'August House is Dead, Long Live August House! The Story of a Johannesburg Atelier' (2017)
'August House is Dead, Long Live August House! The Story of a Johannesburg Atelier' (2017)
'August House is Dead, Long Live August House! The Story of a Johannesburg Atelier' (2017)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, 'August House is Dead, Long Live August House! The Story of a Johannesburg Atelier' (2017)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, 'August House is Dead, Long Live August House! The Story of a Johannesburg Atelier' (2017)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, 'August House is Dead, Long Live August House! The Story of a Johannesburg Atelier' (2017)

'August House is Dead, Long Live August House! The Story of a Johannesburg Atelier' (2017)

Vendor

Kim Gurney

Regular price
R 350.00
Sale price
R 350.00
Regular price
Sold out
Unit price
per 

From the publisher:

 

"In the east end of the inner city of Johannesburg, a former textiles factory undergoes a dramatic transformation to become, over the next several years, one of the city’s foremost artists’ studios. When the sale of the building seems imminent, not only must the artists face the daunting prospect of relocation, but a remarkable chapter in the complex narrative of contemporary South African art seems about to close. Sensing the importance of this moment, Kim Gurney, herself a former tenant of the atelier, follows the stories of several of the August House denizens through some of the artworks that came to life in their studios. The result is a fascinating study of the role of the atelier and its artists in South Africa’s fractious art world, and a consideration of the relationship between art and the ever-changing city of Johannesburg."

 

23.5 x 18 cm | softcover | 172 pages

 

Kim Gurney is a writer, artist and research associate at the University of Cape Town’s African Centre for Cities (ACC) and the University of Johannesburg’s Visual Identities in Art & Design Research Centre (VIAD). Her previous book, The Art of Public Space: Curating and Re-imagining the Ephemeral City (Palgrave, 2015), followed a trilogy of artistic interventions in Johannesburg and proposed ideas centred around the commons. Kim lives in Cape Town, South Africa.