INSPIRE / NEWS & ARTICLES

Not quite the garden variety

By

Posted on February 2nd 2008

The Carry Me Away exhibition at the Corner Café in Durban saw 10 local artists and designers celebrate the wheelbarrow.


Wheelbarrows have a rich conceptual history in South Africa where they are the preferred mode of transport for shebeen stock; used to carry infants and the sick to clinics; and are a popular toy for kids of all ages and can double up as hammocks for municipal workers taking a break.

The Carry Me Away exhibition at the Corner Café in Durban saw 10 local artists and designers celebrate the wheelbarrow. The rollcall included Modern Museum's Jean-Paul Brouard, Jenna-Leah Shone and Richard Phipson; Disturbance Design's Christian Mugnai and Trevor Paul; Iron Fist's Lyle Wessels; independents Sarah Holloway, Ross Turpin and George Halloway - whose brainchild the exhibition was; and myself.

The idea of the show was to take "usable items" and decorate them outside in the courtyard to complement the Corner Café's garden. Said Halloway: "The exhibition happened in my head the first time I sat on the back 'deck' of the Corner Café. I saw a bunch of altered garden utensils displayed against the back wall. Then, as I left and drove down Frere Road, I found a guy selling wheelbarrows at his front gate and I bought three. Three grew to 10 and it became an exhibition with some great artists buying in to my idea."

Everyone involved brought a unique idea to the wheelbarrow shape. Mugnai turned his into a lightbox, Phipson made a bookshelf with a clever slogan and Brouard created a cheeky love nest. In turn, inspired by a recent series of designs I did for Revolution Skateboards, I converted the outside shell of my wheelbarrow into a canvas.

The exhibition was very successful in taking art out of a gallery and to the man in the street - or shall I say garden - giving art a different meaning. Future exhibitions with artists designing other garden tools such as spades or saws are also planned.

More info: www.hopeproject.co.za

  • Q108: Cape Town DC

    Magazine Cover
    Cape Town is home to the annual Design Indaba event in February, but “Cape Town DC” – as in Design Central – pulsates all year round.
    R30.00

Facebook Comments