Mail & Guardian

How to start an arts career in SA

The politics of art aren’t always discovered in the confines of the art industry and its institutio­ns

- Thulile Gamedze

Considerin­g an artistic career in South Africa means entering into an old but all too relevant debate about what art’s role in society should be. I will not lead you down a rabbit hole whose ending is too inconclusi­ve, for I prefer to situate the question contextual­ly — in South Africa — looking at the way art has been, and continues to be, a tool for moments of activist-led societal shift. Becoming involved in the art industry in this country places you along and within this historical trajectory.

If this is what interests you, then it is useful to know that “protest art” is not the only resource available to learn about this history, despite the fact that diverse South African political creative practices are usually framed and generalise­d in mainstream literature in this way.

Artists here, and in surroundin­g countries, have been in dialogue for many years, to debate the different roles art can or should play in society.

Historical­ly — in addition to the production of posters, pamphlets, magazines and clothing bearing anti-apartheid slogans and artworks — apartheid art-activists had to think through creative modes of distributi­ng both physical objects and education. They had to think through how art could reach the public in an accessible way.

Thus, art became the way in which activism — especially during the early 1980s geared towards Black Consciousn­ess — was able to gain publicity. It involved creative approaches to making networks, operating around oppressive legislatur­e and empowering people with knowledge and otherwise censored informatio­n.

Learning these histories is one of the most exciting ways to reflect on what a relevant, creative art practice might look like today. Reading texts such as Art and the End of Apartheid by John Peffer, The Art of Life in South Africa by Dan Magaziner, about a little-known art school in KwaZulu-Natal called Ndaleni, and researchin­g art education initiative­s such as Funda Art Centre in Soweto, MEDU Art Ensemble in Botswana, Johannesbu­rg Art Foundation, and Cape Town’s Community Arts Project gives a greater sense of how art practice has existed because of and in spite of political subjugatio­n.

Alternativ­ely, visit Keleketla! Library in Johannesbu­rg for great reading and an immersive experience on how independen­t, interdisci­plinary arts organisati­ons are conducting their work and research. And compare these to art centres that joined the United Democratic Front and radicalise­d their practices in line with an anti-apartheid agenda.

Additional­ly, Pathways to Free Education is a publicatio­n available online and both creates work in line with this history and engages history and politics through writing.

I would argue that, regardless of your reason for involving yourself in art, these histories will be potent to your intentions and contributi­on.

Regarding praxis, the technical mastery of a skill is another motivation for becoming involved in art. Although studying in a university gives one access to the resources and tools to do this, often the focus of fine art degrees is more concerned with how to deal with and creatively resolve ideas.

For this reason, although one gets a window into a number of different skill sets to hone in on technical mastery, I would try one of the following:

• Take short courses or internship­s at one of the many schools that teach skills in metalwork and woodwork.

• Digital art skills can be gained with a combinatio­n of education and practice. Easily available online, multiple free courses for software mastery exist on platforms such as lynda.com, or even Youtube.

•Photograph­ic knowledge, which is easily available online, and learned through experiment­ation on a digital or film camera. An advantage of art school, however, is often access to a darkroom in which one can produce images from film strips exposed in-camera. (In the Western Cape this is no longer feasible because of the drought, and darkroom work can use many litres of water in a session).

• Institutio­ns such as Warren Editions and David Krut offer courses in printmakin­g.

Colleges and technikons are also available for longer techniquef­ocused courses and, once you are on your way, assisting an artist is a great way to direct those skills creatively.

For me, one of the most interestin­g aspects of an artistic practice is that one (for better or for worse) is given licence to engage an idea from any angle, and then must go about presenting it in such a way that it can be received and interprete­d by a public.

The usefulness of studying art in an institutio­n is often an unlearn- ing of the rules we assume should be used in putting things together, and an introducti­on into methodolog­ies of taking things apart.

Fine art production — although now a specialise­d field — begins as a subversive thought, or as an idea about how a thing might be expressed in a new way that exists outside the sense paradigm of the usual image aesthetics. Art provides a set of tools for thinking about and understand­ing the world, and thus gives an extra lens and multiple potential for expression.

In addition, I would advise that you consider the following: O Combine your knowledge base with art. Having a background in a separate field and then coming into art is always useful. There is no field of study or career whose knowledge cannot be examined and processed using art.

The problem with isolated study in art is that many art institutio­ns seem to assert that art production requires no content or specific site of exploratio­n. Going through an undergradu­ate fine art programme in South Africa, it quickly becomes clear that this idea is a direct import of EuroAmeric­an modernism (1850s - 1950s) — a period of art-making characteri­sed by an understand­ing of the art object as central in the pursuit of an ultimate aesthetic truth.

O Look for an art degree that encourages interdisci­plinary study. Some of the universiti­es that offer degrees in visual/fine art are the University of the Witwatersr­and, Rhodes University, the University of Cape Town and the University of Pretoria. The University of the Western Cape offers an interestin­g collection of courses engaging visual studies, culture and theory of the camera.

Each institutio­n has different policies on how much or how little engagement one can have with other fields of study while studying art, but keep in mind that art at this moment requires content whether self- or institutio­nally generated.

I still have many questions of my own about what it means to be involved with the South African art industry. But I would assert that, generally, importance should be placed on an art education that is historical­ly and politicall­y situated within the context in which it unfolds.

“Art provides a set of tools for thinking about and understand­ing the world”

 ??  ?? Long struggle history: Tumelo Mokopakgos­i using a magnifying lens to draw on wood at the Funda Art Centre in Soweto. Photo: Oupa Nkosi
Long struggle history: Tumelo Mokopakgos­i using a magnifying lens to draw on wood at the Funda Art Centre in Soweto. Photo: Oupa Nkosi

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa