Lukhanyo Mdingi’s Sports Capsule Collection has launched exclusively through Lemkus

What happens when two of the biggest forces in local design and fashion collide? Well,  Lukhanyo Mdingi’s Sports Capsule Collection is born – exclusively to and through, Lemkus. As an offering for audiences in accessibility to the luxury brand, Lukhanyo Mdingi and Lemkus have joined forces with full alignment for their respective visions for local production and considered design. We are very, very here for it. 

Lukhanyo Mdingi’s eponymous label demonstrates a reverent commitment to the human spirit through the vehicle of design. Since 2015, the label has seen steadfast growth as one of the most critical facets of South Africa’s fashion landscape, while being intentionally renowned.   

This collaborative collection was made on their fifth floor design centre at the ‘NFS workshop’ led by Dennis Collins, and showcases their ongoing vision to bring about the production potential of local design right in the heart of Cape Town. The collection itself embodies Lukhanyo Mdingi’s ongoing dialogue with sporting attire as rich with sartorial histories and cultural relevance, as seen by the label’s SS23 BURKINA Collection.

Some of the label’s achievement include a notable partnership with the Ethical Fashion Initiative, as well as being the recipient of the LVMH Karl Lagerfeld Prize in 2021, and this year, the label became the 2023 recipient of the prestigious Amiri Prize, which includes a year-long mentorship with Mike Amiri in Los Angeles. These ongoing achievements symbolise the potential for a pathway in longevity for aspiring designers in South Africa and across the continent. Lukhanyo Mdingi has shown at SA Menswear Week,  presented at New York Fashion Week and Paris Fashion Week

Unique to the label’s practice, is Lukhanyo’s commitment to re-imagining design as a pathway to restoring dignity and preserving craftsmanship. Through a network of relationships with artisans from Khayelitsha, to the Eastern Cape and up to Burkina Faso; Lukhanyo Mdingi continues to advance a vision for artisanal through the ‘hands that make’, as central to his expression as a designer. Through a focus on natural fibres, textured materiality, perennial tailoring and focused referencing; the label perfectly distils contemporary, African design in the 21st century.

Shop LM Sports Capsule Collection HERE

 

Images by Calhoun Matthews 

Press release courtesy of Lemkus

For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

RESERVOIR Projects on their unmediated, curatorial lens in South Africa’s artistic landscape

The structures organised around the artistic process are intricate; an interplay between communities and commercial markets, art has been mapped within these nuanced (and often contradicting) systems, intended to exist across many forms of experience; from distribution – to commodification – to appreciation and celebration. Whether it is the artists themselves, the galleries and institutions, collectors and audiences – there is perhaps no role that necessitates more function and advocacy than that of the curator. Acting as translators and interpreters between the domain of artists, their work and the rest of the world; curatorship extends beyond mere selection or contextual placement of artistic work. To curators, we often owe the meticulous shaping of a narrative and critical engagement; that ‘moment’ felt by all our senses, when we are standing in the midst of an exhibition, surrounded by tangible demonstrations of a person’s (artist/s) inner landscape. 

RESERVOIR Projects, a curatorial partnership between Heinrich Groenewald and Shona van der Merwe, is a response to this complex ecosystem of relationships, experiences, opportunities and vision of the artworld – both systemically and personally. Shona and Heinrich share a decade-long veteranship in South Africa’s art industry and through the vehicle of Reservoir, they experiment with the role of ‘curator’ through an independent, unmediated lens. Unencumbered by the often-inflated and siloed institutional structure of the art industry, the duo have the refreshing vantage point of focusing wholly on relationships. When most ‘rebellions’ against an institutional framework occur, it is likely born out of contempt – except RESERVOIR exists totally otherwise. No, this is not a response to the art industry in order to ‘disrupt’; rather, RESERVOIR is offering the South African artistic landscape a profound dose of independence; a required remedy to maintain the health of any ecosystem.

Heinrich and Shona by Paris Brummer, Amber Moir artwork in the background.

