Monday, July 21, 2014

Where Paradise Grows



















Photographed by: Paul Zisiwe

Where Paradise Grows

If you’ve lived in Johannesburg for a while, as most have, you’ve witnessed the phenomenon of neighbourhood change: residents replaced by a new population or displaced to make room for new housing or a non-residential project. New buildings are constructed, old buildings are renovated, and public space is repurposed.

Because cities are dynamic, with competing interests, change takes place in cycles. Over time, a single block can go from lower income to higher income population and vice versa; from uniform housing stock to a mix of styles to all new; from residential to industrial to residential; and on and on. Change at the neighbourhood level is the result of complex forces including financial investment, demographic trends, new cultural projects, expanding institutions, and government programs.

Art and Creative businesses are also being affected by this phenomenon of gentrification, (a catchphrase commonly used) and robust investment is required for arts and culture business enterprises to be competitive in their own right as participant in the constant transformation of any living spaces and the economics of city dwelling.

Lately, terms such as "creative economy," "creative class," and "cultural economy" are becoming more common among urban planners, arts administrators, economic developers, and business and municipal leaders. These terms need exhibit tangible results such as jobs as they have become the new terminology linking culture and the economy, and should also indicate recognition of the connections among the fields of planning, economic development, and arts and culture.

As an inevitable by-product of city growth, creative precincts are mushrooming all over Johannesburg and many investors have seen the financial benefits for artists and their communities, as well as the corporate sector itself. With rising commercial rents having closed many traditional artistic businesses like galleries and performance spaces, there is a niche market which creative precincts exploit, which has been dramatically characterised by social adaptation in the face of gentrification.

On the exhibition

Recently I attended a walkabout with curator Ingrid LaFleur who brought the work of Detroit-based artist collective, Complex Movements, to Johannesburg.
And upon seeing the title of the exhibition I could not help but be attracted to the what I presumed to be ‘participatory approach to city/community development’ to paraphrase the description provided by the curator. I naively expected a visceral exploration of imaginative neo-scientific concepts regarding city development and community development.

In my mind, the exhibition promised a replenishing of social ecosystems through various media of art harmonised with architecture, transportation systems, park systems, sanitary systems et al.
From a creative stand point, a reference to Afro-futurism as an artistic perspective from which the artworks should be analysed; further posited a dilemma of interpretation of representation versus the reality of what is the installation itself.  
Besides the exhibition being comprised mainly of miniaturised recreations and photographs of the original exhibition held in Detroit, one could also feel the vicariousness of the experience as it lacked the mystery of the promised.
Like a sister of mine asked: ‘Why do we get watered down versions of the original exhibition. The case being the same with pop acts like Rhianna and Beyonce (to mention a few) who give sub-standard shows when touring South Africa as opposed to when performing in Europe or the US. Why does this also have to apply to such a ‘participatory’ exhibition?’

However, there are themes the exhibition explores that range from: Cultivating “Natural” Cultural Districts; From Creative Economy to Creative Society; Migrants, Communities and Culture; Financing Artists’ Workspace; and Culture and Market Value Analysis (MVA) – which are interrelated issues from any artists’ and their community’s perspective.
This experiment in repurposing the old is eloquently defined by Jeremy Nowak as true “community development or place-making, largely directed to older, economically disadvantaged areas. Place-making involves businesses, households, government and civic institutions in efforts to increase economic opportunity, the quality of public amenities, and flows of capital into the built environment.”

Artists are expert at uncovering, expressing and re-purposing the assets of place – from buildings and public spaces to community stories. The Complex Movements troop thus managed to provide a formidable example of how art communities can accommodate themselves within any community. Through improvisational dialogue, local artists discovered the perils of an art of individual assertion within and against the group; art was identified as social capital.

One obscure norm that characterises places accomodating art communities becomes their exclusivity which often alienates the common man. This leniency towards selectivity is now identified as what has been the resilient virus that has gnawed to the detriment of many community development art projects. When integral association with the broader community is essential for making art economically viable; it therefore means that art should serve purposes of benefitting the sources from whom inspiration for art is drawn.

Rather than condemning commodification as an unwarranted threat to the ‘authenticity’ of local cultures, artist sought formulae of collaborating more and more, their works intended to generate consensus and to challenge media stereotypes.
In simple terms, everyone echoed the anthemic words by Ron Karenga in “on Black Art”.

He wrote:

“Black Art must be for the people, by the people and from the people. That is to say, it must be functional, collective and committing.

Soul is extra-scientific, that is to say, outside of science; therefore we will allow no scientific disproof of it.

All that we do and create is based on tradition and reason, that is to say, foundation and movement. We began to build on a traditional, but it is out of movement that we complete our creation.

Art for art's sake is an invalid concept; all art reflects the value system from which it comes.

We say inspiration is the real basis of education. In a word, images inspire us, academic assertions bore us.

Our art is both form and feeling but more feeling than form.


Our creative motif must be revolution; all art that does not discuss or contribute to revolutionary change is invalid.”

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