Tag: Jana Hamman

  • Jana+Koos – The Free Art Project

    The collaborative studio Jana+Koos are known for a variety of projects with unpredictable art execution that ranges from work on small passion projects to global brands. The list goes on and on but I believe the ones they are best known for include Simon + Mary, MESH and Nike ZA. Koos jubilantly reflects on the studio’s work with Simon + Mary as their baby that is now “a healthy young kid in school”. In my interview with Koos we talk about the start of their studio as well as their new project ‘The Free Art Project’ and the concept and ideas surrounding free art

    Jana Hamman and Koos Groenewald walked into what would become their collaborative journey when they first met as graphic design students in Pretoria. After having worked in advertising for a couple of years the duo started their own studio, Jana+Koos. “We’ve always been keen to work on many different kinds of projects, in different capacities and art has always been our way of exploring, trying out new things and making the jokes we can’t in commercial projects.” Koos tells me that this is a vital aspect of the partnership that he shares with Jana. To Koos failed art pieces are the first emphasis and tests for ideas that have the possibility of informing big projects in the future.

    ‘The Free Art Project’ got its name due to the fact that Jana+Koos viewed it as both sensational and dubious, Koos tells me that it didn’t start off as that however. “It actually started a couple of years back when we saw a link that the British Library had released a flicker account with 20 000 high res scanned images from it’s archives.” Stating that the studio has always kept true to creating distinctive, original imagery for every project they take on, this release of imagery from the British Library was a gem they could not leave unfound as the image quality from the archives were not only suitable for commercial use but also free of charge. The duo had planned to use these images from the archives on smaller and personal projects where photography or illustrating it themselves was not required.

    “So we kind of kept a look-out for similar news – and when we saw the Met Museum’s link about their public domain – and the vast amount of classic art one had access to it had us trembling with excitement. I mean there are actual Cezanne, and Manet photos of art big enough to make a building wrap out of.” Printing images for themselves from these archives for their studio and house walls was the next step the project took on before it became an official exploration.

    The Free Art Project took shape when Jana+Koos collaborated with their friend Gareth Steele. Gareth had shown them a glitching site called MOSH where images can be uploaded and you have the ability to ‘glitch yo’self’ and download the artwork afterwards for whatever use you deem fit. “Just messing around we fed some close up imagery of romantic painted boobs through the glitch machine and got some weird (but cool) imagery back, and loved this so much we used it as backgrounds on our iPads and phones etc.  But it felt wasted on just our own personal wallpapers.”

    After having taken this imagery into MOSH, the studio realized that remarkable art works could come from this idea, not only from artists but also from anyone and everyone and they thought about the possibilities that existed for programming techies. Viewing ‘The Free Art Project’ as an experiment, Jana+Koos forged some rules to abide by while working on it, namely that no design and photo shop software that they had purchased may be used to make their new art works (free to download apps only) from the archival imagery. The idea is to choose their best art works and release them publicly as downloadable high-res images in the same way that they were able to download images from the Met and the British Library archives.

    In this week Jana+Koos are planning on releasing the project officially on Instagram and Facebook and see where the project develops naturally. “Everything we do isn’t for press or commerce. Sometimes you just have something that needs to get out. Free imagery and free software or even generative design/programming isn’t new, it’s more a case of wanting to show the potential of putting the two together.” Similar in vision to the ‘con artist’ project Jana+Koos ran a few years ago, they invite people who do not consider themselves to be artists to partake in ‘The Free Art Project’. “We often grapple with the question of what constitutes an artist or not. Creativity really is everywhere, for everyone, and potentially by everyone too.”

    When I asked Koos what some of the challenges were using open source software he had the following to say, “The main part that was hard without our design software was the lack of control in exporting to final sizes and formats. It’s surprising though how much you can do with the free and open source software. And it’s actually been a great exercise, forcing you to try out new ways to get to results, making us realize how stuck we have become in some of our ways of doing things.”

    Koos tells me that at this time there is not an over all theme for the project but that it is about the subjectivity of art, what constitutes what art is and who is in fact an artist and whether painful labour is essential to creating art.

    Koos’ opinion on the idea of free art is expressed as, “Giving away Free art is obviously not viable only as one needs to make money to survive but is a cool project. But seen from the perspective of Free-ing the art and making it accessible to more people it becomes viable and lives on beyond us in terms of helping to build on a culture of art creation and appreciation. It feels cool for us that perhaps someone whose barrier to starting an art collection is money, could own a nice big piece that they love. Even if it is their first piece that starts a collection – that would make us very happy. We’re also happy to share our preferred printers and framers with anyone who needs help on that side. Mail us anytime.”

    Initially I was dubious about the concept of free art, I mean surely giving away an art piece that someone slaved over is not ok? After I had spoken to Koos, I must admittedly say that my view has shifted and I agree with him that making art more accessible to the public will in tern foster a more dynamic society with an appreciation of art.

     

  • Good Good Good ‘Broken Hearts Club’ T-shirt capsule collection by Jana Hamman

    I spoke to Daniel Sher about Good Good Good’s latest capsule collection, Broken Hearts Club.

    Tell our readers a little bit about Good Good Good.

    Good Good Good is a functional basics menswear brand for men of all sizes, manufactured in our family factory in Cape Town. While quality menswear basics is at the core of our brand philosophy, we have recently started to venture into designing and manufacturing more classic and technical menswear items with the aid of some very experimental fabrics.

