993), which now hangs in the
Studies Department at Harvard University. His teach-
foyer of the Constitutional Court, anticipated the
ing position left him some time in which to paint.
coming glee of the elections: a miner in gum-boots
For a while his work seemed free of his earlier political
– at once a symbol of servitude and freedom – jumps
concerns and the engagement these demanded.
on the devil in the manner of adherents of one of
His richly painted surfaces and nuggety figurines
southern Africa’s African Independent churches.
characterised by matrices of dots that contradict-
The joy of this work is palpable and its quasi-Pop
ed and enlivened the images seemed to engage
sensibility signals a subtle shift in Stopforth’s work
with an entirely different aesthetic and admirers
of the period. Similarly, the large wall-piece, End of
of the work would have little sense of the difficul-
Empire (2002), celebrates liberation. Like the danc-
ties of translocation with which he struggled. Around
er, it is deceptively simple in execution. Its Pop and
the time of South Africa’s first democratic elections
Postmodern elements combine with allusions to
in 1994, however, Stopforth’s American experience
Tibetan topographical painting to create a synthe-
had begun to blend with his South African past to
sis that is almost cinematic. Although its subject is
inform work that was more reflective and more
the Zulu War, this work conjures the hordes and
complex than ever before. Apartheid was collapsing
heroes of pre-industrialised warfare anywhere,
and Stopforth watched with interest as events un-
from the Gobi Desert to the hills of KwaZulu-Natal.
folded. His large cut-out piece, Freedom Dancer
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Healer #2, 2003. Mixed media on paper.
In 2004, Stopforth was invited to spend some weeks
that is somewhat comic, somewhat frightening,
on Robben Island as an artist-in-residence. The work
wholly platteland. It reminds us of how inquisitive
he produced during and after his visit makes sophis-
cattle are, of how fighter pilots flying over Europe
ticated demands on the viewer and is key to under-
during World War II dreaded landing in fields for
standing his oeuvre. Stopforth’s commitment to
fear of being ringed by curious livestock whose be-
bearing witness here assumes a subtlety that was
haviour would give their positions away.
not possible during his South African years. Then we needed the shock of deeds revealed. But now
On Robben Island, Stopforth found the soap that
the artist asks us to collaborate in a philosophical
had caused such havoc in our history. Now he sees
and aesthetic partnership that requires a different
it as iconic, as synecdochic, the fragment that con-
kind of engagement with the work. Central to his
tains the whole. In Healer #1 (Sunlight) (2004) the
new approach is Triangle (2007). Two oxen – one
soap is a lintel: archaic, African, reflecting light and
facing the other, one looking towards the viewer,
creating a space through which the sky can be seen
both set in a pink colour-field that resembles a
and entered. We smell kelp and carbolic. For a frac-
dried saltpan – are the means by which he defines
tion of a moment we become Nelson Mandela, and
our role as participants: the title suggests that the
this act of identification is profoundly healing. On
viewer is the third beast in an odd trio. Stopforth
the other hand, it is a cake of soap on a dingy sur-
eschews nobler beasts for that bovine scrutiny
face: the smell of respectable but impoverished
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The Island #8: Bethesda, 2004. Mixed media on paper.
childhood rises to the nose. The paint has a beautiful,
rotting flesh that made people outcasts from society
washboard feel to it, and the promise of Sunlight.
and that, even now that it is curable, instills horror in us. Our associations with it are biblical. The vision
In Healer #2 (Lifebuoy) (2004) we see the sustaining
of people ringing bells and declaring themselves
word ‘Lifebuoy’ pressed into soap set in a scum of
‘unclean, unclean’ has the power to haunt us still,
grey paint. It suggests endurance without the
especially as it resonates with our tendency to see
promise of release. Both works convey the resil-
‘the other’ as somehow defiled. It evokes racism,
ience and the hope of island prisoners, the tedium
xenophobia, the contagious diseases of the mind.
of everyday life, the will to maintain cleanliness
But in Bethesda Stopforth also alludes to the simple,
and dignity, and the prospect of soap, cake after
sad story of leprous women bathing in a tidal pool,
cake, washing the user into a captive infinity. These
hoping that the water will heal their sores. He in-
pieces remind us that the happy ending of Robben
vites us to perform an act of identification. In the
Island was not shared by all of her inmates.
