South Africa Sees Shifts in Power
Courtesy Michael Stevenson
The gallery building Buchanan Square is being completely overhauled and will relaunch in May as a new creative precinct in Woodstock, Cape Town, housing the Michael Stevenson gallery.
By Sean O'Toole
Published: April 16, 2008
![]()
Courtesy Michael Stevenson
A three dimensional rendering of the new Michael Stevenson gallery in Cape Town
Changing of the Guard “We are still negotiating,” said an unusually demure Givon in an interview with ARTINFO. “It is not easy to have tough fiery women work together.”
New names on the scene Her present negotiations with Givon aside, Essers is also overseeing a retrospective of the mid-century modernist sculptor Eduardo Villa. Titled “Changing Worlds,” the exhibition is on view at the Nirox Foundation, a private sculpture park north of Johannesburg. Essers, an advisor to Nirox’s press-averse founder (in a previous life as a venture capitalist he was embroiled in a very public financial debacle), collector Benji Liebman, declined an interview on her plans to buy a stake in the Goodman.
Battle for artist loyalties The situation around the Goodman cues a related issue: the fierce rivalries among dealers for the allegiance of key South African artists. Goodman artists Goldblatt and Siopis are currently being tussled over by Givon and a rival Cape Town dealer, Michael Stevenson. Two years ago photographers Roger Ballen and Zwelethu Mthethwa, who is represented by New York dealer Jack Shainman, left the Goodman for nearby Everard Read Gallery; however, neither loss seems to have cost Givon much. Although Mthethwa has presented two sell-out shows with his new dealer, his expressionist pastel drawings are workaday pieces passed over by his international representatives, not an incidental fact given Goodman’s strong focus on Art Basel; meanwhile, Ballen’s single show at the Everard Read to date was a resounding commercial failure. Founded in 1913, the Everard Read, which is jointly hosting the Villa retrospective at Nirox with Essers, has in recent years tried to shake off its stuffy, Anglophile reputation, with mixed results. Since investment banker Paul Harris, owner of Cape Town’s up-market boutique hotel Ellerman House, acquired a small minority stake in the gallery two years ago, rumors have circulated about a new contemporary offshoot.
|
advertisements
|