Mar 17 2010

Public spaces and places in the city come of age on Human Rights Day weekend

A large part of our time at the Cape Town Partnership and CCID  is spent on finding ways in which our public spaces can be used by and for citizens of this city. The multiple events taking place this coming Human Rights Day weekend point to a coming of age in the use of our public spaces for a wide variety of citizen activities. Take a look at some of the social, cultural, sporting and political events taking place in the city over the weekend:

The Cape Town Festival, part of the One City, Many Cultures project, will take place in the form of a four day programme of events from 19-22 March in the Company’s Garden, featuring, amongst others, Hilton Schilder, Good Luck, the Hip Hop collective, Kings of Vegas, South Paw, Country Conquerors, Under Kontrol (world beat-box champions), Keeno Lee, Claire Philips, Zaki Ibrahim (Canada), Loading Zone & Allou April, Napalma (Brazilian and African musicians), Gugulethu Tenors, Emo Adams, Anselmo Ralph (Angola) and the Rudimentals

On Saturday 20 March 2010 hundreds of people will queue for Dignity and Sanitation as a part of the Social Justice Coalition’s “Safe, Clean and Private Toilets” Campaign on the Sea Point Promenade opposite the SABC Studios between 10:00 and 12:30.

The Absa Cape Epic, Cape Town’s world-renowned mountain bike stage race (8 days, 1200 riders, 722 km, 14 635m of climbing) will be launched at the North Wharf at the V&A Waterfront on Saturday afternoon

The Cape Town Carnival will take place on Greenmarket Square (music party featuring Emo Adams & Take Note, Loyiso Bala and Locnville) and Upper Long Street (float procession with 2000 performers) on Saturday March 20 during the afternoon and evening

An Equal Education march to Parliament for school libraries, starting at 11h30 on Sunday 21 March on Thibault Square, followed by a concert with Hip Hop Pantsula. Equal Education is a movement of learners, parents, teachers and community members working for quality and equality in South African education, through analysis and activism

The Kurdish Human Rights Action Group (KHRAG) will be launching a petition to call for the release of imprisoned Kurdish leader Abdullah Ocalan in the Company’s Gardens at 15h00 on Sunday March 21 as part of the Cape Town Festival

A memorial commemorating the great march of 30,000 people from Langa to the city centre led by Philip Kgosana in 1960 to protest the pass laws will be unveiled in Langa at 13h00 on March 21. Part of the march will be re-enacted from the Grand Parade to the Caledon Square police station. (For the history of Langa, one of the oldest African townships in South Africa, see the Centre for Popular Memory at UCT)

A special Day of Prayer will take place on Monday March 22, when over 55 000 people are expected at the CT stadium to pray about ”important issues surrounding our city and the impact of the World Cup event as a whole – employment opportunities, youth, child trafficking, drug abuse, our government, our essential services”. This event is also being held to test the readiness of the CT stadium and transport arrangements ahead of the 2010 Football World Cup starting in June. Participants are being encouraged to use public transport to town and catch a shuttle bus or walk to the stadium, on a route parallel to the official fan walk, which is still under construction

The Out of the Box Festival of Puppetry and Visual Performance, organised by the South African branch of the Union International de la Marionette, or UNIMA, runs from 20-28 March. It will be launched at the Baxter Theatre on Monday evening March 22. Many of the events also take place at the Little Theatre at the Hiddingh Campus at the top of the Company’s Gardens. More details are available on the Out of the Box Facebook Group

The Parlotones play at Kirstenbosch Gardens on Monday evening

And finally, don’t forget the Spier Contemporary 2010 exhibition on at the City Hall every day!

PS. Sport lovers need not conflicted. The Cape Town Festival has cleverly arranged to screen Super 14 rugby, IPL cricket and Sunday’s big match between Liverpool and Manchester United on big screens in the Company’s Gardens


Mar 14 2010

Sm(art) opening

I thoroughly enjoyed taking part in the opening of the Spier Contemporary 2010 Exhibition at the Cape Town City Hall last night. The event was well attended and a great success. Well done to Tanner Methvin and the Africa Centre for pulling it off.