absence of human figures, we engage with the landscape as the lepers did. We watch the tide come
Consider, for example, Bethesda (2004). Robben
in beyond the rocks. We step across the grass to-
Island was, at one time, a leper colony and Stopforth
wards the mirage of healing in the brackish water
invokes the long, sad history of the disease – the
and its promise, Bethesda. Over the rocks and the
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TOP: Trinity, 2005. Mixed media on panel. BOTTOM: Monument, 2005. Mixed media on panel.
cement and water falls the colour of sunset or serum,
Polish poet Julia Hartwig writes, ‘The image ... carries
and we are amongst the Island’s sequestered souls.
us in the most extraordinary way into an invisible
The experience of one of Robben Island’s most fa-
sphere ... The experience of reality thus becomes
mous prisoners, Robert Mangaliso Sobukwe, resem-
a kind of transcendental experience.’1 In this work
bled the treatment of lepers. He was kept in solitary
the artist’s capacity to propel us towards an act of
confinement under the notorious Sobukwe Clause,
identification is very strong. It is reinforced by the
well beyond his three-year term, because the govern-
poignant ‘sampler’ of squares embroidered by town-
ment feared that he would ‘infect’ other prisoners
ship women. Touchstone touches on everything from
with his Pan-Africanism. In Touchstone (2007), Stop-
its subject’s solitude, to his devoted family, to his
forth moves away from the communal pool of Bethes-
untimely death. In contrast, Trinity (2005) reminds
da to the small hand-basin in Sobukwe’s cottage.
us of the companionship that ANC prisoners shared.
The basin is dry and the soap of Healer #1 and #2
Three simple stools, produced, no doubt, by the
is conspicuous by its absence. It is a bereft and humble
prison workshop, acquire dignity from the fractured
image, made sadder still by its juxtaposition with
shadows of the title, which looms behind. The left
the basket of bones. The two interact to create an
and right stools are set at angles, outwards, and their
elegy for a man of great moral stature whose health
invisible occupants take a broad view, as if they are at
was broken by his extended confinement. As the
a kgotla.2 This is not a confrontational triumvirate
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and the scrubbed furniture takes on greater mean-
artist teases us with a shimmering, liquid shape,
ing now that South Africans are tiring of corrupt
evoking the haze and the tides and the coming and
politicians and the studded, ormolu-infested
going of its long history as a dumping ground for
thrones preferred by despots. In Monument (2005),
lepers, lunatics, prisoners and soldiers. The stippled
a blanket pin, surely one of the most beautiful util-
surfaces of the Robben Island works create an almost
itarian shapes ever devised, is seen in salt-corroded
hallucinogenic energy, the sea alive with moisture
silhouette on a rusty background. Our eyes follow
and small craft while the land radiates points of light
its bends and curves and it becomes a piece of land-
as if its layers of history flicker above and around
art, carved into a massive rock-face. Yet we know
the commonplace geography of prison and landing
perfectly well that this monument is small and in-
strip. Together with the Island works, Stopforth
significant. The artist takes us into the barrenness
produced others that are less specific, more enig-
of a cell where we find that a mundane object is a
matic. In Another Country (2007), we see on the left
work of art. Beauty is a grace, he reminds us, and
a glimpse of bushveld rock and, on the right, an
contemplating it may keep us sane.
ominous aspect of the Island prison yard. The car mirror reflects the island as a memory. In Incident
From the vastness of a small pin to the vastness of
(2007) we participate in a dysfunctional triangle.
a small island: the topographically unremarkable
We see figures brawling on a lawn: a rape, a beating,
blob of land off Cape Townâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s coast looms large in the
a schoolyard reprisal? An interior black frame sets
worldâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s consciousness. It is already iconic, so the
each image within unusually sullen bars of colour. On the left, a leg tears the park-like grass back to
TOP LEFT: Touchstone, 2007. Gouache on panel. CENTRE: Another Country, 2007. Gouache on panel. BOTTOM LEFT: Homage, 2008. Gouache on panel. RIGHT: Incident, 2007. Gouache on panel.
