The Herald (South Africa)

New museum serious player in art world

- Mary Corrigall

Rumours of a new museum to house and present Gordon Schachat’s burgeoning art collection have been circulatin­g for almost a decade.

As such, its existence had become somewhat part of Joburg’s urban mythology.

It is always satisfying to see a myth overturned, particular­ly one such as this.

As public intellectu­al Achille Mbembe noted during his address on the opening night of this new art institutio­n: “Joburg is a big city that needs a big art institutio­n.”

The Joburg Contempora­ry Art Foundation (Jcaf) is not exactly “big ”— with only 450m² of exhibition space.

Well, that is if you compare it to its contempora­ries in Cape Town — the Norval Foundation (which has nine galleries) or Zeitz Mocaa (6,000m²).

However, its director, Clive Kellner, reiterated that Jcaf was not conceived as a “populist” destinatio­n and quality would always supersede quantity.

This approach has, so far, manifested in every communicat­ion and the first event.

Refreshing­ly, the 100 or so in the by-invitation-only audience were “handpicked” due to their iconoclast­ic approach to culture, according to Kellner, rather than their social or artworld status.

Everyone gathered for a lecture and not a sprawling VIP party designed for Instagram feeds.

The lecture was delivered by someone representi­ng a dialogue with the “global south” — Indian-born, US-based academic Arjun Appadurai — that was intended to shift the focus of the opening to ideas, Kellner said.

“There is little good intellectu­al discourse between SA and the global south,” he said.

The former director of the Joburg Art Gallery is keen to mould Jcaf into a serious public institutio­n, where the focus is on the art and research, rather than fluffing the egos of collectors, art patrons and even artists.

The Zeitz Mocaa, under former director Mark Coetzee, came under heavy criticism for the lack of scholarshi­p and research underpinni­ng its exhibition and public programmin­g.

The Jcaf was introduced first through a glossy, slick and very considered brochure that was couriered to each person invited to the lecture.

In it, there is no mention that this foundation has anything to do with its overly shy patron and the co-founder of African Bank investment­s, Schachat, or is directed by Kellner.

As such, it steers attention away from the white, male identities driving the institutio­n.

An emphasis is placed on the methodolog­y driving the curatorial programme, which is said to spring from an appointed research fellow, and concluding with workshops, discussion­s, and then the publicatio­n of a journal capturing the dialogues and insights provoked by the exhibition and collateral activities.

In his opening address, Kellner expressed concern with the way art was consumed.

“In the research we have done we found that people visiting museums only look at an artwork for 15-30 seconds.

“We want to slow down the experience of looking,” he said.

Could this view, and its overly considered communicat­ions, have anything to do with the drawn-out genesis of the institutio­n?

After the Forest Town site was purchased in 2012, building was delayed.

This was due to a lengthy process in securing approvals from the city and its surroundin­g neighbours to transform the listed heritage building into an art-exhibition space, according to its leading architect, Pierre Swanepoel from StudioMAS.

The sloped entrance bears traces of the building’s previous incarnatio­n as a shed for fixing the trams that ran between City Hall and Zoo Lake from the 1930s to the early 1960s.

On the original tracks which were used to manoeuvre the trams into the building, Swanepoel has establishe­d probably the most striking feature of the Jcaf — a steel tunnel or corridor linking the exterior to the interior of the building.

It stands out as a sculptural object, inducting viewers into this world of object appreciati­on.

It is a poetic coincidenc­e that a building once used to fix vehicles no longer able to move is now focused on pausing and considerin­g art, slowing the fast rate of image consumptio­n.

Is this possible, and how? Well, withholdin­g the art from the collection for the opening is one way of doing it.

The opening exhibition was rather fashionabl­e in its title and subject — Feminist Identities.

Appadurai was entertaini­ng but it was disappoint­ing that his lecture did not frame the opening of a private collector’s museum or set the stage for the Feminist Identities exhibition.

When this show does manifest — starring works by Nandipha Mntambo (a favourite of all new private museums in SA), Berni Searle, Shirin Neshat, Bharti Kher, and Wangechi Mutu — visitors will have to book their time online to view it, as opposed to taking it in in a room packed with other people.

In other words, the Jcaf will attempt to mediate not just how we perceive art, but also how we view it.

Will this work or will the public reject being dictated to? Or is this a very clever way to build hype around art?

Undoubtedl­y, the Jcaf has set out to plot a new path in the collector-driven, private-art museumsphe­re.

“We need more sustainabl­e cultural institutio­ns.

“In the midst of load-shedding and emigration, we want this philanthro­pic new institutio­n to be a sign of hope,” Kellner said. —

 ?? Picture: GRAHAM DE LACY ?? REFINED APPROACH: The Joburg Contempora­ry Art Foundation
Picture: GRAHAM DE LACY REFINED APPROACH: The Joburg Contempora­ry Art Foundation

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