Matanaswo-A Bragging and Proud Lady - Phillip Rikhotso

Matanaswo-A Bragging and Proud Lady - Phillip Rikhotso

This is what I said at the opening:

“The Spier Contemporary 2010 is South Africa’s largest visual and performing arts exhibition, and we are honoured and delighted to launch it here in Cape Town tonight.

A good friend of mine in the art world gave me some advice about my speech. She said: keep it short, make it humorous, and for goodness sake, don’t talk about art. Whatever you say, you will be wrong. In any case, the audience are there to look at the work, and those who are really interested in contesting assumptions of what constitutes the proper protocol of post-apartheid rainbow nation representation in liminal spaces, with or without the cliché of the white frame, can read the catalogue.

Well, you’ll be pleased to know that it will be short. I don’t know about the humour bit, and I will limit myself to just one comment about art.

Die Bystander - Hanje Whitehead

Maggots in red earth from Polokwane? Die Bystander - Hanje Whitehead

Our current national discourse is fractured, polarised, intemperate and downright dismal. Populism and opportunism is the order of the day and all manner of insincerities abound – none of which bring us any closer to finding ways to solve the real problems of the day – poverty, hunger, unemployment, our lack of solidarity, community and ethics, the need for better systems of accountability and governance.

Hope and Fear - Frina Galloway

Hope and Fear - Frina Galloway

Clive van den Berg, a member of the Curatorial Team, talks of a ‘national distemper, a profound unease in the nation’ that is reflected in many of the works submitted for consideration and many of those chosen for the exhibition. Mwenya Kabwe, another team member, notes the political cynicism that exists amongst many artists at the moment, whose work reflects ‘a deep sense of distrust and disappointment in formal politics and particularly with politicians’.

Representation: A Discourse - Christopher Marsberg and Francois van Tonder (video installation)

Representation: A Discourse - Christopher Marsberg and Francois van Tonder (video installation)

Phula Richard Chauke's acerbic view of politicians and their cars

Phula Richard Chauke's acerbic view of politicians and their cars

The Spier Contemporary has amongst its aims: audience and artist development, creation of new markets, and training and development of artists and curators. All these aims are exemplary. It seems to me however that its greatest contribution is in giving us art as another language to understand and express ourselves, especially during this time when the conventional political discourse is severely limited. And it’s not all serious, thank goodness. Humour, irony and sly jokes abound in many of the works that cast a jaundiced eye on our contemporary leaders and problems.

Ball and Chain - Dawood Petersen

The 2010 Football World Cup is not spared either. Ball and Chain - Dawood Petersen

I want to say something about the Africa Centre, the organisation behind the Spier Contemporary. Established in 2005, and located in the Cape Town Central City, the Africa Centre has already distinguished itself through its other programmes – in particular, the Badilisha Poetry X-Change, the Pan African Space Station and the Infecting the City public arts festival which annually stages and exhibits free high-quality, thought-provoking works in the public spaces of Cape Town accessible to everybody.

The Africa Centre is one of the new breed of organisations that are conspiring to make Cape Town a creative and innovative city. Five years ago, we realised the close connection between culture and urban regeneration, and so initiated the Creative Cape Town programme. Amongst other things, this programme attempts to find and create both public and private spaces for creative industries and enterprises to grow and flourish.

Today, there are more than 1000 creative industries in the Cape Town central city alone, which is why Cape Town has decided to bid for the World Design Capital for 2014, a biennial accolade that is given by the International Council of Societies for Industrial Design to cities that best use design for social, cultural and economic development.

One of our current projects is the East City Design Initiative (ECDI). The East City is that curious and quirky part of the city centre that lies between Adderley Street and District Six – an architecturally and historically rich area with amazing potential.

Home to many design and advertising businesses, film producers and photographic studios, the East City is also the location of the Cape Craft and Design Initiative, Fabrication Laboratory and Cape Town Fashion Council in Harrington St, the new Fugard Theatre and the District Six Homecoming Centre in the Sachs-Futeran Building, the District Six Museum itself, the Book Lounge, the Assembly live music venue, the Central Library in the beautifully restored Drill Hall, the rejuvenated Grand Parade (site of the 2010 Fan Fest), the new CT Station, Cape Peninsula University of Technology’s Faculty of Informatics and Design, and the soon to be restored Granary Building.

