Johannesburg Art Gallery’s decay reveals deeper cracks in South Africa’s cultural and political institutions
In a world bursting with self-appointed saviours, Tracey Rose speaks truth to power
By facilitating a community for thought, the Sekoto School hopes to ground various discourses to do with black life
The Art of Comics exhibition, now on at the Johannesburg Art Gallery, aims to meet this need
She might have softened her approach but her emotions still run high in all she does
New in-house show re-engages gallery’s diverse collection
The curator cum activist understands creatives’ struggles and is working to rectify this situation
German photographer Wolfgang Tillmans captures the mundane alongside the epic
“People have lofty ideas of what I am expected to do but my view is to pose the question, ‘What type of institution do the people expect?’ ”
Tshabangu’s images of poverty don’t push the boundaries but his approach has integrity.
The artist Beezy Bailey is perhaps best known for having staged a hoax in the local art world. But everyone knows that he lends a critical voice.
Is Anton Kannemeyer’s <i>Pappa in Afrika</i>, flagrantly racist or is it a lament for a continent ravaged by centuries of colonial rule?