An old Shell gas station is turned into a work of modern architecture
The first time I went to Johannesburg I was terrified of walking around the city. I had heard so many frightening stories prior to going there that I was sort of paralyzed. Three years later, I had become braver, less prone to think that disaster was lurking at every corner, and Johannesburg had experienced a certain urban revival. Diane Frankel who is quite familiar with Joburg also accompanied me and we had a trustworthy cab and driver.
So we set out one morning to explore. Our first stop was a visit to the Wits Art Museum at the edge of the University of Witwatersrand’s campus in the bohemian district Braamfontein. The Museum had reopened that spring in a new building designed by the architects Nina Cohen and Fiona Garson. This art space had been many years in the making. With the government providing little funding for museums it had been a long struggle. Part of the plan had been to help change the neighborhood and engage the city. The architects had had to merge three buildings; one of them was a car dealership/ gas station. Soaring ceilings, sculptural lines and full volumes defined the new quirky multileveled structure. The car ramp had been repurposed into a sweeping walkway leading to the second floor galleries. Anitra Nettleton, the director of the Centre for the Creative Arts of Africa, which is located in the Museum, gave us a tour of the space. The Wits Museum is unique of its kind in South Africa. It has a broader mandate than most of the museums in South Africa. The collection was started in the 1960’s and is comprised of 9,000 pieces that include traditional pieces from all over Africa, contemporary pieces with an emphasis on emerging artists and a broad collection of beaded works. Its mandate allows a more experimental approach. Half of the new space is devoted to exhibition space and the rest of it is to state of the art, climate controlled storage and research and teaching facilities.
The display is overall minimalist. Contemporary works hang next to more established names of the South Africa arts scene of the later 20th century in the sparsely hung main exhibiting space.
Just as we walked in we were greeted by Jackson Hlungwani’s Altar of God, which is part of a shrine called The New Jerusalem and located in Mbokhoto. The wooden figures represent characters from Jackson’s mythology and are made out of found wood. The artist who sees himself as part prophet, part artist requested that rocks from the original shrine be added to the sculpture. This earthy work with the rocks arranged in a helter skelter manner did seem a bit incongruous against the cool and slick backdrop.
However, I liked the glass display cases, which showed the many artifacts to their advantage. I was immediately seduced by the design of the bright, playful, and abstract contemporary beaded headgear done by the Mikula collective in Durban.
The video still of a young man’s face covered with maize by Churchill Madikida is a recent acquisition. Madikida explores Xhosa’s rituals in this video “ Liminal States” of a young man force-feeding himself with maize to eventually regurgitate the staple meal. Madikida was a gang member who turned his life around by building on a natural talent for draughtsman ship and becoming an artist.
In the main gallery Willem Boshoff’s triptych The Purple Shall Govern looks stunning. He reproduced the lyrics from 49 anti-apartheid songs and slogans in Zulu and other indigenous languages across 3 large panels. Boshoff has had a life long interest in archiving language and researched protest slogans from the period for the piece.
Paul Stopforth became well know in the eighties for his politically charged work, which was repeatedly suppressed. He eventually left for the US. His portrait of a man Bather is at once repulsive, fascinating, and beautifully painted. The hint of his body under water suggests to me what we cannot see, such perhaps the unconscious or hidden motivations..
We ended our visit with a tour of the huge storage space. We quickly realized that most of the collection is kept out of site. There was a dramatic shift from the lean and edited public exhibition spaces to the myriad of objects in the storage area. We entered Ali Baba’s cave. A trove of beaded artifacts were all arranged in drawers and wooden sculptures of all shape, form and color could be seen carefully laid down on the floors which allowed for easy access and viewing. I can’t figure out why she was covered ! The wooden sculpture was carved out of one trunk of wood. It was my favorite piece in the storage.
After a snack at the museum’s café – the cupcakes were so tempting – we went wandering through the Braamfontein district checking out small art venues and the local architecture. We got a view of the Nelson Mandela Bridge. It was time then to go to Durban, the next city in our itinerary.
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