A building in the East City with the potential to become one of Cape Town’s most important cultural spaces is the City Hall. To date, for a variety of reasons, this project has not managed to get off the ground. (By the way, have a look at Jonathan Garnham’s work – Gold Chain – a 298,5m long comment on the neglect of the City Hall over the years).

(Untitled) Gold Chain - Jonathan Garnham

(Untitled) Gold Chain - Jonathan Garnham

The Africa Centre, by presenting the Spier Contemporary Exhibition in the City Hall, has done us a huge favour, in that we can now imagine how these spaces could be creatively used in future. This is why, to coincide with the opening of the Spier Contemporary, Creative Cape Town, the Africa Centre and Cape Mic have launched the Imagine City Hall campaign.

The Spier Contemporary 2010 has brought life and colour into a neglected building

The Spier Contemporary 2010 has brought life and colour into a neglected building

Imagine City Hall is a citizen activation programme. Its aim is to draw support for the development of the Cape Town City Hall as a dedicated cultural venue. The space should be accessible to all the people of Cape Town, and should forward the broader arts and heritage of the city and the continent. Please visit the Imagine City Hall Facebook group, which already has 541 members, and read what local artists Tina Schouw, Steve Fataar and Barry Smith have to say in support of the initiative.

More importantly, when you walk around the Exhibition, please take the time to see how spaces that were, until recently, dark, cluttered and neglected, have been ‘opened for art’, and to imagine the City Hall as a permanent cultural space.

Enjoying the new spaces in the City Hall (Picture: Anita van Zyl)

Enjoying the new spaces in the City Hall (Picture: Anita van Zyl)

The opening speakers were mercifully located adjacent to the main balcony used by Nelson Mandela on 11 February 1990

The opening speakers were mercifully located adjacent to the main balcony used by Nelson Mandela on 11 February 1990 (picture: Anita van Zyl)

In conclusion, my thanks and congratulations go to:

  • the many South African artists who submitted a total of 2700 works for consideration
  • the 101 artists that have been selected for the exhibition
  • the Spier Estate for supporting visual and performing arts at a time when funds are hard to come by
  • Tanner Methvin, Farzanah Badsha, Robin Jutzen and the hardworking team at the Africa Centre – for the exhibition and for all you do for the city
  • The curatorial team and the judges, especially those who are visitors to our city – you are most welcome

Ladies and gentlemen, you are in for a treat! Please enjoy the evening. The Spier Contemporary Exhibition at the Cape Town City Hall is now open for art.”

A Downtown Symphony (detail) - David Koloane. This is my favourite piece on the exhibition

A Downtown Symphony (detail) - David Koloane. This is my favourite piece on the exhibition (naturally)

Brett Murray at his provocative best with his piece 'Culture'

Brett Murray at his provocative best with his piece 'Culture'

Voices - Maurice Mbikayi (picture: Anita van Zyl)

Voices - Maurice Mbikayi (picture: Anita van Zyl)

Heartbreaker (literally!) - Johann van der Schijff

Heartbreaker (literally!) - Johann van der Schijff

(By the way, have a look at Gabeba Baderoon’s thoughtful response to Minister Lulu Xingwana’s comments about the Innovative Women Exhibition)


Feb 8 2010

Mandela’s release February 1990

Twenty years ago, on 11 February 1990, I watched Nelson Mandela’s release on a small TV in our rented house in Isidingo Road in Yeoville, Johannesburg. I had moved from Cape Town to Johannesburg in 1989, with my wife Nike Romano to work for an NGO called Planact. I remember getting highly irritated with SATV reporter Clarence Kayter’s seemingly inane remarks (”The sun is not just for the growing of grapes but the sun is shining on South Africa.”) while he tried to fill the time before Mandela eventually emerged from Victor Verster Prison. I watched with pride as Cape Town became the first city to welcome a free Mandela as he spoke to the world from the small balcony of the City Hall in front of a massive crowd on the Grand Parade.

A few days later, it was our turn in Johannesburg, as we went to the Soccer City Stadium near Soweto with 100 000 others to welcome Mandela, Walter Sisulu and the other political leaders. Having endured, with so many other South Africans, a decade of detention, banning, living underground during the State of Emergency and friends and comrades dying in detention or going into exile, it was one of the most euphoric periods of my life.

