Sunday Times

Mandla Sibeko builds art space for the best of the best

- Andrea Nagel

Mandla Sibeko was always a big part of the FNB JoburgArtF­air — he was its director from 2015 until 2018. Now he owns the newly renamed FNB Art Joburg after officially acquiring it from previous owners, Artlogic, and his first big, rebooted show launches this Thursday night.

When I meet him for a coffee at his offices at Mesh, the swanky membersonl­y co-sharing space at the Trumpet Building in Rosebank, I’m distracted by all the great art on their walls.

Sibeko admits that being entrenched in the art world has its distractio­ns, like falling for unaffordab­le pieces of art — the work of Ethiopian artist Aïda Muluneh, for example.

“I come from a background that was not centred around art, so collecting is new to me,” Sibeko says, adding that he’s loving photograph­y in particular at the moment. “I was drawn into this space when I attended the first JoburgArtF­air,” he says. “I had been travelling around the world quite a lot at the time and was wondering why a big city like Joburg, that’s drenched in culture, didn’t have anything like the museums and fairs I’d seen around the world. When I discovered the JoburgArtF­air I felt passionate about it and wanted to be a part of it.”

Sibeko cut his teeth in marketing when he was integral to the branding of 2010 Fifa Soccer World Cup, where he says he learned the important lesson that there is great unity in diversity in this country and that it can be

harnessed to great effect by bringing people together in various forums.

Sibeko says that the JoburgArtF­air was pioneering, being the first big art fair in Africa.

“When it started, there were 50 art fairs around the world,” he says. “Now there are something like 250 fairs in the world. After last year’s fair we decided that we needed to change the model and move away from a fair that was just focussed on filling up space. I wanted to make it smaller and more focussed, with a real understand­ing of what the Joburg art market wants. I want this fair to be a platform for the best of the best in the art world now.”

The fair will also have a Gallery Lab section, to focus on new talent and

MAX, which features large-scale installati­ons presented by the participat­ing galleries.

Galleries exhibiting are also now by invitation only, reiterates Sibeko.

“The world is talking about African art,” he says. “There must be a destinatio­n where you can go to one place and find the most important pieces and the artists represente­d by the best galleries.”

FNB ART JOBURG will take place from September 13-15 at the Sandton Convention Centre.

 ?? Aïda_Muluneh, Fragments, 2016 ??
Aïda_Muluneh, Fragments, 2016

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