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X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://nervous-rhodes.38-242-239-132.plesk.page
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for African Centre for Cities
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TZID:Africa/Johannesburg
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TZOFFSETFROM:+0200
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DTSTART:20190101T000000
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DTSTART;TZID=Africa/Johannesburg:20190926T173000
DTEND;TZID=Africa/Johannesburg:20190926T193000
DTSTAMP:20260415T001226
CREATED:20190918T094159Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190923T073235Z
UID:10001999-1569519000-1569526200@nervous-rhodes.38-242-239-132.plesk.page
SUMMARY:Beyond our borders:  Independent art spaces as a lens on city futures
DESCRIPTION:Four leading shapers of the contemporary art world from cutting-edge independent spaces on the African continent will next week share their insights and experience in a public panel hosted in central Cape Town. \nThe panellists\, who respectively manage or help direct programming for multidisciplinary contemporary art spaces in Addis Ababa\, Cairo\, Dar es Salaam and Nairobi respectively\, will speak about the work they do and the broader value it has. \nTheir contributions come at a time of growing global interest in contemporary art from Africa and burgeoning private museums and foundations but also increasing sustainability challenges for non-profits. The panel simultaneously coincides with a national crisis in South Africa around xenophobic attacks and gender-based violence\, which gives extra resonance to hearing the compelling voices of four women from beyond our borders. \nThe discussion panel\, on Thursday 26 September at 18:00\, is organised by University of Cape Town’s African Centre for Cities (ACC)\, which hosts a research project on the topic\, called Platform. The panellists comprise the project’s key participants\, whom ACC has brought to Cape Town for a two-day workshop to inform final outcomes. Prof Achille Mbembe from Wits Institute of Social and Economic Research\, a well known theorist and philosopher\, will chair the discussion. \nProf Edgar Pieterse\, the Director of the ACC\, said that despite limited resources\, artists are sustaining vital institutions in their cities to ensure that there are spaces for engagement with urban dynamics from an artistic perspective. This greatly enriches and extends the quality of the public sphere\, pointing to novel questions and insights. \n“ACC believes that it is impossible to foster a rounded understanding of contemporary urbanism in Africa without engaging the perspectives and practices of African artists\, especially those who operate within and through artist-led spaces dedicated to autonomy and expression.” By hosting the event\, ACC was creating an opportunity to learn from the determined practices in key nodes in Africa\, Pieterse added. “Political and policy discussions in South Africa often fail to appreciate the important role the arts play in giving expression to the unsayable and the unthinkable\,” says Pieterse \nDr Kim Gurney\, the researcher behind the project\, identified and visited these participant spaces – plus one more in Accra\, Ghana (ANO Institute) – at different times over the past year to come to grips with their working principles. They are all navigating conditions of flux in some of Africa’s fastest urbanising cities\, she said. “Their emergent forms and strategies can help unlock new ways of thinking and doing with deep resonance for others in comparable places and spaces.” \nThe discussion panel is hosted at the newly refurbished Desmond and Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation at the Old Granary Building on Buitenkant Street. The evening event is open to the public and free; all are welcome to attend. Light refreshments will be served. \n  \nThe discussion panel comprises:  \n\nMeskerem Assegued – Curator of numerous exhibitions both in Ethiopia and abroad and a cultural anthropologist. Together with artist Elias Sime\, Meskerem co-founded and co-directs Zoma Museum (Addis Ababa)\, an environmentally conscious art institution recently relaunched;\nRebecca Corey – The Director of Nafasi Art Space (Dar es Salaam)\, a creative hub and centre for contemporary visual and performing arts which provides a meeting point for intensive dialogue between artists and the public;\nMariam Elnozahy – Curator\, archivist\, and writer based in Cairo\, who focuses primarily on critical\, community-based work and is Programme Manager at Townhouse Gallery (Cairo);\nJoy Mboya – Executive Director of The GoDown Arts Centre (Nairobi)\, a multidisciplinary national and regional focal point for artistic experimentation\, cross-sector partnerships and creative collaboration;\nEdgar Pieterse [panel chair] – Director of the African Centre for Cities and South African Research Chair in Urban Policy.\n\nWHEN: Thursday 26 September 2019\nTIME: 17h30 for 18h00 start\nWHERE: Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation\, The Old Granary Building\, Buitenkant Street\, Cape Town – entrance on cnr Longmarket and Harrington streets\nGoogle map: https://goo.gl/maps/ukM81xiP7NwmyL7o9 \nIMAGE CREDIT: On the move at the GoDown Arts Centre\, Nairobi. by Kim Gurney
URL:https://nervous-rhodes.38-242-239-132.plesk.page/event/beyond-our-borders-independent-art-spaces-as-a-lens-on-city-futures/
LOCATION:Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation\, The Old Granary Building\, Buitenkant Street\, Cape Town\, Cape Town \, South Africa
CATEGORIES:Conversation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://nervous-rhodes.38-242-239-132.plesk.page/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/gurney02_GoDown_Nairobi-scaled.jpg
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