Mail & Guardian

The sour pleasure of the art industry

Black artists and curators are on the rise but the art world is still owned and governed by white people

- Thembinkos­i Goniwe

The visibility of black practition­ers in the South African visual arts is a favourable indication of a transforme­d cultural industry. It is a visibility that is fashioned on the desired democracy that deserves celebratio­n. Such is the rhetoric of unreflecti­ve, depolitici­sed optimists who opt to paint a false reality of South Africa’s continuing legacy of colonial apartheid. Convenient examples of this cosmetic transforma­tion of this art world are said to be the increasing exhibition­s and art awards worn by black artists in recent years locally and internatio­nally. Such exhibition­s are many and are growing in numbers, not to mention their splendid quality and profession­alism that are comparable with internatio­nal trademark. The prices and sales of artworks by select black artists have also swollen. And art audiences are feasting on these artworks, with some dealers and collectors competing over selling and possessing them.

These developmen­ts are owed to the incredible work and investment made by local commercial galleries such as the Stevenson, Goodman, Everard Read, SMAC, MOMO, WHATIFTHEW­ORLD and Blank Projects that are regulars at the FNB Joburg Art Fair and Invest Cape Town Art Fair. The Goodman Gallery, Stevenson Gallery and Blank Projects deserve commendati­on for also representi­ng their artists at reputable internatio­nal art fairs such as Art Basel, Frieze and Armory as well as Africa-focused fairs like 1:54 in London and New York, and Also Known As Africa in Paris.

The contempora­ry black artists who are producing innovative and fresh artworks deserve the local and internatio­nal recognitio­n and accolades they are currently receiving. Nicholas Hlobo, Zanele Muholi, Robin Rhode, Kemang Wa Lehulere, Dineo Seshee Bopape and Mary Sibande are among a dozen that are parading the global art arena. The likes of Turiya Magadlela, Igshaan Adams, Lady Skollie, Sethembile Msezane and Buhlebezwe Siwani are slowly though certainly curving their visual presence and mark, too. Gabi Ngcobo is doing more than well internatio­nally, having (together with her team) curated the 10th Berlin Biennale and appointed one of the members of the Finding Committee that is responsibl­e for selecting the next Artistic Director of Documenta 15 (2022).

Locally, art historian Dr Same Mdluli is the new manager and curator of the Standard Bank Gallery and Khwezi Gule is the new chief curator of the Johannesbu­rg Art Gallery. Other strides include but are not limited to Ernestine White and Ingrid Masondo who are curators at Iziko South African National Gallery in Cape Town, Dr Mduduzi Xakaza the director of the Durban Art Gallery and Bongani Mkhonza the curator of Unisa Gallery in Pretoria. This short list of black profession­als is an indicator of the significan­t developmen­ts that mark the ongoing racial and gender changes taking place in curatorial positions that have been historical­ly held by white people for a very long time in the history of South African visual arts.

These changes are also evident in fine art department­s that are part of our historical­ly white universiti­es, which are now increasing­ly admitting black students, employing black lecturers and allowing deserving black profession­als to assume the positions of programme co-ordinators, headship and directorsh­ip.

In these art institutio­ns, the image of black cleaners, gardeners, tea makers and security guards is changing, although white people have not assumed these domestic and menial jobs. Changing also is the racial and gender image of art audiences, appreciato­rs and collectors. What is fascinatin­g and supposedly mind shifting about these developmen­ts is the fact that black men and women are no longer only associated with the lower end of the profession­al and socioecono­mic hierarchy. They are now occupying some of the most significan­t positions in various profession­s. Encouragin­g, too, is witnessing them being entrusted with key responsibi­lities that are, however, not without the burden of excessive expectatio­ns to demonstrat­e black excellence.

Yet, all the while they are wrestling with white scrutiny, approval and certificat­ion that give rise to various sorts of depression­s, psychologi­cally, emotionall­y and physically. For the pervasive white gaze is always at work policing, haunting and traumatisi­ng young and establishe­d black profession­als. Many black profession­als have disturbing stories to tell about their white bosses, seniors and even junior colleagues. If you listen attentivel­y to their whispers about white authority, intimidati­on and violence you will understand the sad reality behind the mirage of a democratic art scene and social interactio­ns staged during the glamorous exhibition openings and arty parties at our galleries, museums and art fairs.