reveal the dirt beneath. On the right, a surveillance camera peers outward, but does not seem to connect with the incident. Does it work? Is it observing us? Are we bystanders or voyeurs? In this,
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the most disconcerting of Stopforth’s recent works, our clamour for answers is ignored. Julia Hartwig writes, “If the attitude towards reality is the nerve-centre of every aesthetic, whether in literature or in art, visible reality has always been a constant point of reference for me.”3 In Homage (2008), we see Stopforth creating a small and pretty piece of visible reality, pinning its bright nerve-centre to the canvas and making it an object of meditation. A bougainvillea blossom splits the canvas into two almost identical parts, a mirroring device that can often create an almost intolerable tension between images; but here we find ourselves the third part of a very agreeable triangle. We could, for that matter, be the base of a scale whose contents are in perfect poise, or somebody at a crossroads. In other works containing the triangle motif, the artist makes us look outwards. The game he plays with us here is existential, personal. We read each tenderly painted vein in the fabric of leaves as if we had never really looked before. Our cataracts have been removed. Translucent cerise and scarlet pulsate against fields of broken yellow. We want to measure the space between the colours. Is the yellow a landscape away? An inch away? Or is it like Hildegard of Bingen’s feather on the breath of God, lighter than air? Here, to quote Hartwig again, “the image, accessible to us … carries us in a most extraordinary way, into an invisible sphere.”4 Despite TOP: Singer: Siren Song, 2010. Mixed media on panel. A painting of the siren on the roof of the Robben Island prison. CENTRE: Intake: Breath, 2009. Gouache on panel. The British gun emplacements on the Island had underground bunkers where ammunition and food were stored. BOTTOM: Source, 2010. Gouache on panel. An image of the ubiquitous old brass taps that were attached to barrels on farms that collected precious rainwater.
the important and obvious shifts in Stopforth’s work over the years, his commitment to bearing witness has never changed. He has looked at objects, people, incidents and facts in a clear-eyed and compassionate way, and deduced that a kind of truth resides in an agglomeration of all of these things.
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Tidal pool: Bethesda #1, 2 and 3, 2010. Gouache on panel. Recent works based on the tidal pool called Bethesda.
NOTES
About the author
1. Cited in Benjamin Paloff, ‘Personal Histories’,
Judith Mason was born in Pretoria, in 1938. She
The Nation (30 Jwune 2008).
studied at the University of the Witwatersrand in
2. ‘Kgotla’ is a Setswana word. It refers to a public
the 1950s, obtaining a BA Degree in Fine Art in
gathering or community council called by a village
1960 and held her first solo show in 1964. Today,
headman to decide important or judicial matters.
with a career that spans almost 50 years, Mason is one
3. Cited in Benjamin Paloff, ‘Personal Histories’,
of South Africa’s most distinguished and prolific
The Nation (30 June 2008). 4. Ibid.
artists. Her work is represented in all major South African art collections and museums and internationally represented in both private and public col-
This essay was first published in Paul Stopforth:
lections in Europe, USA and Australia. Click here
TAXI-015, published by David Krut Publising in
to read more about Mason. <
2010. Photos by Susan Byrne.
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Gerhard Marx: Cumulus Review by Gavin Younge
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Johannesburg-based visual artist, theatre director and filmmaker Gerhard Marx presented his first exhibition with the Goodman Gallery earlier this year where he showed new works based on his signature creative process and interest in the urban locus. Gavin Younge reviewed the exhibition titled Cumulus.
Gerhard Marx presented new works that
Marx is a literate artist, and the notes that
are born out of his own self-designed proc-
accompany the works on exhibition tease
esses, which involve skillful manipulation
out aspects that may not be immediately
of materials collected as part of an engage-
apparent to the viewer. Take the connec-
ment with the artist’s physical urban con-
tion between drawn skeletal remains and
text. As a Cumulus cloud constantly verges
cloud formations. His notes, which are
on collapse, Marx’s subjects border be-
freely available, guide anyone interested
tween form and formlessness, always rich
in what he terms the ‘forensic gaze of the
in associative and connotative density.
viewer’, to a less-narratively based under-
Marx presented several compositions
standing of these works. In other words,
made entirely out of the dried stalks of
Cumulus I, II and III are not only burial
plant material. Each wispy strand has been
sites; they are also sites of more general
carefully sorted through, and those with
disintegration.
the ‘right’ bend, or form have been pasted down onto large sheets of cotton paper.