    The minimal aesthetic of our core basics range also serves as an excellent platform for us to collaborate on more artistic and contemporary menswear capsules, such as this ‘Broken Hearts Club’ T-Shirt capsule with Jana Hamman or our soon to be released capsule with South African artist David Brits, which were both showcased as part of our runway collection at SA Menswear Week.

     

    Tell our readers about the thinking behind the name for the collection, ‘Broken Hearts Club’.

    We feel that the capsule name has a bitter-sweet and very human feel to it. Almost everybody has had their heart broken at some point in their life, whether that heartbreak came via a romantic relationship or from another life situation. The humor in wearing a T-Shirt series of that name/with that phrase splashed across the front chest is something that many people can identify with and hopefully laugh at. It also hints at the small personal victory associated with rising above the emotional lows brought about by a broken heart.

     

    What was the inspiration for or thinking behind the collection?

    We wanted to release a capsule of love inspired T-Shirts for Valentine’s Day. Since our SA Menswear Week show fell on the 3rd of February, it seemed a perfect idea to use the runway as the platform in which to reveal a teaser of the capsule.

     

    Tell our readers about collaborating with Jana Hamman for this collection.

    Jana is always fantastic to work with. We’ve been very close friends for a few years now, and since I was familiar with her artistic style and inspiration, I felt that she was the perfect person to work with in order to realize the vision that I had for this capsule.

    It was also very last minute, and I know she conceptualized and painted for hours the Sunday before our menswear week show. I think it’s fair to say that she killed it!    

    Once the illustrations were down, it was a quick and seamless collaborative process whereby we worked together to decide how and where to place them onto the T-Shirts.

     

    Any other info you would like us to mention about the label or the collection?

    We are busy working on the production of our SA Menswear Week collection, which consists of 2 parts; a standalone Good GoodGood collection and our collaborative capsule with South African artist David Brits. Later this year we also have a few exciting collaborations lined up with a few local artists as well as with some South African institutions which we tend to frequent.

    The collection is exclusively available for purchase from their online shop.

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    Credits: 
    Photographer: Carl David Jones – the entire look book was shot on 35mm film.
    Art Direction: Jana Hamman & Daniel Sher
    Models: Kimberley Davidson and Inge Somdyala
    Hair and Makeup: Wanida Keeping
  • The Kalashnikovv Gallery; rise of the underdogs championing the blue-chip outsiders

    The Kalashnikovv Gallery is a hyper-vigilant and rebellious art movement born out of punches in order to roll differently within the cut-throat art industry. It is an emergency siren in recognition of what the ‘art world’ often is; a blood-sucking species of butterfly. Its Directors, MJ Turpin and Matthew Dean Dowdle are artists and long-time collaborators, which means that they have had to cut their teeth against the sharp edges of art spaces that will rinse you in a blink. They grew sick from a system that would often seize creatives just to chew them up and spit them out, lining some suit’s pocket in the process. The Kalashnokovv Gallery can see the negative spaces and rebels against this commodified bankruptcy by putting artists first; always ensuring that they are treated with respect and receive the lion’s share of profits.

    The Kalashnikovv is an independent gallery which means that it doesn’t have to rely on a model of external funding or grants to survive. It can see that this anaemic model has contributed to the ephemerality of alternative art spaces in South Africa, as well as the gatekeeper status of the well-established, and refuses to accept this as the status quo. This is an unconventional hybrid space, where the commercial gallery practice is used to facilitate project spaces with room for more edgy experimentations. The Directors have somehow learnt to work a system that worked them, with no surrender of their vision to create a resiliently rule-breaking practice able to champion the blue-chip outsider.

    Both Turpin and Dowdle are ‘slashers’, embodying multiple talents and professions (gallery owner/curator/DJ/artist etc.) which enables them to locate artistic practice in places which others may find surprising. They refuse the hierarchisation of different forms of creativity and instead, create hyper-pollinated encounters between multiple inspirations (art, music, fashion, digital culture, branding, design…). While this may be unsettling to those that doggedly guard their own definitions, it is embraced by Kalashnikovv as a necessary weapon against the reductions and redundancies of a pre-defined ‘culture’ completely at-odds with the contemporary.

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    Stasis is not an option and this is reflected in the diverse approaches of Kalashnikovv’s emerging and established artists; in the home that is created for ‘controversial’ practitioners such as Ayanda Mabulu, Vusi Beauchamp, and even the Gallery director/artist himself, MJ Turpin; in the creative collaboration on events such as the Basha Uhuru Youth Day Arts Festival and the Fakugezi Digital Africa Festival; in the experimental multi-disciplinary approach of projects like Kalashnikovv Radio and the Black Cube Sessions; in the collaborations initiated with other galleries… the list of ‘taboos’ goes on and on.  The Kalashnikovv isn’t bound by a fear of failure by someone else’s definition; they are transgressive counter-culture in constant execution.

    In a testament to the true potential of the under-dog, perseverance and perspective have seen the Kalshnikovv grow from strength to strength; soon expanding through the opening of a Gallery in Berlin, which will no doubt act as platform for the continued exhibition of South African excellence and as an interface for further exciting transmutations. Be sure to check out Kalashnikovv’s latest exhibition GIRLS! GIRLS! GIRLS! which features a collaborative encounter between creative practitioner Jana Hamman and the gallery itself, running until 24 May. You can also keep up-to-date with the many manifestations of the Kalashnikovv movement through their Facebook page, Twitter, or Instagram. Here’s to the misfit realisation of a sustainable dissident space and to an insurgent force rearticulating what South African art can mean!

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