Joan Armatrading has added additional dates to her South African tour that will take place next month. Concerts will be held in Cape Town, East London, Durban and Johannesburg in July.
Author: stelsinkins
2015 Wakkerstroom Arts and Crafts Ramble
The village of Wakkerstroom will host an Arts and Crafts Ramble on July 11 and 12.
Local and national artists will be showing and selling their works in their own homes, and several galleries in town will be open for you to visit. Artists encompass a range of skills from glass art, to painters and other hand-crafts.
Ne-Yo to perform at the MTV Africa Music Awards
Grammy Award-winning R&B icon Ne-Yo will perform at the MTV Africa Music Awards in KwaZulu-Natal in July.
The event, sponsored by the KwaZulu-Natal government, in association with Absolut Vodka and The City of Durban, will take place at the Durban International Convention Centre on Saturday, July 18.
Tom Holland to play Spider-Man
SONY Pictures and Marvel Studios have cast Tom Holland to play Peter Parker/Spider-Man in the next Spider-Man film, which is expected to be screened in theaters in IMAX and 3D on July 28, 2017.
The film will be directed by Jon Watts, director of Cop Car, the upcoming thriller that made its debut earlier this year at the Sundance Film Festival.
Creative Arts Incubators Programme
The Director General of Arts & Culture, Vuyo Jack launched the Creative Arts Incubators Programme at The Playhouse Company in Durban recently.
This initiative is part of the implementation of the Mzansi Golden Economy strategy that aims to unleash the economic potential of the creative sector through large-scale investment.
Essentially, the Arts Incubators will provide a platform for the sector to create employment and provide skills and training towards economic self-reliance. In addition, the incubators will enable the sector to develop and measure the output of locally developed content in terms of music, artworks, films, arts and crafts and stage productions amongst other artistic disciplines.
International award for SA film, The Shore Break
Ryley Grunenwald’s The Shore Break, has won the prestigious Backsberg Audience Choice Award at Encounters South African International Documentary Festival for Best South African Film.
The award-winning documentary film follows the dilemma faced by a rural community on South Africa’s Wild Coast as to whether to support or resist a proposed titanium mining project and a national tolled highway.
Paul Emmanuel’s Remnants exhibition at Freedom Park
The Lost Men project is a series of site-specific, temporary, outdoor installations engaging concepts of memory and memorialisation.The artworks are non-partisan and make no political statements.
Each installation of this ongoing project relates to a specific historical battle site and is unique in its imagery, structure and format while maintaining conceptual consistency.
Colab Tokyo: an exhibition of photographs by Mark Lanning
DURBANITES can enjoy Colab Tokyo: an exhibition of photographs by Mark Lanning at Saviour Brand: Station Drive Precinct (51 Station Drive) from June 26 to July 31.
Respected photographer, Lanning, will be exhibiting a collection of “iphonography” (photographs taken on an iPhone5) of a recent visit to Tokyo with Durban designers the Holmes Brothers. Continue reading
La Fille mal gardée at Cinema Nouveau
A season of five famous ballets from The Royal Ballet company is currently being screened at Cinema Nouveau theatres around South Africa. Continue reading
Solo exhibitions by Hamblin & Allerton-Davies
Lizamore & Associates hosts two solo exhibitions in July: Daughter Language by Robert Hamblin and Daughters, by Heike Allerton-Davies.
In these exhibitions Hamblin and Allerton-Davies visit subjects of patriarchy, race, colonial remnants and gender from the perspective of parenting a new generation of daughters. The exhibition will be opened by activist and television and stage actor Vinette Ebrahim.
Hamblin’s images are based on his family and baby daughter who is of Xhosa descent. The photographic images in Daughter Language are hand finished with pencil writing from an antique English Xhosa phrase book written by missionaries in 1899. The pencil markings on the works pose an allegory for current day struggles and tensions between black and white South Africans.
“My family and I are confronted by racism and also our whiteness on a very personal level now,” says Hamblin. “I am not talking about blatant racism, more about subtle day-to-day communications, almost invisible things that leave uncomfortable spaces between people, making them unable to really connect across race borders regardless of their commitment to change.”
Hamblin has been an active fine art photographer over the last 22 years and has had several exhibitions across South Africa and included in shows internationally. His work is informed by gender complexities, identity and more recently, colonial studies.
Highlights in his career include winning the Fellowship Award at the Houston Centre for Photography in Houston, Texas, and a Kanna award nomination at the KKNK national arts festival. Lizamore & Associates represented Hamblin at the Joburg Art Fair in 2014.
Daughter Language is Hamblin’s first solo exhibition with the gallery and follows the artist’s solo exhibition, The Colony, which was exhibited at the University of Johannesburg Gallery late 2014.
The most recent work from Heike Allerton-Davies, Daughters, explores the merging fault lines in our shared history that brings the artist, her daughter and the daughters of the surrounding Dwarsrivier Valley (between Stellenbosch and Franschhoek) to this point and place in time. These grappling portraits contain shards of Delft porcelain collected by her daughter.
“My daughter sifts through the sand in the vineyards obsessively collecting these iconic colonial ‘treasures’,” Allerton-Davies. “She brings them to me, cobalt reflected in her eyes. Porcelain that would have been carefully packed in crates with soft cushioning against any damage, brought across the sea, slaves below the deck – and so Colonialism spread like spilled ink across the African continent.”
In this exhibition, Allerton-Davies explores the colonial patriarchy as the underlying and binding narrative in the famous Boschendal valley where traces of the colonial rule remain embedded in every corner of the land. On the farm where Allerton-Davies lives with her family, the slave bell still stands in the back lawn, untouched. The works in this exhibition features her own daughter, girls in the rural region where she lives, and the found shards of Delft porcelain.
Allerton-Davies has established a well-known name for herself within the South African art industry. She holds a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Fine Art from the University of Cape Town and where she completed her Honours in painting. She also studied art and graphic design at the East London Technikon.
Allerton-Davies has participated in numerous group shows, including Sex, Power and Money (2009), Fresh (2011), 15 Years (2011) and Marking the Map. Allerton-Davies has also had a number of solo exhibitions: Good Night at the Barnard Gallery, Cape Town in 2012, Damaged at the Association of Visual Arts in 2004 and Valley of Grace at Lizamore & Associates in 2013 are amongst others. Lizamore & Associates also represented the artist at the 2013 Joburg Art Fair and 2013 Turbine Art Fair.
Daughter Language & Daughters opens at 6 pm on Thursday, July 2 and ends on July 25 at Lizamore & Associates, 155 Jan Smuts Avenue, Parkwood, Rosebank.


