Archive for the ‘ Cape Town ’ Category

Sanell Aggenbach

I was so lucky to meet Sanell Aggenbach (Brett Murray’s wife) a few weeks back. Here’s my piece on her… check out her works, humorous and inspiring! Enjoy!! x

‘I don’t limit myself,’ says Sanell Aggenbach

Sanell Aggenback is a painter who used to teach print making and likes to play with sculptures

 

Artist’s Biography:
Cape Town based Sanell Aggenbach was born in 1975 and graduated from the University of Stellenbosch as a Fine Artist in 1997. Between June 2000 and March 2004 she lectured at the Cape College and has been a full-time artist and designer since 2005. Sanell Aggenbach was part of many group exhibitions: Bell Roberts Gallery Cape Town, exhibitions in Stellenbosch, Johannesburg, Austria, Canada etc. and solo exhibitions at several galleries in Johannesburg, Cape Town, Oudtshoorn and in New Delhi, India. She has been a finalist in several awards (Spier Contemporary Art Award, Kanna Award), a curator at the Bell-Roberts Gallery in Cape Town and a winner of the 2003 ABSA L’Atelier Award, won a residency in Paris for 6 months, and spend 5 months in New Delhi, India as a selected for the UNESCO-Aschberg Residency programme at the Sanskriti Kendra (1999). Also, Sanell Aggenbach published several catalogues and was also involved in several other publications. Her works are part of various private and corporate collections locally and abroad such as the Absa collection, Spier collection, SABC, Red Bull Collection Austria and many more.

Aggenbach is proving to be an important, intelligent voice in SA contemporary art, Alex Sudheim, Mail and Guardian, January 2008

Sanell Aggenbach is Brett Murray’s wife. Brett is a well known South African pop artist. Together they live in Woodstock with their daughter Lola who was born in 2009. Two artists, lot’s of interaction and a similar sense of humour: “My husband Brett is my big inspiration.”

Sanell does art with absurdity: “I don’t limit myself. I paint, I also make sculptures, I play with different mediums.” Her themes are based on history and private narrations as well as social commentary with a gentle humour. “A lot of my work has to do with nostalgia. Nostalgia and narratives make new stories.”

“You don’t have to smile when you stand in front of Aggenbach’s art. I do, though, most of the time. Because I think I get it. Most of it, anyway. Perhaps I can hear her artist’s voice so clearly because I am also a child of the volk, of the white tribe of the furthest south. God’s Chosen People, remember? Aggenbach understands all this and nostalgia is a recurring theme in her work. She makes me miss my granny, the one who told me the horror stories about the British concentration camps every day – her mother and sisters died in those camps,” says Max du Preez, author and political commentator, and continues, “But Aggenbach’s satirical take on this nostalgia is a liberating one. It holds the possibility of a new excitement, a new way of looking at our nation, our continent and ourselves. Perhaps she is going to help us redefine ourselves – even if ‘we’ are not Afrikaners or Africans.”

Art is an excursion.

This excerpt from Max du Preez‘s article is just a taster, I want you to check out Sanell Aggenbach’s work for yourself. One of her pieces that got stuck in my mind is “Degrees of seperation” (2004), a painting that is 3,5m long. “It’s a self-portrait. With each panel, the painting becomes darker. From European to African.”

In 2004, Sanell’s career turned around and with the fear of not being able to support herself, she risked it: “I don’t care, I’m gonna focus on work. I’m gonna make quality works,” were her thoughts that time. Experiencing Paris and high quality, well executed works, she wanted to live up to it. Today, Sanell sells her works of art and enjoys commercial success.

Another series, ‘Graceland’, is based on being Afrikaans, “My own inspiration of heritage and language”. For example, she took old photographs of Apartheid politicians and folded their mouths. Mouth gone. Look at the fold, a feeling of censorship. Another work of this series is about the Miss World competition, where a white South African girl took part. Normal? Strange? “Art is an excursion,” concludes Sanell.

For another project, Sanell painted portraits of photographs she got hold of from photographer Von Kalke: “He lived in District Six and took pictures of Muslims, soldiers, of initiation, of anything. He was the only photographer there. My works reference his works. He portrayed District Six without knowing it.”