Marx also presents works relating to the
The overall effect is that of a line drawing
garden and its wall. He notes that the ety-
– one made with the finest-tipped nib.
mology of the word ‘paradise’ points to a walled garden, and that the word is
Although he calls these compositions
closely imbricated in the ‘Garden of Eden’
Cumulus I, II and III, they in fact reference
in both its Christian and Jewish manifes-
the human skeleton. Composite skeletons
tations. Bits of the garden that are super-
as one might find in an archaeologist’s
fluous, or diseased, are discarded. In his
gravesite. Humerus, scapula and rib bone
case, as someone living in Johannesburg,
lie upon one another, disturbed perhaps
these mauvais herbes are bagged and
by the actions of scavengers, or laid down
left on the pavement for the [Johannes-
randomly as in a mass grave. The artist says
burg City] Council to collect, but not be-
of these works on paper that they focus
fore Marx has rummaged through this
on ‘unstable forms’ and ‘indeterminacy’.
detritus and gathered twigs and branches
The cloud formation we call Cumulus, is
that may suit his purpose. In Scion, a
an accretion or accumulation prior to
bronzed set of branches in the shape of
Nimbus, when moisture vapour reaches
a rib cage, he has curated the skeleton of
saturation and it starts to rain.
a new body. This crazy conjunction, the
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TOP LEFT: Skull I, 2011. Plant material, acrylic paint and glue on cotton paper, 75 x 57 cm. CENTRE: Skull II, 2011. Plant material, acrylic paint and glue on cotton paper, 75 x 57 cm. TOP RIGHT: Skull III, 2011. Plant material, acrylic paint and glue on cotton paper, 75 x 57 cm. BOTTOM LEFT: Cumulus I, 2011. Plant material, acrylic paint and glue on cotton paper, 153 x 103 cm BOTTOM RIGHT: Cumulus II, 2011. Plant material, acrylic paint and glue on cotton paper, 153 x 103 cm
197 >
newly-born out of the recently-departed, is a true Marxism. One hundred and fifty years before Carolus Linneaus established his plant-naming system in the 1700s, Luca Ghini produced the first herbarium – or dried garden. Marx celebrates this feat through three works in which the original form of various weeds have been transposed into line and colour. These are digital prints, but they derive from collages he made using road maps. We are all familiar with the red-bounded, yellow lines that designate major routes connecting South Africa’s towns and cities; the thick and thin red lines that designate minor tarred roads; and, if the scale is large enough, the dotted lines of a jeep track. The technique of using ‘found lines’ is Marx’s alone. He has gone to court to protect his IP, and won. [In 2006 Marx won a landmark out of court settlement resulting from infringement of his signature creative process which was appropriated by a major advertising agency in a campaign developed for a major international automotive brand.] So what are these twisted and mangled map forms? Linneaus’s plant-naming system was based on shared similarities between flowering plants. His system has given way to true phylogenetic systems, ones that are predictive, and that are based on DNA sampling. Thus the three genes found in all plants give rise to 565 flowering plant species worldwide. Marx has singled out plants that grow opportunistically on pavements and on the verges of roads. There they benefit from the increased run-off of precipitation, and there they whither, exhausted by exhaust fumes. These weeds are Marx’s ‘dry garden’. Meticulously
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Hortus Siccus (for Luca Ghini) I, 2011. Pigment inks on cotton paper, 92 x 92 cm.
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process-driven, he has ‘mapped’ their form in three dimensions. The arterial roads coalesce or cross over one another, topographical references have been abandoned, and the viewer is left with an indexical as opposed to a symbolical object. In a way these prints, and the large collage entitled Hortus Siccus – Bush, could reference Nepenthes alata – one of the so-called ‘flesh eaters’, or pitcher plants. In this way the intended connection between road maps (which are, after all, codified desire trails), and the gestural index of re-making the plant world as a hybridised structure would become clearer. Marx also presents two large, sculptural accretions of a quotidian object – the school ruler, and a quotidian subject – the weather. Here he is careful to point to the emotional connotations we all attach to this endlessly measured, and palpably unpredictable phenomenon. He likes the fact that the ‘ruler’, as a measure of all things, is based on human proportions; that of the foot, or 12 thumb breadths. Strangely behind the times, the United Kingdom still uses miles, yards, feet and inches on its roadways, despite having changed to metres in 1936 for all geodetic purposes. By law, beer is sold in pints and dairy produce in litres. But Marx is not overly concerned with this confusion; he is interested in incremental calibration and the way in which the ‘calibrated, objectified abstraction’ of the ruler collapses into phenotype. The error of parallax dictates that the ruler must be in close contact with that which it is measuring. But the ‘weather’ is not solely rain fall and wind speed, it brings
Hortus Siccus: Bush, 2011. Cut and reconstructed map fragments, 150 x 150 cm.
