DO YOU SPEAK VANSA
VANSA’s ACTIVITIES SINCE ITS INCEPTION by Gabi Ngcobo
The Visual Arts Network of South Africa (VANSA) is an organisation
established by and for South African artists and arts practitioners to
represent and lobby in the interests of the visual arts. Focused on
issues of art and social development, VANSA seeks to foreground
existing historical imbalances and deal with concerns around access,
opportunities and coherence within the visual arts sector.
Background
In 2002 the International Cultural Diversity Network (ICDN) conference
took place in Cape Town and here it became apparent that the visual
arts did not have representation on a national level. VANSA was formed
in response to this need, to represent the interests of the visual arts
sector and to systematically and constructively address the historical
imbalances in access and opportunity that continue to characterise the
sector.
The first meeting to set up VANSA was held at the Johannesburg Civic
Centre in 2003. Here a national committee was elected and regional
representatives were designated to spearhead the formation of regional
steering committees in their areas, and bring on board provinces that
were not represented at the initial meeting. These were the Eastern
Cape, the Free State (allocated to KwaZulu-Natal), Limpopo, Mpumalanga,
the North West Province (allocated to Gauteng) and the Northern Cape
(allocated to Western Cape).
Modelled, to some degree, on the Performing Arts Network of South
Africa (PANSA), VANSA was set up to make the voices of visual art
practitioners heard and to promote and support their practice at every
level. It is envisaged that the Network will also serve as a crucial
advisory mechanism for government initiatives that have a bearing on
the visual arts. Workshops and meetings with the Department of Arts and
Culture (DAC) have taken place and have proved fruitful in forging a
strong working relationship between the two.
VANSA membership consists of and is open to individual visual arts
practitioners, community arts practitioners, curators, gallerists,
administrators, as well as organisations, institutions and service
providers that participate in or serve the visual arts sector.
VANSA Conference
As no major collective meeting of the visual arts community has yet
taken place at a national level, VANSA has undertaken to host a
national conference for the visual arts. Also, to date, the visual arts
has been largely absent from the DACís agenda: the bulk of research and
policy development has occurred in craft, publishing, music, performing
arts and film.
In preparation for the conference and in view of the lack of
transformation within the visual arts sector, VANSA formed a
partnership in 2004 with CAPE, which aims to organise an Africa-based
showcase and a platform for discourse and cultural exchange with a
long-term vision of building a more coherent and sustainable African
cultural network.
Between October and December 2004, with the support of CAPE and through
funding from the NAC and the Arts and Culture Trust (ACT) which CAPE
raised for VANSA, I, as a member of the KZN steering committee and on
behalf of VANSA, undertook a process of consultation on what the
proposed VANSA conference should address. The consultation process took
the form of one-day workshops, which were hosted in Limpopo, Gauteng,
KwaZulu-Natal and the Western Cape.
These four meetings revealed a common desire for the transformation of
the visual arts sector. As with many other areas within the creative
industries, the process of transformation has been slow, with the
majority of South Africans still finding entry into the sector
problematic. However, transformation in the visual arts sector has been
considerably unhurried when compared with the performing arts for
example. The number of black students enrolling at tertiary level has
shown no major increase over the years, and black women particularly
are still invisible as active participants in the sector. Thembinkosi
Goniwe, artist and History of Art Doctoral candidate at Cornel
University, challenged this in 2003 during the 19th South African Art
and Architecture Historians conference (SAAAH) held at Stellenbosch
University. His statement, ”We’ (art historians) should be ashamed
because there are no black women as audience and presenters alike’ was
met with reactionary excitement from the conference delegates.
Such reactions highlight a refusal to take responsibility and
acknowledge the problem for which ‘we’ must all take responsibility,
rather than blaming apartheid for the invisibility of black role
players. Without a doubt, there have been a number of initiatives and
individuals who have taken up the challenges presented in this
post-apartheid era in forums that promote dialogue and create space to
confront the challenges.
Active Transformation
The upcoming VANSA conference is also aimed at foregrounding
transformation, a concern that filters through all other VANSA
activities at national and provincial levels. A membership drive taken
up by John Smith of the KZN steering committee in 2003 took place in a
form of a Road Show and managed to draw close to 150 new members. The
KZN committee also intervened in the proposed closure of the sculpture
and ceramics department at the Durban Institute of Technology’s Fine
Arts department, something that would have been detrimental to the
whole KZN art community. DIT has since continued to offer classes in
these disciplines to students and community organisations like the
Velobala Group alike. In addition to this, VANSA lobbied the eThekwini
municipality over their cultural policy. Such initiatives and
interventions have ensured that VANSA’s voice is heard.
In the Western Cape, a VANSA logo competition was run, attracting more
than 50 entries. Amongst other things VANSA Western Cape organised a
screening of Vuyile Voyiya and Julie McGee’s controversial The Luggage
is Still Labeled: Blackness in South African Art, and also made
submissions to the city of Cape Town Arts Policy.
Partnerships with existing organisations have been integral to VANSA.
These include VANSA Limpopo’s partnership with PANSA, the Limpopo Arts
and Culture Association (LACA), CAPE, DAC and various art galleries in
different city centres. These include the AVA Gallery, KZNSA Gallery
and the Johannesburg Art Gallery. These partnerships reflect the
support that VANSA has gained and the cooperation it has received from
the visual arts community.
The upcoming VANSA conference aims to consolidate these efforts into
one national forum so as to reflect on and celebrate the achievements
of the sector over the last decade. The conference will also identify
critical issues facing the sector and debate and strategise around ways
of effectively addressing these. A national forum like this will also
enable networking, information-sharing and the development of
partnerships between all role players within the sector, all of which
are fundamental to the transformation, growth and opportunity the
conference seeks to foster.
A list of achievements to date:
4 provincial steering committees (Western Cape, Kwazulu-Natal, Limpopo,
Gauteng) have been established, and meet regularly
+- 1000 members have been recruited nationally
Discussion forums relating to member concerns and issues have been held
in Durban, Polokwane, Cape Town and Johannesburg
Newsletters produced and distributed
SABC was lobbied as it considered planned the cutting back of its arts
programming.
The Western Cape and KZN have been involved in making submissions to
their respective cities cultural policy development
A series of workshops were held in the 4 provinces to discuss the
development of the national conference
Funds were raised to host a major conference on the state of the visual
arts - the first of its kind 12 years after change.
Vansa KZN was involved in averting the closure of the KZN Technikon’s
visual arts department’s sculpture and ceramics sections
A programme was run during the British Council’s Ukuza Conference 2003
which saw a range of visual artists working to document the conference
visually.
Has successfully lobbied the Department of Arts and Culture to develop
a visual arts policy and to begin a survey of the sector
Guest-edited edition of the Artthrob website (November 2005)
A members exhibition has been held in Gauteng at the Premises Gallery,
followed by a tour of the Credo Mutwa Cultural Village in Soweto
VANSA Limpopo has been integrally involved with the Limpopo Arts and
Culture (LACA) and has played a role in the recent launch of Artz-One -
and arts facility in Polokwane.