The huge crowd at Soccer City waits expectently for Mandela's arrival

The huge crowd at Soccer City waits expectantly for Mandela's arrival

A shaft from the West Reef gold mine provides a backdrop to the packed crowd

A shaft from the West Reef gold mine provides a backdrop to the packed crowd

The moment we had all been waiting for - Mandela and his comrades do a lap of honour

The moment we had all been waiting for - Mandela and his comrades do a lap of honour

Nike and I savour the moment

Nike and I savour the moment

"An occasion to be remembered by everyone". My brother Jeremy gets into the swing of the celebrations

"An occasion to be remembered by everyone". My brother Jeremy gets into the swing of the celebrations

Twenty years on, as we reflect on the changes that have taken place in South Africa, and in our own lives, I would like to echo the words of Njabulo Ndebele in a recent Sunday Times article, Long Walk Remains: “So, as we recall Mandela walking out of prison, we must contemplate how he walked not only out of a physical prison, but also out of many emotional and conceptual prisons, and took us along with him… This thought allows us to attempt to identify prisons we must walk out of 20 years after Mandela left the prison of apartheid – those that we carry deep within ourselves and which hold us back.”

Njabulo concludes, and I agree with him: “South Africa desperately needs new politics in which the actors understand the full implications of abundant new opportunities for people to rediscover one another and to build the country. Today we know that diversity in thinking is a national asset.”


Jan 27 2010

East City – two good, one bad

I toured the East City precinct in the Cape Town Central City yesterday – and saw two amazing projects, and one disaster.

I first went to the City Hall to see the installation of the Spier Contemporary biennial Arts Competition and Exhibition, set to open on 14 March. In my view – we’re in for a treat! The exhibition is organised by the Africa Centre and will showcase 132 pieces from 100 South African artists. The best news is that the City Hall is finally receiving a bit of a – albeit temporary – makeover, showing what the space could look like if it is properly restored.

Clutter and debris dating back to the 1970s being removed from the City Hall

Clutter and debris dating back to the 1970s being removed from the City Hall to create bright modern exhibition spaces

Majestic spaces - where the City Library (now next door in the restored Old Drill Hall) used to be

Majestic spaces - where the City Library (now next door in the restored Old Drill Hall) used to be

Next, I went around the corner to Caledon Street to the Sachs-Futeran building to look at the new Fugard Theatre. Its going to be the home of the award-winning Isango-Portobello Theatre Company. Situated in an old Congregational Church Hall and an adjacent warehouse, it is one of the best restorations of an historic building I have seen in a long time. The Fugard opens on 12 February with Mozart’s The Magic Flute-Impempe Yomlingo. Situated next door to the District Six Homecoming Centre, and the Old Granary Building (also due for an upgrade in 2010), the complex is set to become the heart of the Cape Town Partnership’s East City Design Initiative.

The entrance to The Fugard in Caledon Street, off Buitenkant Street

The entrance to The Fugard in Caledon Street, off Buitenkant Street

Rehearsal space on the second floor

Rehearsal space on the second floor

Terri Carter of the Cape Town Partnership auditions on the stage of the new Fugard Theatre

Terri Carter of the Cape Town Partnership auditions on stage

The roof terrace boasts some of the best views in the Central City

The roof terrace boasts some of the best views in the Central City

See recent Sunday Times article on The Fugard by Marianne Thamm

And finally – the bad.

I walked around the newly-upgraded Grand Parade and was bitterly disappointed in what I saw. The Grand Parade is Cape Tow’s oldest public space. It is one of our most important heritage sites. It was where Nelson Mandela first spoke to the world as a free man 20 years ago. It is the venue for the official FIFA Fan Fest in June. The City of Cape Town has recently spent R22m on upgrading the Parade. It looks like this:

The brand new brickwork is covered in ugly oil stains due to the vans and bakkies that are allowed to park there

The brand new brickwork is covered in ugly oil stains due to the vans and bakkies that are allowed to park there

New paving turning to rubble

New paving turning to rubble due to lack of maintenance

The vandalised base of a monument

The vandalised base of a monument

Lack of cleansing and refuse removal mars the environment

Lack of cleansing and refuse removal mars the environment

The main problem is that the City does not have a public space management policy and strategy in place. No one is responsible or accountable for maintenance and management, even though many of the spaces have been beautifully upgraded by the City in recent years. This issue, which has been kicking around the Civic Centre for the past four years, needs to be resolved once and for all. Watch this space!