Heinrich and Shona have each cultivated careers rooted in respect and dedication; particularly centering trust as a basis to engage with artists and collaborators. In asking them how RESERVOIR began, Heinrich explains that “when we started this process together in 2021, we said yes to every opportunity. I think we still do, so long as our focus is always moderated with what the arts ecology can offer us, and what we can offer it. Very soon, we realised that the art world was a very warm, welcoming space – and we had all these people, especially artists, who have supported Reservoir more than we could have ever expected. People who literally lent us their bakkie or offered their hands. When we started curating shows as RESERVOIR, artists were willing to give us work. It has really catapulted us to a place where we have to stand for our credibility – it us only, Shona and I, as the RESERVOIR team.” This unconstrained and personal aspect of Reservoir – in which artists are directly engaged with Shona and Heinrich – lends itself to a distinct focus on quality in each project that RESERVOIR undertakes, across every single detail. 

Shona explains that, “it’s been exactly ten years since we have been in the industry and those years have been so important to our learning. While you’re being an administrator or a junior curator, you get to see the mistakes being made and it has definitely shaped how we approach projects and exhibitions, especially through our relationships with artists. The artworld can be quite chaotic and boundless – the rules are grey and bendy – so we have had to make sure that we create our own parameters as RESERVOIR.” 

RESERVOIR is two years old and can be understood in two phases. Its initial conception was as a nomadic gallery, in which RESERVOIR produced group shows in collaboration with contemporary galleries such as WHATIFTHEWORLD, THK Gallery, THEFOURTH and the Norval Foundation at Boschendal. In its second year, RESERVOIR has found its own home in Bree St, Cape Town – along with a permanent gallery space, has come a natural focus on solo exhibitions. On this, Heinrich says “solo shows offer a much more engaged process with an artist. It is about their work and their work at large – as opposed to curating singular pieces in a group narrative – instead, we are able to focus our energy on their entire body of work into a cohesive narrative that represents them entirely.”

Exhibited at Artissima 2023 BY Dale Lawrence, titled ‘Forget most of what you read’, 2023, clear packaging tape, digital print on paper. Photo by Paris Brummer.

Exhibited at Artissima 2023 BY Dale Lawrence, titled ‘Forget most of what you read’, 2023, clear packaging tape, digital print on paper. Photo by Paris Brummer.

Exhibited at Artissima 2023, Inga Somdyala ‘Chronicle of a Death Foretold V’, Soil, ash, chalk and oxides on canvas. Photo by Paris Brummer.

Exhibited at Artissima 2023, Inga Somdyala, ‘History is Written in the Tracks You Leave Behind’, 2023. Ochre, iron oxides and waxed thread on canvas, Kiaat frame. Photo by Paris Brummer.

In this respect, RESERVOIR is able to function as a bridge for artists; particularly so in a landscape in which funding, infrastructures, grants and residencies are relatively minimal in South Africa’s creative landscape. On their initial foray into collaborating with other galleries, Shona describes how “it made sense to do group exhibitions at the time. Essentially, we were bringing together various parts of artist’s practices that were already well developed that fit together through our curatorial lens. Often, we didn’t have a very clear theme with our shows; it was just a very organic process that occurred while talking to artists in their studios, making connections and finding those common threads.”

Shona expands on how their understanding of curatorship was defined during those early days of RESERVOIR, saying “taste-making and story-telling are some of the most important things you can have in your arsenal in the 21st century, and this is essentially what we are doing as curators. In South Africa, there is a curatorship within institutional or archival frameworks – but almost all art on the continent has a commercial aspect to it, so understanding through taste-making has been very important for us.” 

Now that RESERVOIR has its own space, there is a new level of agency available to Heinrich and Shona’s curatorial partnership. Since February of this year, their shifted focus to nurturing artists for solo exhibitions has signified what the platform can offer – as Shona explains that “having our own space has created more independence for us. We were always independent but in going into another space – there are natural limitations as to what you can do. Our own space has definitely shown us a new level of success that we can achieve with artists.” of this direct relationship with artists, Heinrich notes that, “I had a lot of time to co-create with artists with whatever the reality of the moment was. I think that created a very important facet in how we understand art management. We recognise the critical need for security for artists in what is a very precarious or vulnerable situation; where you’re creating work in your altar space or studio, the realm in which your ideas come to be, and for those works to then go out into this sterile, cube environment for the whole world to view and critique. We have seen firsthand how important it is for those who are facilitating those moments, to have a sense of how profound or daunting this process can be for artists, and to have empathy as curators.”

