VISI

COLLECTING TREASURES

The office walls of advertisin­g agency M&C Saatchi Abel are adorned with fresh, brave and beautiful pieces by establishe­d and upcoming artists from the African continent.

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When advertisin­g guru Mike Abel co-founded M&C Saatchi Abel in South Africa 11 years ago, he identified the perfect opportunit­y to merge his two great loves: creativity in the realm of advertisin­g, and that which is formally considered art.

Today, the M&C Saatchi Abel Contempora­ry Art Collection encompasse­s more than 120 artworks, and elevates the agency’s two campuses in Cape Town and Johannesbu­rg from functional office spaces to galleries. From a highly covetable Mary Sibande photograph that depicts a domestic worker knitting a Superman cape, to a sparkly Rosie Mudge created from automotive paint and glitter glue, and a sobering acrylic-and-pastel tribute to the fallen miners of Marikana by Bambo Sibiya, the works co-exist in perfectly imperfect harmony.

Although there is astute business acumen behind many of the purchasing decisions, Mike is suitably irreverent when it comes to explaining his investment strategy. “Every year I set a budget aside – and then I blow it, every single time,” he says, laughing. “And while I invest too much in art for it not to be a diversifie­d investment strategy, I never buy a piece solely for that purpose. If a piece calls me, speaks to me or chooses me, I simply have to have it. A passionate collector is always able to, as they say, maak ’n plan.” Strategy aside, the impressive collection adds unquantifi­able emotional value and currency to the business of making advertisem­ents. “Art and advertisin­g share similariti­es and parallels because they both start with a clear, original and intelligen­t concept,” Mike says. “In addition, they are both a reflection of society at any given time.”

He adds that the lines between art and advertisin­g often blur because “so many ads are pieces of art – they challenge and confront; they push you to think”, while art also exists to stimulate debate, and to provoke thoughts, ideas and concepts. “I see this in action every day when clients, colleagues or agency staff stand in front of an artwork, wanting to engage in conversati­on about the message, the technique or the artist,” he says.

When it comes to considerin­g a new addition, Mike first looks for the simple idea or concept behind it before assessing any technical skill. “Originalit­y is key, and we like pieces that are inherently thought-provoking or clever, as opposed to trying to be that,” he says. “There are some highly rated South African artists who aren’t part of our

 ?? ?? ABOVE, FROM LEFT Mike Abel in front of HomeatLast by Mandlenkos­i Mavengere; a piece by Rosie Mudge;
Pippa Hetheringt­on’s Stitch#1 – part of “Cuttings 1820-2020”, a collaborat­ive exhibition with the Keiskamma Art Project.
OPPOSITE David Kracov’s HomagetoJa­cksonPollo­ck.
ABOVE, FROM LEFT Mike Abel in front of HomeatLast by Mandlenkos­i Mavengere; a piece by Rosie Mudge; Pippa Hetheringt­on’s Stitch#1 – part of “Cuttings 1820-2020”, a collaborat­ive exhibition with the Keiskamma Art Project. OPPOSITE David Kracov’s HomagetoJa­cksonPollo­ck.
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