A story on the state of the Grand Parade appeared in the Weekend Argus on 30 January 2010:

Vandals trash Grand Parade after upgrade

City’s main fan park ‘not managed’

By Helen Bamford

The Grand Parade, the site of Cape Town’s main fan park for the World Cup, was upgraded at a cost of R24 million but within weeks has been damaged and vandalised, apparently because of a lack of management.

In his blog, the chief executive of the Cape Town Partnership, Andrew Boraine, described his disappointment after walking around the newly-upgraded site.

He posted photographs of what he saw: brickwork covered in oil stains from vehicles permitted to park on the parade, new paving turned into rubble due to lack of maintenance and the vandalised base of a monument.

He says the main problem was that the city did not have a public space management policy and strategy.

“No one is responsible or accountable for maintenance and management, even though many of the spaces have been beautifully upgraded by the city in recent years.”

The city’s 2010 co-ordinators are also concerned.

Shameel Ho-Kim, project co-ordinator for the city’s 2010 operations office, said the Grand Parade was a high priority for 2010 and they wanted it closely managed.

He said that they had raised their concerns with the city’s sports and recreation department, under which the Grand Parade fell.

“They have indicated it will be managed more closely with increased patrols.”

The Parade will be fenced off from May 1 for construction of the fan park which will create a stadium atmosphere accommodating an estimated 25 000 people, with an overflow along Darling Street which will take 15 000 people.

All 64 World Cup games will be screened live at the fan park which will be open from 10am until midnight on match days with hospitality areas and beer tents.

The city has appointed an operator called Grand World Visions, a consortium of World Sport, VWV and Grand Parade Investments, to plan, implement and manage the fan fest on its behalf.

Paul Williamson, city service co-ordinator for business areas management, said the city had identified two alternative sites for existing traders during the World Cup.

The city would ensure that the Grand Parade was in a suitable condition for the fan fest, and the damage identified would be repaired.

 Weekend Argus sent written questions to Gerhard Ras, the councillor in charge of sports and recreation under which the Grand Parade falls, on Thursday asking who was responsible for managing the site and why it was not being done.

He did not respond but Gert Bam, director of sport, recreation and amenities, said the areas requiring attention since the upgrade were not substantial.

In one area the electricity department had “disturbed the paving” during an installation.

“This caused a ripple effect on the surrounding paving. We have asked the electricity department to correct this.”

In other areas the paving seemed to have sagged.

“As we are still in the maintenance period of the contract a snag list has been drafted and the urban design department which managed this project will interact with the contractor to attend to all the snag items,” Bam said.

Published on the web by Cape Argus on January 29, 2010.

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© Cape Argus 2010. All rights reserved.


Dec 3 2009

Cape Town Central City: Reclaiming people’s spaces (part one)

When Jan Gehl, world-renowned architect who focuses on ’life between buildings’ visited in 2004, he described pedestrians in Cape Town as a ‘hunted race’. He was right. Thanks to grievous urban planning errors in the 1970s, a six-lane race track called Strand Street intersects with an eight-lane monstrosity called the Heerengracht, creating an urban wasteland in the central of the city, right where tens of thousands of public transport users emerge from the Cape Town Station every day.

Fortunately, some progress has been made during the ensuing five years to shift from a car-dominated to a more people-centred city centre. Strand Street and the Heerengracht are still there, but cars, taxis and buses are slowly being tamed and pedestrians (and cyclists) are beginning to find their rightful places and spaces. And we have been doing it in the way Jan Gehl suggested – by stealth!

Company’s Garden

One of the historic green spaces in Cape Town, the Company’s Garden had by the late 1990s become unsafe and unkempt. A process, led by the City of Cape Town, and supported by a range of stakeholders, has revived the fortunes of the Gardens, which is now a well-used and beautiful green space in the heart of the city.

Company's Garden - a tranquil space (Pic: Ed Suter)

Company's Garden - a tranquil space (Pic: Ed Suter)

Company's Garden - Part of the Central City pedestrian route

Company's Garden - Part of an expanding Central City pedestrian route

Jetty Square 

Named because of its proximity to the site of the original Cape Town jetty but now part of reclaimed land known as the Foreshore, Jetty Square has been upgraded and adorned with ghostly shark-like creatures to remind us of our marine heritage.

