We are now taking applications to the postgraduate programs at the Wits School of Arts. Please visit our website for more information.


We are now taking applications to the postgraduate programs at the Wits School of Arts. Please visit our website for more information.



Scenes from Collision by Clare Loveday and Gerhard Marx in the Substation Gallery, Wits School of Arts, October 2006. Photos by Christo Doherty
The young South African composer, Clare Loveday, has recently been making waves with her innovative compositions for saxophone orchestras. Her works for 12 saxophones, Duodecet I & II were played at the International Society for Contemporary Music World New Music Days in Sydney and premiered at the Royal College of Music in London. Loveday credits her experience of interdisciplinary collaboration, while she was a Music Lecturer at The Wits School of Arts, as a catalyst for the emergence of her mature compositional style. As she describes the experience to M&G journalist, Gwen Ansell, her early compositions were "fairly structured, conservative modernism" but her "breakaway from conventional composing`" came through her collaboration in 2006 with visual artist (and then WSOA Drama Lecturer) Gerhard Marx on the work entitled Collision. The work used a wrecked car as a bizarre kind of a musical instrument, with Music students playing on fragments of cellos and violins that had been grafted onto the body of the wreck, "setting up a relationship between sound and image that challenged the boundary between ’seeing’ and ‘hearing’." Loveday concludes that the "Wits School of the Arts was promoting interdisciplinary work and we quite consciously wanted to push that as far as it could go."
In varying ways, all of Loveday’s works represent Johannesburg. In the same interview, she explains: "Jo’burg’s a place non-South Africans find hard to understand. It’s cosmopolitan, rich, poor, edgy, shiny, energetic, rough, dangerous and changing faster than you can blink. And it also has a neglected gentler, tender, more beautiful side. I’m trying to represent all those aspects, mixed up and layered on top of one another."

Scenes from Collision by Clare Loveday and Gerhard Marx in the Substation Gallery, Wits School of Arts, October 2006. Photos by Christo Doherty
Seeing that we just finished our fantastic Aarduino workshops and are about to launch into workshops with Warrick Sony at the Digital Arts Division. I thought this an apt and fun pointer.
FINE COLLECTION OF CURIOUS SOUND OBJECTS from Georg Reil on Vimeo.

Upgrade! Joburg - Digital Arts Soiree
Award winning Digital Artist Christaain Hattingh will be speaking about his work at the next Digital Soiree. His Focus will be on his artistic use of signal processing. To see more of his work please visit this link http://www.k7.co.za
" Christiaan Hattingh is qualified as a metallurigcal engineer and multimedia artist. His main interests lie in the fields of interactive audio-visual synchronisation, artificial intelligence, 3D animation and technologically advanced media." (Unisa Website)

Map to Digital Arts Division - opposite the Wits School of Arts (WSOA)
Soft Serve, Soft Serve… What can we say about Soft Serve?
Firstly… It’s crazy. We mean, really crazy. Like some weird space time flux it tests the boundaries of what we think is real.
Follow the band through a warped storyline revolving around ice cream,
featuring a cast of freaks in hoodies who torment the soft serve
obsessed office worker and the Mr Drippy van run by a crazy ice cream
man who extrudes dodgy soft serve from his mouth.
Soft Serve combines music, sound and visuals in a slightly crazy - no -
insane performance that anyone who’s slightly eccentric or just
downright warped in the head will love. Jam to sounds of the ice cream
jingle from your childhood, giggle hysterically as you see what REALLY
goes into soft serve and run in fear of the deformed freaks that will
haunt your dreams for nights to come.
Soft Serve is Jonathan Crossley (guitars), Janus van der Merwe (sax,
keys and voice), Isaac Klawansky (drums), Stefan Henrico (bass) and
Pippa Stalker (animation and visuals).
Pasop Kinders!