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Scion, 2011. Bronze, 70 x 100 x 30 cm.
with it emotional subjectivity. In this way Gerhard
Photos courtesy of Mike Hall and the Goodman
Marx hopes to bring the world (natural phenome-
Gallery.
na) to the body, and the body to the world. Not strictly eye-candy, these works extend the art-
About the author
ist’s signature work with road maps and the ‘found line’, they also give the mindful viewer a glimpse
Gavin Younge is a professor at the Michaelis
of his paradise – the garden behind the walls. His
School of Fine Art, University of Cape Town and
garden is the colour of dry mesquite and as deli-
works internationally as a sculptor, author, film-
cate and ephemeral as place names. Despite the
maker and curator. Click here to read more about
prevalence of black (Scion, and Weather 1 and II),
Young. <
the works have an internal luminance. They are also possessing. One feels and sees their inner logic.
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TOP LEFT & CENTRE: Weather I, 2011. Plastic rulers on black wooden substrate, 83 x 140 x 10 cm. TOP RIGHT: Weather II, 2011. Plastic rulers on black wooden substrate, 56 x 76 x 10 cm.
BOTTOM LEFT: Weather I, 2011. Pigment ink on cotton paper, 62 x 91.5 cm. BOTTOM RIGHT: Weather II, 2011. Pigment ink on cotton paper, 62 x 91.5 cm.
Absa Bank Ltd, Reg No 1986/004794/06. Authorised Financial Services Provider. Registered Credit Provider Reg No NCRCP7.
The Jupiter Drawing Room 44130
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Creativity takes courage. Just ask Guy du Toit. Overcoming one’s fears is easier said than done. That’s why we sponsor the Absa L’Atelier – an art competition that rewards brave, young artists with the opportunity to live and learn at the world-renowned Cité Internationale des Arts in Paris. As a look through the list of past winners will testify, when courage and this kind of opportunity come together, greatness is sure to follow suit. Visit www.absa.co.za for entry details.
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Working with nature View of Andrew van der Merwe's Inside Fibonacci.
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Armed with an assortment of materials ranging from sticks, sand, water and grass, some of the world’s top land artists joined local artists to temporarily transform the picturesque town of Plettenberg Bay and the Bitou municipal area where South Africa’s first international land art event, Site_Specific, took place at the end of May. Site_Specific is a new, non-profit entity established in 2011 by artists, educators and business people who are passionate about the magic of land art. The initiative’s organisers and supporters believe that by viewing the different projects, visitors will gain appreciation for their diverse natural, historical and cultural heritage. In the process, the first Site_Specific event delivered art and environmental education and contributed to skills development, job creation and growth of cultural tourism. By linking art, culture, history and the environment, Site_Specific aims to created a sustainable model for using the power of land art to challenge and change people’s perceptions about their natural environment. “Site_Specific is determined to make land art inclusive and accessible. We are thrilled that top international land artists and some of South Africa’s most innovative conceptual artists have volunteered to mentor and collaborate with artists from the Bitou community and to lead educational
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outreach programmes for local learners,” says Heather Greig, Site_Specific co-founder. More than 30 artists participated in the event, including internationally acclaimed land artists Strijdom van der Merwe (South Africa), Urs Twellmann (Switzerland) and Gabriele Meneguzzi and Vincenzo Sponga (both from Italy). The list also included prominent South African artists such as Gordon Froud, Angus Taylor, Marco Cianfanelli, Andrew van der Merwe, Jan van der Merwe, Simon Max Bannister (MAX), Anni Snyman, Hannelie Coetzee, Marcus Neustetter, Mark Wilby, James Webb and Tyrone Tewson. Local artists living in the Bitou Municipality also joined in the action, either as participating artist or as hosts of exhibitions, studio tours and workshop. They were Charles Levine, Carol NathanLevin, Myfanwy Bekker-Balajadia, Matthew Brouckaert, Ingrid Coerling, Zane Coetzee, Willie Gouws, Angus Greig, Darren Lyon, Amos Lwana, Kate Muller, Klaus Oppenheimer, Dee Pellum Reid, Marty Reddering, Stephen Rosin and Anja Wiehl.