“South Africa is not simple, not straight forward. I am an outsider looking at a culture I am part of. It’s an internal dialogue.”

by Antonia Heil

PS. Sanell Aggenbach tries to have an exhibition every one and a half years – you usually find her works at João Ferreira in Cape Town or at Gallery AOP in Johannesburg. Keep your eyes open, Sanell Aggenbach might have an exhibition in April 2011 at the Blank Gallery.

Check out Cape Town’s galleries and be part of the art!

 

Christmas present – Lace and horse clip

Lovely. I use it as a badge though. Handmade in Cape Town. Check it out. Mine is the one on the right with the horse!!

Dokter and Misses Checkas bin

one of my Christmas presents is this very cool Checkas bin by Dokter and Misses (in yellow)…

Chekas Bin by dokter and misses

bent collection
material powder coated mild steel
dimensions 380 (l) x 180 (w) x 520 (h) mm
colour black / white / yellow / blue / red
fits a standard shopping bag
DAMSR017

•available from 44 stanley and 113 long street

I love it so much! Thanx Maaike and Werner!!!

Christmas Day…

 

 

 

… today I have slept soo long… awesome, went for a walk, ate, read lots and slept again… busy cooking some yummy Christmas dinner. Life is very very good. x

Bombay Bicycle Club…


Sooo lucky… yesterday, we finally got a table at the Bombay Bicycle Club in Cape Town. I had the chocolate chilli steak and lot’s of fun… it’s definitely worth a magic visit! Book here.

pic by lookandsee

Milnerton Market Cape Town // portraits

Yesterday we went to the Milnerton Market… always interesting… Desmond says it’s depressing without a camera… so went with one. Enjoy. Interesting faces there… more here.

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Milnerton Flea Market
Visit an excellent junk and second-hand flea market where you can find t-shirts, car parts, computers, Tupperware, telephones, exercise machines, kitchen sets, CD’s, pancakes and ginger beer. The market with everything is open between 07:00 and 16:00 on Saturday and Sunday.

Otto du Plessis Drive | Paarden Island | Cape Town

Cape Jazz / Hilton Schilder

Saturday night we went for a lovely dinner to Ganesh and afterwards for some live Cape Jazz to Tagore… awesome. Check out Hilton Schilder, I will surely get his CD!

Friday culture

What a beautiful day – sleeping late (7am), breakfast at the Kitchen, Michael Stevenson walk around, Goodman Gallery with an Awesome show on: Brett Murray “Hail to the thief” (check it out!!!) & Jewish Museum for the David Goldblatt show… and now off to shoot a wedding! Happy weekend! x


Established Cape Town based artist Brett Murray returns with a new body of satirical work that continues his acerbic attacks on abuses of power, corruption and political dumbness. Whereas his last show, Crocodile Tears, sought to parody Mbeki’s still-born African Renaissance, Hail to the Thief uses the populist imagery and language currently in vogue with the present powers that be , to mock and goad. Murray’s bronzes, etchings, paintings and silk-screens form part of a vitriolic and succinct censure of bad governance and are his attempts to humorously expose the paucity of morals and greed within the ruling elite.

David Goldblatt has been photographing and documenting South African society for over 50 years. Born in Randfontein in 1930 to parents who came to South Africa to escape the persecution of Lithuanian Jews in 1890, he was simultaneously part of privileged white society and a victim of religious persecution and alienation. Motivated by his contradictory position in South African society, Goldblatt began photographing this society, and in 1963 decided to devote all of this time to photography.

Bashews Soft Drinks in Cape Town

… for all the Bashews lovers. I have often been asked where to buy the stuff… here we go:

Look out for Bashew’s 330ml at Spar Grand Parade, Cape Town CBD or call the peeps 0219512233. Lekker, lekker…

Read an older post of the most loved drink.

I ♥ New Markets / Labia Market Cape Town

Things are happening in Cape Town. I am living the good life with many culinary highlights during the week and weekends, shooting many weddings, writing like a maniac, enjoying the sun and Desmond, meeting wonderful people…

I have seen it, but so far haven’t popped in, will do so soon! There’s a new market in Cape Town at the Labia Theatre (every Saturday I heard) The best setting for something wonderful!!

” A haven for all things vintage, retro and the like, You and me and everyone we know is fast becoming a one stop shop for all essential period fashion wares. The setting is the Labia Theatre, where nostalgia gives birth to contemporary ‘what goes around, comes around’.”

More info, of course, on the market’s website. The market’s name is youandmeandeveryoneweknow