Recently, RESERVOIR was affirmed in an incredible feat, becoming the recipients of the New Entries Fund award for their presentation at the 30th edition of Artissima in Turin, Italy. The jury, composed by titanic figures in the international art landscape – such as the former directors of the fair Ilaria Bonacossa, Director of the MNAD – National Museum of Digital Art – Milano, Sarah Cosulich, Director of Pinacoteca Agnelli, Torino –  Andrea Bellini, Director Centre d’Art Contemporain, Geneva, and Francesco Manacorda, new Director of the Castello di Rivoli – noted their decision, saying “the exhibition proposed by the gallery RESERVOIR impressed the jury for its coherence and refinement in the dialogue of the two artists involved. The gallery, given its curatorial approach, presents works of great interest in a display of institutional quality.” RESERVOIR showcased artists Inga Somdyala and Dale Lawrence at Artissima. On receiving this award, Shona explains that “we had immense trust in both Inga and Dale, and we were able to create a link and a relationship between artists that would hold for the fair.” 

RESERVOIR. ‘As Far As The Sea’. A solo exhibition by Inga Somdyala. Photo by Paris Brummer.
RESERVOIR. ‘Something about this place’. A solo by Bella Knemeyer, Installation view. Photo by Paris Brummer.

Installation view, RESERVOIR at Artissima 2023. Photo by Matteo Losurdo.
Inga Somdyala in residence with RESERVOIR. Photo by Sihle Sogaula.

Heinrich notes, “both Inga and Dale explore post-coloniality through their practice, by means of referencing themes of a post-Apartheid South Africa, sourcing inspiration from authors who write about this precariousness transition, and by exploring material forms that speak to the ideas of land, identity and nationhood. So for us, it was about expressing that cohesion between two artists that come from different backgrounds, through a variety of unifying links.”

To be emerging as a gallery and platform, with notoriety built on trust, incisive attention to detail and an unbridled approach to the possibilities for curatorship; RESERVOIR are proving just how central the notion of relationships and care is for building South Africa’s artistic future. We cannot wait to see what comes next for this beautiful partnership. 

Upcoming exhibitions at RESERVOIR:
‘group-psyche’
A solo exhibition by Jeanne Gaigher
Opening: 2 December 2023 

Follow Reservoir HERE

Written by: Holly Beaton

For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

Searchlight drop reworked tracks from their debut album, titled ‘Remixes’ ft. Atjazz, Wipe the Needle and Afroforce

Irish producers Zero T and Beta 2, Searchlight, have selected three of their favourite electronic producer teams to rework tracks from their debut, self-titled, neo-soul album; Atjazz, Wipe The Needle and Afroforce. 

Lee Gomez under his Wipe The Needle moniker takes ‘We Could Be More’ featuring Manchester’s new school, soul king [ K S R ], right through to deepest West London. The remix drives with broken beats, uplifting strings, choirs and soulful keys leading to a change that feels like a true celebration of the current resurgence of Bruk in the capital’s clubs.

UK House music legend Martin Iveson AKA Atjazz declares war on the time signatures on ‘Can We Go Back’ Ft. Tolü Makay. The mix begins downtempo, playing neatly with polyrhythm synths and Tolü’s vocals before cleverly and beautifully, switching to an up-tempo Atjazz groove. 

Bugz In the Attic core members Mark Force and Afronaut team up under their Afroforce guise to take on Breathe, once again featuring Irish rising star vocalist, Tolü Makay. Originally co-written by Goldie himself for Searchlight’s debut album, the remix sees Mark and Orin replay the keys and flip the song into a modern, bruk-wise dancefloor bomb.

Stream ‘Searchlight Remixes’ HERE

Press release courtesy of Only Good Stuff

Levi’s® and Barbie Ferreira Partner on New Capsule Collection

Barbie Ferreira has won the hearts of fans throughout the world as an incredible actress, creative force and style icon. Since its founding in 1853, the Levi’s® brand has created some of the most iconic jeans and garments by approaching new designs with daring perspectives. As part of their continued partnership, the Levi’s® brand and Barbie combined their creative vision on a new capsule collection that utilizes a recurring bunny doodle hand drawn by artist and best friend, Ben Evans.

