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Graphic revelations

Posted on February 19th 2011

Confessions of a Design Thief in New York is an overview of some of Durban-based Garth Walker's work since democracy.


Arguably the greatest proponent of African-rooted graphic design, Garth Walker’s latest exhibition in New York is an overview of his work in “darkest Africa”, since South African democracy.

Confessions of a Design Thief, showing at the Dr MT Geoffrey Yeh Art Gallery until 5 March 2011, is a journey through Walker’s interpretation of South Africa’s city and township vernacular, and photography and graphics from selected personal projects, including the Constitutional Court of South Africa.

Walker’s image archive encompasses all aspects of South African street and township design, from architecture to type, signage and even gravestones. With a keen interest in the question of “What makes me African – and what does that look like?”, Walker’s personal work has essentially focused on this quest, across a range of disciplines.

Garth Walker

Garth Walker trained as a graphic designer and photographer at Technikon Natal in Durban in the mid 1970s.

He later founded Orange Juice Design in Durban in 1995, one of South Africa’s best-known graphic design studios and one of the very few with an international reputation. In 2008 Walker again went solo with his new studio, Mister Walker.

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