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University of Cape Town (UCT) scholars Nkule Mabaso and Associate Professor Nomusa Makhubu’s co-edited, handcrafted creative book There are Mechanisms in Place took the laurels for Best Visual Art Collection in the prestigious 2021 Humanities and Social Sciences (HSS) Awards: Book, Creative and Digital Contribution.
Nkule Mabaso, the curator of the Michaelis Galleries, and Nomusa Makhubu, associate professor (art history and visual culture) in the Michaelis School of Fine Art, were recently awarded the National Institute for the Humanities and Social Sciences (NIHSS) award for Best Creative Collections (Visual Art) in recognition of their handcrafted creative book There are Mechanisms in Place. This was the sixth edition in the series of annual awards presented under the auspices of the NIHSS.
On show: Two local must-see art exhibitions this month Make sure to catch a solo debut from Bonolo Kavula and a new body of work from Craig Smith 07 March 2021 - 00:00 By Sunday Times Reporter Bonolo Kavula, I want to fall from the sky, 2020. Shweshwe fabric and thread.
1. SEWEDI SEWEDI BY BONOLO KAVULA | SMAC GALLERY, CAPE TOWN
Bonolo Kavula describes herself as an experimental artist, and an advocate of simplicity and minimalism. The Kimberley-born multi-disciplinary artist is opening her first solo exhibition, sewedi sewedi at Smac Gallery in Cape Town this weekend.
The artist lives and works in Cape Town and has a BA(FA) from the Michaelis School of Fine Art at the University of Cape Town, majoring in printmaking.
Four University of Cape Town (UCT) academics were awarded two UCT Creative Works Awards for 2020.
Nkule Mabaso and Associate Professor Nomusa Makhubu for their exhibition The stronger we become.
Associate Professor Nadia Davids and Professor Jay Pather were honoured for their production What Remains.
This is Mabaso and Associate Professor Makhubu’s first Creative Works Award, which recognises major art works, performances, productions, compositions and architectural designs produced by UCT staff. Mabaso is the curator of the Michaelis Galleries and Makhubu is a scholar of art history and visual culture, both in the Faculty of Humanities. The work encompasses painting, film, sketches, narrative and an accompanying book. They spoke with UCT News.