With a strong point of view on styles, fit, and color, Barbie worked closely with the Levi’s® design team to capture her vision for the collection. The Levi’s® x Barbie Ferreira capsule collection includes an oversized Long Dress Coat, crafted from washed black denim, with Ben’s doodles printed on the piping along the interior seams. The collection’s Lace-Up Corset, with lace-up details in the front and smocking in the back to allow for an adjustable fit, can be paired with the Lace-Up Flare Jean, a mid-rise flare with lace-up details at the side hips and a back-patch emblazoned with Ben’s’ bunny drawing. Bottoms also include a pair of ‘90s 501® Jeans, featuring an allover graphic bunny print made with a bleach splatter effect, and a chartreuse pleated skirt with a raw, distressed hem. For tops, the collection also offers a Second Skin Top, a tight mesh long sleeve shirt with a ‘90s amoeba style print and thumb holes, and an Oversized Bunny Tee, a relaxed black tee with a glow-in-the-dark bunny graphic. To top it all off, the collection offers the matching reversible Tulip Hat, made with chartreuse denim on one side and the ‘90s amoeba style print on woven fabric on the other. 

“This collection was inspired by my love for beautiful scenes and creating a story with my everyday wardrobe. I wanted to play silhouettes that are reminiscent of costuming from my favorite movies. It was important for me that the collection lived somewhere between a dark fairytale and a nostalgic dream,” said Barbie about the collaboration.

To bring the campaign to life, Barbie turned to her longtime collaborator and friend, Petra Collins, to execute her vision. Petra Collins is a multi-talented artist and director whose distinct style of new-wave feminist photography is known for elevating the subject with rich textures and unique lighting. After closely planning the creative execution, Barbie and Petra orchestrated a special photoshoot that beautifully captures Barbie in the collection with Petra’s other-worldly visual touch.

Shop the The Levi’s® x Barbie Ferreira capsule collection HERE  and in Sandton and V&A stores.

Press release courtesy of The Bread

For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

The Do’s and Don’ts of being HOT, HOT, HOT this summer

It’s been a couple of years since the term ‘Hot Girl Summer’ became a part of our everyday vocabulary when Megan Thee Stallion coined the phrase and released a mega-hit song to accompany it. In response, some butthurt frat boys (by which I mean Tom Hanks’ son) had to declare a white boy summer because, damn, it seems my gender can’t allow women to have anything. Regardless of the phrase’s origins or how much it’s used in the current slew of internet slang, there is no doubt that as soon as temperatures start to rise, the serotonin and sex drive of the youth spark at a now internalised understanding of just what it means to have a hot girl/boy summer.

Now, while hot girl/boy summer looks different for everyone, there are a few telltale signs across the board to signify that you are indeed in the midst of one such summer. You’ll be socialising more, way more, as you wake up from your winter social slumber. This will probably also be after the inevitable but painful cutting of the cord with your cuffing season cutie, so my condolences on that. Back to it, though, whether more socialising means you are at Blondie from lunch sipping on palomas and building up a sweat – just to have to yell at the German tourist you’re trying to flirt with as soon as the sun sets. Or, it simply means getting back on all of the dreaded apps, and whether you go by he/she/they or them: it’s time to get flirty, sultry, saucy, and even slutty.

This kind of behaviour comes with some sense of self-serving hedonism; that ‘controlled but slightly scary’ self-indulgence that can sometimes border on self-harming. So, today, I want to change the narrative a bit. Look, I’m as big a fan of escapist hedonism as you’re likely to meet outside a sex dungeon in a Berlin bunker, but having hot boy summered a bit too close to the sun on multiple occasions (somewhat of a modern fuckboy version of the Greek tale of Icarus, if you will) I am intimately aware of some of the fallout that mostly follows such sweet summers. Because of this, I want to set up a bit of a guide to having a hot, hot, hot summer without hating yourself or the predicament you find yourself in when April rolls around.

Photographed by Angela Roma, courtesy of pexels

Photographed by Cottonbro Studio, courtesy of pexels

Here are the do’s and don’ts of being hot this summer.

First and foremost and it pains me that I have to make this such a pertinent point (but homies have made it clear that they don’t understand or don’t care). MAKE CONSENT A PRIORITY. Consent should not only be a key pillar of any relationship you’re in, but there also needs to be an ongoing understanding that consent is constantly being negotiated. Maybe you made out outside a bar, or damn, perhaps you have even slept together before. None of that means that every interaction between you and that party is consensual, no matter what. I don’t want this getting convoluted. Basically, keep your creepy little claws to yourself unless you have consent. 

