Cape art picks: February 3 2012
The <em>World Press Photo 2011 Exhibition </em>is both a celebration of the medium and a startling portrait of our contemporary world.
The <em>World Press Photo 2011 Exhibition </em>is both a celebration of the medium and a startling portrait of our contemporary world.
Up the Creek is part of a growing trend: rock festivals aimed at those of the X generation yearning to relive the rock authenticity of their youth.
Local vocalist Inge Beckmann is a master of pop-cultural seduction, provocation and innovation.
They employ vastly different mediums and explore divergent themes, but Viviane Sassen and Nandipha Mntambo share a preoccupation with perception.
Avant Car Guard’s day-long exhibition closing party will be an experiment in organised chaos.
Catch South African-born saxophonist Ntshuks Bonga in a rare performance on local soil.
Simon Stone’s new series of paintings, <em>Thrown Together,</em> is an exploration of chance encounters.
When young, bit-chomping, post-bop quartet Tribe dropped their album, <em>Our Language</em>, almost a decade ago, it was the start of things to come.
It’s tough being a creative jazz musician working a circuit where venues prioritise entertainment over art.
Photographer Nontsikelelo Veleko’s haunted holiday snapshots of the Canary Islands set the tone for the Goodman’s Summer Show.