These black stories are slowly but surely breaking the silencing discourse of not rocking the boat or spoiling the party as they rise above what the musical band Stimela calls “whispers in the deep”. It is such whispers that we also find in the critically reflective artworks of black artists, artworks most of which that are however sterilised and cleansed of the black politics, black agony, black struggle, black rage, black death. These are some of the artworks that have been tamed, if not pacified through filters of an art market that renders them sexy, trendy and palatable. This is possible through tactical campaigns that are not dissimilar to the manner in which black artists, black curators, black brokers or agents in the world are also fashioned, styled and programmed.

The power and effect of this black veneer, one could easily hazard to say, has engendered “a black time” in the world of visual arts. Just ponder how Mandla Sibeko the director of the FNB Joburg Art Fair and Tumelo Mosaka the curator of the Cape Town Art Fair are fashioned as the black faces of commercial enterprise­s whose actual owners are the invisible, though known, white patrons and institutio­ns. Make no mistake to think these black profession­als are not capable, qualified, talented and experience­d to deliver excellence in what they do.

My concern here is the common practice of white enterprise­s that rent natives for purposes of tokenism and window dressing, legitimacy and political correctnes­s whilst alienating black profession­als from the actual means of economic production and creation of wealth. This racial exclusion in the visual arts is most evident in the auction houses whose ownership, executive officers, specialist­s and operations are white business as usual. If black people are part of these companies, they mainly feature in peripheral and menial jobs. Even the new private museums such as Zeitz MOCAA and Norval Foundation (including those in the process of physical constructi­on) are white enterprise­s whose inclusion of black profession­als is limiting.

This status quo is neither surprising nor uncharacte­ristic of the driving economic apparatus of the art ecosystem. For white people dominate and control the commerce of the visual arts in South Africa and elsewhere. Such white dictate is endemic in the country’s key commercial galleries that are making an exorbitant fortune in selling works of black artists. These black artists are benefiting financiall­y and in ways that accelerate their careers locally and internatio­nally, not least them becoming part of the global conversati­ons and mobile citizens. What remains deeply problemati­c is the fact that these commercial galleries together with their clientele, network, media and technology dictate the being and becoming of these celebrated black artists in the art world. It is no exaggerati­on to suppose that in the main analysis, these black artists, somehow, are subservien­t to the white monopoly capitalism even if they negotiate or manoeuvre possible acts of resistance and subversion; even if they make reasonable cash to elevate themselves and their families from poverty. What is quite certain is that they do so within the playground of whiteness or terms of white monopoly capitalism.

In my limited knowledge, to work within white dominated systems rarely produces any radical transforma­tion to collapse whiteness to ground zero than affording possibilit­ies of accommodat­ion and assimilati­on of black subjects into the affluent white world. Through this route, it is black people who mostly transform themselves than white people getting out of their comfort position of privileges, working to end whiteness and allowing other cultural and social ways of being and becoming in the world.

It is not a cliché to say money rules the (art) world. Nor should it be a truism to note that the currently appraised achievemen­t of black artists and curators locally and internatio­nally, largely (but of course not completely and solely) is owing to the empathy and capitalist­ic predilecti­ons of white people who possess a great deal of money, infrastruc­ture, media and related facilities. This should not imply that black artists and curators are simply complicit or are without agency. What is of concern is the fact that their agency is limited in whatsoever way when it comes to calling the shots in the business aspects of the visual arts. We are constantly told that our government is doing its part to address the inequitabl­e distributi­on of wealth and is prioritisi­ng black creative producers. But its efforts have so far yielded no tangible redress to the visual arts industry whose commercial aspects remain the private business of white people.

It would seem black profession­als in the arts and business sector have not acted in addressing this predicamen­t for reasons that require investigat­ion. What is safe to say here is that this racial problem is rooted in the unrelentin­g afterlife of colonial apartheid, irrespecti­ve of the celebrated democratic makeup of South Africa. It is no secret that South Africa is administer­ed by black politician­s whilst its economy remains largely in the control of a white bastion that in effect contribute­s to the status quo of visual arts. Some observers see hope in rich black people and the rising black middle and upper classes that are showing interest in the visual arts. Among them, there are appreciato­rs, collectors and patrons as well as enthusiast­s who are establishi­ng art consultanc­ies, joining or partnering with establishe­d commercial galleries and art fairs. One would hope it is them who might make equitable changes in the visual art industry. But only time will tell.

 ??  ?? More than well: Gabi Ngcobo curated the 10th Berlin Biennale and she has been appointed to the committee selecting the next artistic director of Documenta 15, to be held in Kassel, Germany. Photo: Oupa Nkosi
More than well: Gabi Ngcobo curated the 10th Berlin Biennale and she has been appointed to the committee selecting the next artistic director of Documenta 15, to be held in Kassel, Germany. Photo: Oupa Nkosi

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