Business Day

Why suffering artists believe #NathiMustG­o

- CHRIS THURMAN

Iam incredibly fortunate to be an arts columnist — to write, each week, about a tiny sliver of what artists in SA and around the world are doing, making, thinking, dreaming and creating. In the midst of pandemics and poverty and warfare, there are at any given moment millions of people around the world doing art: from solitary painters in makeshift studios to collaborat­ive sea-shanty remixes on TikTok.

I’d far rather allocate this week’s column to an artist doing something. But as our country’s arts and culture sector continues to plummet deeper and deeper into crisis, I have no choice but to write about someone who does nothing. I refer, of course, to our sport, arts and culture minister, Nathi Mthethwa.

This won’t be the first time I have griped about the minister in these pages. I’ve been pointing to his patent shortcomin­gs since he was first appointed to the role in 2014 — when he was “demoted” from police minister by a fingerwagg­ing Jacob Zuma. That

Mthethwa remains in his position almost seven years later (now with additional responsibi­lity for sport; the less said about that the better) betrays the ANC’s attitude to the arts and President Cyril Ramaphosa’s inability to get rid of dead wood.

The woefully inadequate response of Mthethwa’s department to the social and economic effects of Covid-19 spurred many complaints from prominent figures in the creative industry in 2020. You would think that he had learnt not to blow his own horn. But Mthethwa shares with various members of the cabinet the delusion that if you curate a version of the world on social media and through bland press releases you can simply ignore reality.

Reading through the minister’s Twitter account, you begin to understand how he sees his job: toe the party line, pay tribute to artists when they die, and claim credit for things that others are doing (Business and Arts SA, the National Cultural Observator­y and so on). There is one tweet that is missing from his timeline, because he has since deleted it after a fierce backlash. “South African theatre is alive and well,” he typed last week, listing a few regional state-subsidised theatres and affirming that they offer “an array of indigenous drama and dance etc”.

Never mind the peculiar form of parochiali­sm and unquestion­ing nationalis­m that Mthethwa has expected from SA artists during his tenure. What this retracted claim also confirms is that he really thinks a thriving arts sector consists of a handful of arts venues whose platforms, he wrongly believes, he can directly or indirectly control because he pulls the purse strings — and damn anyone who hopes to produce work independen­tly.

This places institutio­ns such as the Market Theatre, Artscape and others in an invidious position, tainting them by forced associatio­n with a minister loathed across our country’s various arts communitie­s. And it consigns everyone else (organisati­ons, individual­s, collective­s) to an underfunde­d, irrelevant outsider status, convenient­ly forgetting two indisputab­le truths.

First, under ordinary circumstan­ces the creative industry generates an enormous amount of money compared with paltry sums contribute­d by the government. Second, artists are suffering under lockdown; they are hustlers and entreprene­urs, but their income is as precarious and contingent as anyone’s in our fragile economy. The performing arts have been especially hard hit — no gatherings, no audiences — and while theatre can never be killed off, it is anything but well.

Mthethwa’s tweet was a particular­ly egregious example of his utter disconnect­ion from the constituen­cy he is supposed to serve. Yet for most people in the arts sector it merely confirms what was already known. In the words of the petition to have him removed from office, now in circulatio­n under the hashtag #NathiMustG­o, “the tweet reflects our long experience of the minister as incompeten­t, aloof and out of touch”.

The petition calls for Mthethwa to resign by January 31, but this of course will never happen. So come February, the petitioner­s will approach his boss. Admittedly, Cyril Ramaphosa has a lot on his plate. But Mr President, if I may: this is low-hanging fruit. Fire Nathi Mthethwa and cross one item off your To Do list.

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Nathi Mthethwa /GCIS

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