The work of Italian artists, Gabriele Meneguzzi & Vincenzo Sponga, better known to the Site_Specific crew as Italy 1 and Italy 2, is incredibly subtle and uses only natural materials sourced from the site. “Our idea was born by looking at the sea from the top of our work from the rocks, and we thought how beautiful it could be to sew together rocks, sand and sea as if they were different arts. So we created a lane in the sand and a thread using only grass, and on the beach, we found a beautiful dried tree from which we cut the branches to make it look similar to a needle.”
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All of the artists and the Site_Specific team contributed their time for free and paid their own way to Plettenberg Bay while many local businesses and individuals offered accommodation, logistical support, materials, equipment and studio spaces. Land art has always been at the extreme of art making since it operates outside the gallery setting and uses the terrain as its canvas and anything from one’s hands to earth moving equipment as paintbrush or chisel. Land art is often temporary and in many instances the only artworks that remain for purchase are photographs documenting the interventions. "We’re taking art off the pedestal and putting it on the sand and in the land," says Strijdom van der Merwe, Site_Specific co-founder. Site_Specific ran over eight days, starting with a welcome and site orientation on 22 May. Reney Warrington, one of the documenters of the event blogged: “We spent the morning hiking the Milkwood Trail and looking at all the possible sites. Artists had to ‘claim’ their spot, spend the afternoon planning/scheming/dreaming and then start placing orders for sticks, stones, boats, tractors and the odd chainsaw. Some artists arrived with plans made while others made their plans after selecting the sites for their works and assessing what materials were at their disposal.” The following five days were occupied by artists slaving away and creating mostly ephemeral pieces of land art. Concurrently, creative workshops and site visits were conducted with community groups and local
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Charles Levin’s performance piece Homage deals with the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami and the resulting nuclear accident at the Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant. Click here to view the video.
Gordon Froud and Tyrone Tewson employed recycled moulds made for previous sculptural works to create their installation titled About potential. “We brought moulds of Sperm babies [Froud] and Fat men [Tewson] with us. Into these moulds, we pressed slabs of clay from the local Vantell Brickworks to create forms. These forms were heat sealed to strengthen them but were not baked as we intended them to disintegrate and return to the earth, metaphorically implying our journey on this planet. Each form has a twig of willow inserted from which it hangs – this is to provide a natural twine and to leave no artificial footprint on the site. We hope that the weather, time and interaction will result in the breakdown of the forms.”
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Angus Taylor's work titled Los consists of two abstracted human figures constructed from wood which he installed at the mouth of the Piesang River estuary. The work deals with the fluid, liminal spaces and rites of passage of social reality inspired by the writings of philosopher Victor Turner.
schools. These also included visits by school groups who observed and interacted with the Site_Specific artists while they were creating their artworks. On 28 and 29 May, art lovers, members of the local community and tourists participated in the public launch with guides leading them through the unique open-air art displays on a 3km walk from Plettenberg Bayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Central Beach to the Milkwood Trail in the Piesang River Valley. The organisers describe the inaugural Site_Specific event as a form of communion with the land that changes oneâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s perceptions of given surroundings.
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It is like being given new eyes. Even after the art
Credits
has been reabsorbed into nature, the memory of it persists and informs one’s interaction with the
Information and photographs included in this article
landscape. It doesn’t demand huge amounts of
were provided by the Site_Specific organisers and
visual literacy or education to be moved by the ex-
Reney Warrington. Warrington describes herself
perience of a great land art piece, it is immediate
as a writer, photographer and blogger obsessed
and it enhances one’s own sense of being in the
with film, music, art and espresso. Her first novel
world.
is scheduled for release in the first half of 2012 and her next photographic exhibition will follow a
Land art allows one to integrate the often split
few months later. Click here to view more of War-
concepts of ‘culture’ and ‘nature’. Sometimes it is
rington's work.
a celebration of the land that sustains us, often it reminds us of the temporary nature of our shared existence. <
Click here to see more works from Site_Specific.
