ART AFRICA - November 2015Add to Favorites

ART AFRICA - November 2015Add to Favorites

Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Read {{magName}} along with {{magCount}}+ other magazines & newspapers with just one subscription  View catalog

1 Month $9.99

1 Year$99.99

$8/month

(OR)

Subscribe only to ART AFRICA

Buy this issue $2.99

Subscription plans are currently unavailable for this magazine. If you are a Magzter GOLD user, you can read all the back issues with your subscription. If you are not a Magzter GOLD user, you can purchase the back issues and read them.

Gift ART AFRICA

In this issue

ART AFRICA – an all-new, bigger and more international publication. The new-look magazine is jam-packed with more than double the content of its precursor ARTsouthAFRICA magazine!

ART AFRICA magazine is a barometer of current trends and discourse, responding to issues and in-depth debates surrounding contemporary art from Africa and the diaspora. ART AFRICA is generously designed and full of stunning visuals. The magazine remains relevant in a time of information overload and will be ever-present at over twelve international art fairs, events and locations across the globe annually.

Various international contributions cover content ranging from curatorial practice, emerging markets, the business of art, Bright Young Things, exclusive interviews, exhibition reviews and more!

Leading opinion, sparking debate and leveraging our already extensive (and growing) global network, ART AFRICA extends its reach to focus specifically on the following four global art regions – Europe; The Global South; North Africa, The Middle East & Asia and The United States.

ART AFRICA Magazine Description:

PublisherBell Roberts Publishing

CategoryArt

LanguageEnglish

FrequencyMonthly

Art South Africa is a contemporary art publication that is on the move, experimental, provocative, intelligent; Art South Africa today sees itself a vehicle that celebrates Africa’s future-present. Focused on African culture, creativity and the arts in general while holding onto its core market - the visual arts - Art South Africa understands that life is meaningless without dreams, tastes hollow without love, and viewpoints pretentious if not profoundly felt. Fusing great heart with great mind proves the greatest challenge; Art South Africa delivers this vision

Edited by Dr Ashraf Jamal (Academic, writer and philospoher and lecturer at Cape Peninsula University and Technicon); our accomplished and highly esteemed editorial board comprises: David Andrew- Wits School of Arts at University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, SA. Chats Devroop- the Programme Coordinator Department of Performing Arts (Music) at Tshwane University of Technology, SA. Jean-Pierre de la Porte- Research Director at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Architecture and Infrastructure in Gauteng, SA. Keith Dietrich- Chair of the Department of Visual Arts and Director of the Centre for Comic, Illustrative and Book Arts at Stellenbosch University, SA. Leora Farber- director of University of Johannesburg’s Faculty of Art Design and Architecture Research Centre (Visual Identities in Art and Design), SA. Judy Hecker- Assistant Curator in the Department of Prints and Illustrated Books, at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York, USA. Koyo Kouoh- the founder and artistic director of Raw Material Company, a centre for art, knowledge and society in Dakar. Christine Kreamer- curator at the National Museum of African Art at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC, USA. Andrew Lamprecht- full-time staff member and currently convenes the Discourse of Art major and Theory and Practice of Art III and IV at Michaelis, UCT, SA. Virginia MacKenny- Senior Lecturer in Painting at Michaelis, UCT, SA. Dominique Malaquais’s- Associate Editor of Chimurenga Magazine and sits on the board of the French Journal Politique Africaine.
Nomusa Makhubu -a lecturer in Fine Art at Rhodes University, SA, an art historian, artist, research team member of the Visual and Performing Arts of Africa (ViPAA) and former council member of the South African Visual Art Historians (SAVAH). Zen Marie- lectures at the WITS School of Art, Johannesburg, SA.

  • cancel anytimeCancel Anytime [ No Commitments ]
  • digital onlyDigital Only
MAGZTER IN THE PRESS:View all