To Embrace or to Contest Urban Regeneration? Ambiguities of Artistic and Social Practice in Contemporary Johannesburg

IF 0.1 Q4 HISTORY
Fiona Siegenthaler
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Johannesburg inner city has undergone major changes in the last twenty-five years, a process keenly observed, commented and negotiated by many local artists. The transitional years can be summarized by two phases in urban policy, the discourses of which are coined by urban ‘decay’ marked by informal practices in the first years of transition in the 1990s, and ‘urban regeneration’ when the city authorities intervened with private-public partnerships and a public art program in the 2000s. These recent interventions promise a better city but also appear to reinforce social injustice and spatial control. As an integral part of strategic gentrification, they involve artists and the art market, offering new opportunities and spaces for studios, galleries, or art commissions while extruding undesired and often illegalized residents and traders. The reaction of artists in Johannesburg is accordingly ambivalent if not contradictory. Some try to understand the logic of informal practices and include or even support them in their art practice. This often involves opposing the increasing regulations by the city authorities and police and engaging with discriminated stakeholders. Others discover business opportunities by offering their creative, administrative and collaborative expertise for public art projects to the city administration and thus blend into the official urban policy. Finally, many artists are just residents and visitors of these neighborhoods, sometimes unintentionally benefiting from or even contributing to these developments. I argue that as social actors, artists willingly or not participate in and shape the city even beyond their artistic practice. Therefore, their artistic intentions and their practice as ordinary urban dwellers often interfere or even converge with each other, This paper discusses two case studies of artistic interventions in the inner city of Johannesburg by Ismail Farouk and the Trinity Session and analyzes the observed ambiguities between alignment with and opposition to urban policy and its implications with regard to the role of artists as social actors in the crossfire of urban regeneration and social justice.
拥抱还是反对城市更新?当代约翰内斯堡艺术与社会实践的模糊性
约翰内斯堡的内城在过去的25年里经历了重大的变化,许多当地艺术家敏锐地观察、评论和谈判了这个过程。过渡时期可以通过城市政策的两个阶段来总结,其中的话语是由20世纪90年代过渡的头几年以非正式实践为标志的城市“衰败”创造的,而“城市再生”则是城市当局在2000年代通过公私合作和公共艺术项目进行干预。这些最近的干预措施承诺了一个更好的城市,但似乎也加剧了社会不公和空间控制。作为战略高档化的一个组成部分,它们涉及艺术家和艺术市场,为工作室、画廊或艺术委员会提供新的机会和空间,同时挤出不受欢迎的、通常是非法的居民和商人。因此,约翰内斯堡的艺术家们的反应是矛盾的,如果不是矛盾的话。有些人试图理解非正式实践的逻辑,并将其纳入甚至支持他们的艺术实践。这通常涉及反对城市当局和警察日益增加的规定,并与受歧视的利益相关者接触。其他人则通过向城市管理部门提供公共艺术项目的创意、管理和协作专业知识来发现商机,从而融入官方城市政策。最后,许多艺术家只是这些社区的居民和访客,有时无意中受益于这些发展,甚至为这些发展做出贡献。我认为,作为社会行动者,艺术家愿意或不愿意参与和塑造城市,甚至超越了他们的艺术实践。因此,他们的艺术意图和他们作为普通城市居民的实践经常相互干扰甚至趋同。本文讨论了伊斯梅尔·法鲁克(Ismail Farouk)和三一会议(Trinity Session)对约翰内斯堡内城艺术干预的两个案例研究,并分析了观察到的与城市政策一致和反对之间的模糊性,以及艺术家作为城市复兴和社会正义的交叉冲突中的社会行动者的作用。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
30 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Transcultural Studies is a peer-reviewed, open-access journal committed to promoting the knowledge and research of transculturality in all disciplines. It is published by the Cluster of Excellence “Asia and Europe in a Global Context: The Dynamics of Transculturality” of the Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg.
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