This brings me nicely to the next absolute must-do: communicate. Now, I know you’re thinking, “I do”, and unfortunately, I’m here to burst your bubble. Most people reading this, me included, are rather bad communicators. So, what am I really referring to here? Well, simply put, I think it’s the bare minimum to be open and honest with your wants, needs, desires and boundaries in any newfound fling or FWB situation you find yourself in. Is the relationship strictly casual? Are you seeing other people as well? Do you want to see other people? These are all simple questions that we often get too spooked to address or to open up a conversation about in fear that we lose what we have or hurt the person we’re addressing. I can speak out of experience and a newfound understanding due to polyamory. Not knowing and the simple lack of emotional information always hurts far more. At the end of the day, communication is an unbelievably powerful tool. A way for us on an individual basis to bring another person or people into our world by explaining to them how we think, how we feel, how we can be better to them and how they try to be their best selves for us. So let’s stop the vagueness because we all know precisely what the answer is when we get asked, “So what are we?”.

You may already be in the thick of your sexy summer and you may already have dealt with some of the dilemmas mentioned above. However, there is still one absolute non-negotiable that I think every excellent sexy summer includes, and obviously, that is lots and lots of sex. But here, I want to hammer in the point that a good hot girl/boy summer includes lots and lots of safe sex. Listen, I can’t control this, and at the end of the day, you have to do what you want to do, but consider that it’s never just you putting your health at risk. To this day, it always surprises me how few people regularly test for STIs. Let’s play a little game: When last did you test, how often do you test, and then ask when last (if ever, which is a scary thought) those around you tested? See the dilemma? I’m all about fun, but I’m all about safe fun. So here’s a little tip: if you meet a guy that says he can’t wear condoms or that they feel bad, he’s lying. And if you ever meet someone who can’t show you a recent test or isn’t willing to test, RUN. South Africa has rampant levels of STI infections across all classes and groupings – outside the ongoing HIV epidemic – so please, please, please go and get comprehensive tests done at institutions like Marie Stopes or order home testing kits from Famka or similar sites, particularly if you have multiple sexual partners.

Photographed by Tim Samuel, courtesy of pexels

You’re well on your way to having the hottest and sauciest of summers, but I want to consider one last point, and it’s precisely that: consideration. In these times, be present and considerate not only to those around you but also to yourself. Have good, well-rounded inner dialogue to check in on your emotional well-being, centre yourself in well yourself rather than all the outward distractions, and be the thing in which you route your joy. It’s safer than rooting your happiness in a surfer bro that may or may not have chlamydia. Just food for thought.

Written by: Casey Delport

For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

Guys, Did Snoop Just Troll Us?

Few figures stand quite as an ‘earthly representative of marijuana’ than Snoop Dogg. Unc reportedly smokes around 80 blunts a day and has advocated its benefits for many, many decades. 

So, when Snoop posted a graphic to his socials saying, “After much consideration & conversation with my family, I’ve decided to give up smoke. Please respect my privacy at this time.” it seemed pretty obvious, and not cryptic at all, that Snoop had decided to entirely quit smoking weed. With an outpouring of support, confusion and humour by fans and industry-peers alike, we were suddenly faced with a reality in which Snoop Dogg is…sober? 

According to the platform Go Smoke Free as reported by News24, “the online searches for “quit weed” have skyrocketed more than ten times the normal average volume in one week and analysis of Google search data reveals that online searches for ‘quit weed’ exploded 1,152% worldwide after Snoop Dogg’s announcement.” With Snoop declaring an intention to ‘give up smoke’, it seemed many people who may have been entertaining the idea or have been wanting to change their lifestyle, were suddenly given a kind of  nod-of-approval that most stoners would never expect; from Snoop himself. Even fellow rappers declared this new wave led by the Doggfather, with Meek Mill writing on his socials, “Ima go to Dubai and completely stop smoking. Ima follow snoop, my doctor said I got a lil bit emphysema in a chest if I don’t stop smoking it cuts my lifeline in half, I was addicted to the nicotine and this new weed got too many chemicals and too risky to play with my mental!”

