Mixtape Meeting Grahamstown

Monday, April 19, 2010


In true collaboration spirit, a Mixtape meeting was held in both Cape Town and Grahamstown on Sunday 18th April. With only 8 weeks left until the Grahamstown National Arts Festival, we thought it might be time to extend our ideas into actual projects.

There are a MILLION things to look out for in this years Fest, and projects that we are eager to collaborate with the Cape Town crew. The projects range from kites suspended over Grahamstown landmarks, to community workshops with various organisations in Grahamstown, from blooming plastic trees to GIANT puppets, and anything between East Grahamstown and West!




I've attached some pics on the workshops we have done so far with the Sakhuluntu Cultural Group, a group who holds workshops and performances with the youth of their community in Extension 9... There are more videos to follow, so keep checking!

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Ice Cairn

Sunday, July 19, 2009

A queue of people is lining up to collect water at the spring on the road to Port Alfred. As one of Grahamstown’s only available sources of clean water, the spring has become a meeting point for people all over the town, a uniquely democratic space where social standing is overridden by the necessity for clean water. One afternoon as the sun was setting Tony East and I installed a quiet intervention above the mouth of the spring – a cairn, or way-finder, made of a pile of boulder-shaped ice sitting precariously above the water collectors. We collected the water for this sculpture at strategic points on our drive from Cape Town to Knysna – stopping at bodies of water that hold either social or personal significance to the artists. The sites include the Liesbeck River, Steenbras River, Knysna River, Kranshoek Waterfall, Storm’s River Bridge and Grey Dam, with the quality of each different water source clearly visible in the colouration of the different pieces of ice. At each site where water was taken, a dry-ice construction was left in exchange. Evaporating into Carbon Dioxide, this trade was representative of a miniature carbon footprint, a poor (though harmless to the underwater flora and fauna) exchange for the natural resource the we removed to bring to Grahamstown.

As well as commenting on environmental factors, the work also speaks of the process of journeying, making visible the physical and emotional process of travel, where going somewhere is often more important than getting there. Transience is a key motif here; with evaporating sculptures and ice melting into running water. Aside from the few surprised spectators, the work exists only in photography, exuding a pathos that reflects the global loss of water resources, the sadness of moving on and the fleeting nature of the present.

And the spring, inevitably, beginning to run dry.

Photographs: Colin Groenewald

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Collaborators

  • Linda Stupart
  • Robert Sloon
  • Natasha Norman
  • Andrew Putter
  • Ian Grose
  • Matthew King
  • Tony East
  • Craig Groenewald
  • Mike Rance
  • Natalie Pereira
  • Robert Sloon
  • Jem Smith
  • Jon Keevy
  • Georgina Gratrix
  • Colin Groenewald
  • Simon Tamblyn
  • Josh De Kock
  • Jonathan Kope
  • Shruthi Nair
  • Rebecca Haysom
  • Lauren Palte
  • Lauren Franklin
  • Matthew Hindley
  • Rose Kotze
  • Katherine Jacobs
  • Gareth Morris-Davies
  • Daniella Mooney
  • Karen Graaff
  • Andrew Lamprecht
  • Michael Michael
  • Michael Ilias Linders
  • Ed Young
  • James Webb
  • Daniella Mooney
  • Margaret Stone
  • Marco Filby
  • Hugh Upsher
  • Rowan Smith
  • Myer Taub
  • Ron T Beck
  • Marc Barben
  • Justin Brett
  • Paul Grose
  • Andrzej Nowicki
  • Johke Steenkamp
  • Julie Donald
  • Anna Stielau
  • Tim Liebbrandt
  • Jason Basson
  • Rebecca Haysom
  • Genevieve Louw
  • Charles Maggs
  • Wayne Barker

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About Mixtape

Mixtape is a blog run (loosely) by Linda Stupart as a manifestation of a project in which she collaborates with a large group of smart, interesting, wonderful cultural producers. As such, Mixtape documents these collaborations. More than that, though, the blog serves as a space for each member of the project to post whatever they like: Tell us what they’re making, thinking, doing or, even, feeling. The blog also forms a space for Linda, a Cape Town based critic, artist, feminist, WWE fan and cultural commentator, to post her writing.

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