Mack Magagane
Untitled 12, from the series …in this city
About the SessionFraming a Nation: The Garth Walker Photography Collection and Other Properties presents a selection of photographs from the personal archive of acclaimed graphic designer and photographer Garth Walker. Born in Pretoria, he trained at Technikon Natal in the 1970s, where he met artist Stephen Inggs, a life-long friend. Walker emerged as a pivotal figure in South African graphic design and visual culture in the 1990s through his design firm Orange Juice Design. In 1995 he launched the influential print magazine i-jusi as a platform to showcase new graphic design, typography and illustration. Later issues were sometimes exclusively devoted to photography.
Prominent artists featured in i-jusi included Roger Ballen, Conrad Botes, David Goldblatt and Anton Kannemeyer. It has been exhibited in over 25 countries and is held in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, and Bibliotèque Nationale d'France, Paris. Beyond the magazine, Walker is best known for the unique, custom typeface he produced for the Constitutional Court of South Africa in 2004. Inspired by street typography and prison graffiti, his typography is featured on the court’s building façade.
A longstanding collector, notably of Zulu headrests and nineteenth-century KwaZulu-Natal photography, Walker began acquiring contemporary South African photography in the early 2000s. His choices were instinctual and guided by his interest in vernacular design and the country’s rich documentary photography tradition. He acquired early works by Pieter Hugo, Zanele Muholi and Guy Tillim, before their international rise to prominence. His collection includes personal documentary work by the award-winning photojournalists Jodi Bieber and Greg Marinovich, as well as an important photo from 1965 by David Goldblatt taken at Hartebeespoort Dam north of Johannesburg. The influence of American documentary registers in his holdings of Stephen Shore and Rosalind Fox Solomon.
A highlight of this auction is the inclusion of i-jusi Portfolios #1, #2 and #3, produced to sustain the magazine’s independent publication and featuring seminal works by South African artists. Portfolio #3, with a photographic focus curated by Pieter Hugo, underscores the collaborative impulse shaping this material. The collection offers a rare opportunity to acquire works from a defining moment in the evolution of post-apartheid visual culture.
About this Item
Notes
From an edition of 5 + 2AP.
Another example from the edition is in the permanent collection of the Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa (MOCAA).
Mack Magagane's artistic interest lies in the relationship between photography and memory and the narrative possibility of what is occurring beyond the framed image. His photographs are intimate vignettes of urban life in Johannesburg that create a conversation between real and imagined accounts of the people who both live in and pass through the city. Magagane's series …in this city, produced during his 2011/2012 Tierney Fellowship at the Market Photo Workshop in Johannesburg, is compiled of snapshots of Johannesburg's inner city at night, which the artist views as more serene than the day. In Untitled 12, a group of four men is illuminated by the bright light of a building's overhang. The content of their interaction is decided by the viewer: good or bad, friendly or hostile. The image invites the viewer into the lives of these strangers; to create a story for their imagined lives. Magagane's work 'provides a glimpse into an almost fairy-tale urban landscape with sort of a theatrical narration, where night does not necessarily translate into darkness.'1
1.The Market Photo Workshop (2012) The Market Photo Workshop, ...in this city, online, accessed 27 November 2018.
Provenance
Strauss & Co, Johannesburg, 15 July 2019, lot 342.
Exhibited
BRUNDYN, Cape Town, Living Just Enough, 6 February to 13 March 2014.
ROOM Gallery, Johannesburg, ...in this city, 2012.
