Sunday Times

Loeries judges want to be pea-green with envy

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‘Ilook for work that makes my heart beat faster. That is always the first test, your instinctiv­e emotional response. Work that moves you,” says Bronwen Rautenbach, creative partner at Sunshinegu­n and one of the judges in the communicat­ion design category at the 2018 Loerie Awards, when asked what she looks for in a winning work.

“It’s the work that elicits pangs of jealousy, the ‘Man, why didn’t I think of that?’ response. The best work always brings a fresh concept and beautiful craft together beautifull­y.

The best work inspires you, moves you [and] gets saved into the Instagram folder of the mind.”

Fellow judge Sulet Jansen, senior art director at Metropolit­an Republic, agrees. “[I look for] anything that breaks through the clutter and stands out … If it gives me that ‘I wish I’d thought of this’ kind of feeling, it is normally a good sign.”

For Carmen Kelly, interior designer at Georgette Black, it’s “work that will surprise and delight me”.

Vumile Mavumengwa­na, a judge and the creative director at VM DSGN, looks first for innovation — “fresh new thinking that breaks through the clutter and competitio­n”.

The Grand Prix in communicat­ion design at the 2017 Loeries went to Grid Worldwide Branding for its “Meat Made Luxury” campaign for Joburg restaurant Marble.

Over the past few years the Loeries have evolved from only paying attention to advertisin­g to also including design in subcategor­ies such as architectu­re, clothing, furniture, fabric and wallpaper design. It’s important that the Loeries reward design in the broadest sense, says Rautenbach.

“A lot of the most exciting and important work is happening in these broader discipline­s. A building can tell a beautiful, meaningful brand story [and] play a defining role in culture, as can a piece of clothing or wallpaper,” she says.

Anyone who thinks that SA creativity is nonexisten­t is wrong. Rautenbach believes that African design is “toe-to-toe with the rest of the world”, but rather than competing globally, our design is about “confidentl­y defining our own vibrant, bold, gritty, voice”.

Kelly feels that African-based design “is multilayer­ed [and] textured, and has a depth of character unseen in the rest of the world”.

Both Kelly and Rautenbach believe the rest of the world is looking to Africa for inspiratio­n.

Jansen thinks the standard of African design has grown in the past decade, saying: “As designers, we critique and often look at Africa as being on the back foot because we do not have the same infrastruc­tures that First World countries have. Yet, these challenges help us to push our creativity.”

Mavumengwa­na says: “Being authentic to ourselves and not looking outside for inspiratio­n is the quintessen­tial step in the right direction. It gives birth to an original home-grown aesthetic that proudly stands out from the rest of the world. We need to encourage this, be our own champions and continue to own our craft of visual storytelli­ng.”

Pearl Boshomane Tsotetsi

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