| Constitution
Hill
2002/3
Date:
2002/3
Client: Johannesburg Development Agency (JDA)
Location: Constitution Hill, Johannesburg
Partners: Nina Cohen, Sharon Cort, Mark Gevisser,
Lauren Segal, Ochre Media
Aim: To design and produce a series of temporary
exhibitions introducing the Constitution Hill precinct to the public
imagination; making connections between the past and present context
of the site and the city around it.
Media: Text, Photography, Signage, PVC Mesh, Silk
Organza, Objects, Tables, Chairs, Concrete, Aluminum, Steel, Sound,
Lighting
The
Constitution is at the centre of South Africa’s transition
to democracy and its guardian is the Constitutional Court. In 2002,
a permanent building for the Court was in the process of being built
on the same site as The Fort, the city’s notorious complex
of prisons, which had closed its doors in 1983 and been derelict
ever since. It had confined, within its walls, Mahatma Gandhi and
Nelson Mandela, two major icons of liberation of the 20th century.
The Johannesburg Development Agency wanted to develop this precinct
into Constitution Hill, an exciting program driven museum, cultural
and educational institution. I was part of a multi-disciplinary
team drawn together by Ochre Media to produce a heritage, education
and tourism feasibility study, and a series of temporary outdoor
and indoor installations on the site as part of the initial research
process.
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Working
with the notion of the palimpsest, we designed 3 major installations
across the prison precinct. Everything we placed onto the site was
printed onto a transparent medium so that the image itself was visible,
but so too were the site and at times, the city beyond the site.
We were making connections between the past and the present, both
in terms of the physical space and in terms of the new Constitution
and Bill of Rights which we used as the template off of which to
develop our content.
The
Fort Entrance
The
installation inside the massive gates and tunnel of the Fort Entrance
interrogated the notion “Who is a Criminal” and introduced
the different kinds of inmates who were held in this prison: from
‘saints’ like Mandela and Gandhi through to violent
criminals; and in-between, the mostly ordinary people whose only
crime was that they were black.
The
Rampart Walk
The
Fort ramparts provide a unique vantage point over the site of Constitution
Hill, Hillbrow, and the City of Johannesburg. The ramparts are a
bridge between the past –- as represented by the old prison
buildings - and the future – as represented by the Constitutional
Court. Using South Africa’s Constitution and Bill of Rights
as a template, this installation of 60 transparent panels maps the
relationship between the site, it’s past and present context
– and looks at where we are today, standing on the ramparts
of a society in transition.
Three
Women
Daisy
de Melker, Nomathemba Funani, Jeannie Noel. A murderer, an ordinary
woman spurred to become a pass resister, and a political activist
from Durban. This was an installation in silk, sound (designed by
composer Philip Miller), photographs and objects which interpreted
the stories of three very different women who spent time at the
Women’s Gaol, in 1932, 1956, and 1976.
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