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Marco Cianfanelli’s instillation titled Drift is made of mild steel and found driftwood of which the largest dimension is approximately 2.4m. “For the Site-Specific project I brought laser-cut steel words with me, with the intention of attaching them to trees. On arriving in Plettenberg Bay, I felt that the beach was the right context and the available driftwood a suitable vehicle to carry the words for my site-specific intervention. I found two large pieces of driftwood. The one had a strong architectural quality, like a Corinthian column, which I combined with words that refer to ‘society’. The other was very organic and gnarled, which I paired with words that refer to the ‘individual’. In the context of the beach and shoreline, these works evoke ideas of arrival, imposition, loss and redundancy but they also evoke a sense of growth and transformation, like barnacles on a foreign object.”
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Urs Twellmannâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s artwork titled Stranded Aliens consists of about 70 discs cut from blue gum trees. Each disk is hollowedout with the aid of a chainsaw to allow them to contain water. The artist arranged and rearranged the pieces at different places along the coast and the nearby river to allow the tides and available light to dictate ever-changing configurations, reflections and motions dictated by Natureâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s flux.
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Strijdom van der Merwe used the beach as his canvas to create a large artwork. “For Site_Specific I became aware of the amount of driftwood that washed up on the beach and the continuous deposit of materials during high tide. This let met to idea of using a rake and drawing circles on the beach in various sizes as if it had washed up during high tide just to be washed away during the next tide. This work, as in many of my other works, take part in the cycles of nature. It shows the fragility of beauty,
Simon Max Bannister’s Aardmoeders (Earth Mothers) is one of the few permanent artworks created during Site_Specific. The sculpture, situated at Kranshoek, is carved from local boulders and depicts three elephants. The sculpture is the first of many planned to be installed along the Eden to Addo Great Corridor creating South Africa’s first land art route. As a conservation initiative, the Eden to Addo Land Art Route aims to establish a living corridor along old elephant migratory paths linking the Garden Route
while not lamenting its passing.”
National Park to the Addo Elephant National Park 350km to the east. Photos by Elizabeth Olivier Kahlau.
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Andrew van der Merwe created two very different works titled Inside Fibonacci and Beach Calligraphy. Inside Fibonacci is and installation of blackened gum tree poles. The poles are laid out in the pattern formed by the seeds on the head of a sunflower – a pattern of spirals present in most flowers. When one stands at the centre, the poles look randomly placed and there are no radial lines and any three poles that line up would supposedly represent a weakness in the flower head. However, if one moves into it from an angle, the spirals become evident. There are 13 long clockwise spirals and 21 short anti-clockwise spirals leading to the centre of which 13 and 21 are consecutive numbers in the Fibonacci sequence. Beach Calligraphy draws on van der Merwe’s passion for calligraphy: “I am a calligrapher by profession and carving fantastical letters all over the beach is a welcome break from working at a desk on small pieces of paper. The tools and techniques are ones I have evolved over the past eight years. Before that, like anyone else, I used sticks and shells and object found on the beach. Much of my work has the appearance of letters carved in stone but it is completely temporal. I call it calligraphy, not carving, because the letters are cut directly and at a speed close to that of writing. The forms are a function of the movement.”
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Hannelie Coetzee’s Family Portrait consists of 13 stacked stone sculptures facing the ocean on Lookout Beach. The sculptures represent family members and form part of the artist’s ongoing exploration of her Afrikaner heritage. The artists says that all of the stones have visible quartz lines that symbolise the ‘marks’ that parents and their belief systems impress on their children. For five days Coetzee’s built and rebuilt Family Portrait after every cycle of tidal destruction.
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Jan van der Merweâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s installation titled Uprooted consists of five separate structures made of the stumps of uprooted trees attached to pieces of second-hand furniture. All the objects have the appearance of having been scorched or blackened by fire. The artists says that work may refer to the displacement of people, but also suggests natural and human production processes. In the background (far right) is Malcolm Solomonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s installation titled Barcoded Africa.
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