Jetty Square

Jetty Square - still undiscovered by most Capetonians, but part of an expanding pedestrian network connecting the Foreshore to St George's Mall via Thibault Square

Shark-like statues in Jetty Square move with the prevailing winds

Shark-like statues in Jetty Square move with the prevailing winds

Children enjoying public space

Children using public space

Church Square

For decades, Church Square near the South African Parliament was little more than a motley car-park. In 2007, cars were removed and the Square was transformed into a people-space.

A new carless Church Square

A new car-free Church Square

Church Square - slowly attracting people out of office buildings and motors vehicles and into public spaces

Church Square - slowly attracting people out of office buildings and motors vehicles and into public spaces

Goemarati - a series of music performances in Church Square in 2007 to attract public life back into the area. The juxtaposition between the statue of 'Onze Jan' Hofmeyr, founder of the Afrikaner Bond political party in the 1880s, and the Goemarati performance derived from the music of the slaves at the Cape is supremely ironic)

Goemarati - a series of music performances in Church Square in 2007 to attract public life back into the area. The juxtaposition between the statue of 'Onze Jan' Hofmeyr, founder of the Afrikaner Bond political party in the 1880s, and the Goemarati performance derived from the music of the slaves at the Cape is supremely ironic

Inclusive memorialisation. Slaves in Cape Town between the 1660s and 1800s made up the majority of the city's population but were effectively written out of history books for two centuries. Following a public competition, the City of Cape Town erected a memorial to slaves on the newly-upgraded Church Square

Inclusive memorialisation. Slaves in Cape Town between the 1660s and 1800s made up the majority of the city's population but were effectively written out of history books for two centuries. Following a public competition, the City of Cape Town erected a memorial to slaves on the newly-upgraded Church Square

Reflecting on a divided past. Church Square was chosen as the site of a slave memorial because of its proximity to where slaves were previously bought and sold, and to the old Slave Lodge, where slaves of the Company were kept in inhuman conditions.

Reflecting on a divided past. Church Square was chosen as the site of a slave memorial because of its proximity to where slaves were previously bought and sold, and to the old Slave Lodge, where slaves of the Company were kept in inhuman conditions.

Grand Parade

It was inevitable that sooner or later, attention would have to be paid to Cape Town’s (and South Africa’s) oldest public space – the Grand Parade. A public place at the center of economic and social life in Cape Town for over 300 years, the Grand Parade had become by the late 1990s a run-down, cluttered and inhospitable space. Following a heritage assessment commissioned by the Cape Town Partnership in 2006, and a public consultation process, the City of Cape Town decided to upgrade the Grand Parade at a cost of R22m.

The Grand Parade - historically a place for soldiers, citizens, circuses and markets

The Grand Parade - historically a place for soldiers, citizens, circuses and markets

The Grand Parade as scene of Nelson Mandela's first address to the world as a free man in February 1990 and his first address to the nation after his election as President in 1994

The Grand Parade as scene of Nelson Mandela's first address to the world as a free man in February 1990 and his first address to the nation after his election as President in 1994

Grand Parade as a run-down parking lot (Pic: Ed Suter)

Grand Parade as a run-down parking lot (Pic: Ed Suter)

The Grand Parade is the site of South Africa's oldest continous fleamarket

The Grand Parade is the site of South Africa's oldest continous fleamarket (Pic: Ed Suter)

Long term plan for the Grand Parade. Phase one will be completed by the end of 2009

Long term plan for the Grand Parade. Phase one will be completed by the end of 2009

Aerial view of phase one upgrade underway

Aerial view of phase one upgrade underway

A new people's space emerges

A new people's space emerges

Homeless World Cup on the Grand Parade in 2006 - inspiration for the 2010 FIFA World Cup Fan Fest in Cape Town

Homeless World Cup on the Grand Parade in 2006 - inspiration for the 2010 FIFA World Cup Fan Fest in Cape Town

To be continued… Pier Place, St Andrew’s Square, Greenmarket Square, Station Square, using public spaces, non-motorised transport, 2010 Fan Walk, Green Point Urban Park, reclaiming hidden histories, promoting public spaces, managing public spaces, informal trading.