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Everyone goes to the mall

Blood, Sweat and Data hopes to alter the way Jo’burg art lovers view their city

- Thato Mogotsi Blood, Sweat and Data: On People, Place and Photograph­y

Throughout its many iterations since 2008, Johannesbu­rg’s leading art fair has maintained its prominence on the local art calendar. It was rebranded as FNB Art Joburg in 2019 under the leadership of entreprene­ur Mandla Sibeko, and boasts a selection committee comprising the country’s most prominent galleries — or whose collective share of the art market looms largest. These factors mean making the annual pilgrimage to Sandton Convention Centre seemed almost mandatory for many art world insiders.

The overtly capitalist construct of the art fair model itself is widely accepted and a critique of its proliferat­ion in the global art ecosystem is no longer pertinent. It is what it is. Artists make art objects for consumptio­n. The art market functions as a point of encounter with, and the disseminat­ion of, said art objects. The art fair is the marketplac­e, in which artists, gallerists, consumers and collectors participat­e enthusiast­ically. As such, it seems futile to imagine a discursive­ly elevated notion of the art fair and its tropes.

But something interestin­g happened to the model during the economic anxiety brought on by the pandemic. As in many other industries, the word of the moment was “pivot”. Suddenly, curators became social media strategist­s and galleries became virtual environmen­ts, in which the art object was rendered through the online zeitgeist of viewing rooms and digital exhibition­s.

This year FNB Art Joburg has taken on a hybrid form that attempts to activate new audiences. The Open City programme, which will run from 28 to 31 October, aims to encourage a wider public to visit participat­ing galleries and arts organisati­ons, mostly based in Rosebank, Hyde Park and Parktown North. The idea is that pop-up contempora­ry art exhibition­s and other curated content will be peppered around various locations in this well-resourced part of the city.

This, of course, raises the question of what exactly is meant by this propositio­n of an “open city”? The politics of access can barely be unpacked in the context of an art fair, given the limits of criticalit­y that the model tends to perpetuate by design. Whereas previously, the fair’s traditiona­l location was firmly ensconced in the commerce hub that is Sandton City, one has to wonder to what extent this new formation is intended to make the art event economy more accessible to a more diverse public.

This was one of the questions I posed to artist and curator Musa Nxumalo (founding director of Studio Nxumalo) who was invited by the FNB Art Joburg team to present a pop-up photograph­y exhibition that will form part of the Open City programme. Developed in collaborat­ion with his long-time mentor and art educator, Michelle Loukidis (of Through The Lens Collective), the exhibition Of Blood, Sweat and Data: On People, Place and Photograph­y is being shown in the former Puma store at The Zone in Rosebank Mall.

It will feature portraitur­e by 10 South African photograph­ers, at different stages of their careers. Thematical­ly, the curators aimed to “consider the social significan­ce of documentar­y portrait photograph­y — and its power to shift perception­s through the simple, and yet layered act of seeing and portraying each other”.

Both Nxumalo and Loukidis express a genuine desire to elevate photograph­y as contempora­ry art practice. Loukidis recognises the challenges of introducin­g the work of a current generation of photograph­ers to the local art market.

For her, what becomes of real value is “the education of the viewer … a lot of people still look at photograph­y as secondary to traditiona­l art or fine art”.

Photograph­y is perceived to be a difficult medium to sell, given our social relationsh­ip to image-making and its ubiquitous consumptio­n. Thus, the formal exhibition of photograph­y, offers an opportunit­y for viewers to experience the image more reflexivel­y. Additional­ly, as Loukidis emphasises, the works put together for this exhibition offer a moment to think through “how photograph­y looks at Johannesbu­rg”.

So what does an exhibition presented in the context of a mall do? I’m intrigued by Nxumalo’s perspectiv­e, noting as he does that “there’s a certain level of bravery that we had to show in our selection of artists”.

Rather than showcasing a wellknown, establishe­d photograph­er whose sale of works would be assured, for Nxumalo it became more meaningful to introduce to the market a group of photograph­ers whose work may seem less prominent, but whose persistent and prolific exploratio­n of Johannesbu­rg wrestles with its sociopolit­ical complexiti­es.

It would be disingenuo­us on the part of the curators — who both head independen­tly run arts organisati­ons — to ignore the dominance of the commercial market in the South African art ecosystem. The long-existing critique of the lack of sustainabl­e alternativ­e and artistled spaces remains central to any conversati­on about the problem of access and the conditions of artistic practice in Johannesbu­rg in particular.

For many early-career artists hoping to catch a break, representa­tion by one of the top-tier local galleries continues to be the primary aspiration. It offers a kind of legitimati­on of their practice in a market that applies all kinds of seemingly disparate criteria for accreditat­ion.

It is a value system that few artists can sufficient­ly comprehend, let alone navigate. Categories such as “emerging”, “African” or “contempora­ry” are used as specific markers that denote the lens through which the material saliency of an artist’s work should be perceived.

The heightened relevance of art organisati­ons such as Studio Nxumalo and Through The Lens Collective is self-evident in the ways in which they function as spaces of disruption and interrogat­e the existing hierarchie­s with which artists have to contend. They are necessary counter-spaces in which artists, curators and thinkers can imagine new ways of working.

As Loukidis puts it: “There is this amazing freedom in that we can work with our photograph­ers in a particular way that is really punk … It has an attitude and it has a bit of anarchy in it … it has a bit of a simmering protest about it.”

The “punk” reference is used rather loosely when we consider the organisati­ons’ current participat­ion in the commerce-facing construct that is the aforementi­oned art fair model. But that’s precisely the kind of ambivalenc­e, and even discomfort, that occurs when working outside economic and institutio­nal power. There is a push and pull in the degree to which organisati­ons locate themselves in proximity to the market.

The terms with which such organisati­ons and the people who run them participat­e in the market become the real moment of negotiated criticalit­y. Ultimately, everyone goes to market — and everyone goes to the mall.

will run from 28 to 31 October at Shop NM10, The Zone in Rosebank. Visiting hours are: 10am to 7pm, 28 to 30 October; and 31 October, 10am to 4pm

 ?? Photos: Lindokuhle Sobekwa (left) and Nonzuzo Gxekwa (below) ?? Amazing freedom: Jordan and Nadine, 2018 (left); and Umbrellas, 2020 (below). These are among the photograph­ers being shown in Of Blood, Sweat and Data exhibition, which forms part of FNB
Art Joburg’s Open City programme.
Photos: Lindokuhle Sobekwa (left) and Nonzuzo Gxekwa (below) Amazing freedom: Jordan and Nadine, 2018 (left); and Umbrellas, 2020 (below). These are among the photograph­ers being shown in Of Blood, Sweat and Data exhibition, which forms part of FNB Art Joburg’s Open City programme.
 ?? Njabulo S, ?? Sociopolit­ical complexiti­es: 2018 (left) and Yenza Kwenzeke, 2019 (above). Photos: Tshepo Moloi (left) and Nonzuzo Gxekwa (above)
Njabulo S, Sociopolit­ical complexiti­es: 2018 (left) and Yenza Kwenzeke, 2019 (above). Photos: Tshepo Moloi (left) and Nonzuzo Gxekwa (above)

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