Art on the Walls and the Resolution of Offense
The question of principle at stake in the national and international conversation around the University of Cape Town and its shielding of artworks from public view is how one balances a university’s commitment to freedom of representation with a need to address representations that give offense to one party or another, and especially to those who have suffered the ills of history. Since I have been critical of Max Price’s News24 piece and especially of the concept of curation I take to be behind it let me also say I think that piece is a sensitive acknowledgment of the subtleties of racism of importance for the process of transformation, written as it is by a man in the trenches.
The University of Cape Town has had to address questions of institutional offense under real threat to its collections not to mention to its very persons. If I don’t agree with what the Vice Chancellor and his committees have come up with so far, I do appreciate that they have been under the gun to rethink, revise and/or maintain principles rapidly.
The debate so far has been all too inflammatory, especially on social media, where in the usual Donald-Trump way a fair amount of mudslinging has been hurled in various directions, especially at Max Price, who has been called everything from a Nazi to a dictator. I disagree with UCT’s policy—in part because we have yet to have a clear statement of the principle behind it. It is a policy that keeps Willie Bester’s brilliant sculpture of Saartjie Baartman draped in funereal black at the entrance to its library: and a library is a temple of knowledge for any university, the epicentre of its very existence.
But this is a disagreement that can only be worked through if the air-conditioning is turned on and the temperature of the debate reduced. Hurling insults at a Vice Chancellor who is dedicated to patient conversation in the name of equality and transformation is simply not helpful. On the other hand, that so many people are upset might be taken by UCT as a prompt to reconsider its current position.
The question is how far an institution should bend, and in what ways and in what circumstances, to accommodate the sense of institutional offense felt by some of its members. The student response to this sculpture, and to other artwork is born of a deep exasperation. Their perception is that such work yet again fetishizes the black body in a way other racial groups are not similarly fetishized. One can only sympathize with this sense of exasperation, of being singled out. But I also think that while offense must always be acknowledged it is also true that negotiation leading to its resolution can only take place after all parties understand its terms.