‘SNOOP SILO DISTRICT’ by @vtsek_studios

Snoop’s ‘Give up Smoke’ Announcement, courtesy of @snoopdogg IG

Then, in a marketing spin on this entire saga, Snoop released a video on his socials in what seemed to be his first appearance publicly speaking about this lifestyle change: until it was  quickly revealed to be an ad with Solo Stove, using the phrase ‘give up the smoke’ to refer to their line of smokeless fire pits. With an upwards of 2.5million ‘likes’ on the clip via IG, one user commented, ‘Snoop never misses a paycheck!’. Now, media outlets are reporting various things: that this was all just a slow, ingenious marketing stunt to bring attention to Snoop, Solo Stove and the brand deal, while others are saying that Snoop is merely using his business acumen to tie together a big lifestyle shift with securing a deal. Additionally, it could be the marketing finesse of Solo Stove jumping on the bandwagon within the week that Snoop made his announcement; quicker turnarounds have happened. 

Snoop Dogg is notorious for taking on a myriad of jobs and appearances, all across the world. In this compilation by HipHopDx, the video showcases Snoop in a variety of endless product deals – and this is notwithstanding his appearance on seemingly random songs like Thai rap group, Thaitanium’s ‘Wake Up City’. Snoop has reportedly said that “if you can pay, then I’ll do it.” In a world where celebrities are often trying to conceal their drive to make money or convey their ‘selective’ artistic approach to the work they do, Snoop is always refreshingly real in demonstrating that money is truly his goal – and that being Snoop, he’s worth every cent. 

We don’t know anything more about Snoop’s supposed decision to ‘give up smoke’ – whether this is merely a cryptic marketing ploy for Solo Stove, or where he truly has decided it’s time to live life without ganja. All we know is that many people in Snoop’s comment section were considering joining him. If this shows us anything, it’s that Snoop Doggy Dogg is as relevant and powerful a cultural, hip hop legend than ever.

For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

Gaston Blurry – the new multimedia project ‘Sampling for a Cause’

The creative process requires continual attempts at renewing enthusiasm; it is that intangible, abstract energy of creativity that makes it very difficult to tame – and demands of people, constant reshaping when harnessing its force. An initial concept or feeling can take three years to emerge (as we will learn is the case with Gaston Blurry) and still, it remains quite hard to define what it really is. This, I suppose, is the point of the art of multimedia projects specifically, as a creative pursuit: nuance and layers encase its purpose with subtlety, while offering its viewers a multi-layered, sensory experience. The best projects often make us first ask, “what actually is this?”. 

Gaston Blurry (a brilliant play on ‘Glastonbury’, of the iconic British festival started in the 1970s) is the alter-ego and multimedia project by Parisian-born producer, DJ and engineer Boogie Vice – another alter-ego, of Valentin Barbier. Living in South Africa now, Valentin is known locally for his work with the likes of Pierre Johnson, Deep Aztec and Mx Blouse. Though, this path to music wasn’t always Valentin’s plan, even if it is proving to be precisely what he was always meant to do, “My entry into music isn’t so sexy. I’m originally an environmental science engineer – and I just didn’t want to work in an office or work in corporate. I was making a bit of music before, but nothing really serious or professional. I decided to use music as a tool to see if I could escape the corporate world and to have a lifestyle of travelling and freedom…all those hippy ideas – and it worked. Obviously I am very passionate about making music, but I wasn’t a talented ‘born artist’, it was just that music might lead to freedom.”

Gaston Blurry by Keegan Foreman

Valentin was initially most comfortable behind the scenes as a producer – but was eventually led to create his own project or moniker, explaining that “Boogie Vice was a project that came after being in the industry for a few years. I had already been through three different monikers, and after I experienced some imposter syndrome – being that I wasn’t a natural born artist or had a strong message to share – Boogie was my way of expressing the fact that all I really wanted to do is make music that makes people happy and dance. It was no deeper than that.” Such was the success of Boogie’s entry onto the scene, with early tracks ‘Bel-Air’ (an incredibly crafted and punctuated adaption of the iconic ‘Fresh Prince of Bel-Air theme song) and ‘Bad Girl’ at n°1 of the Nu Disco Beatport chart for several months.

Valentin had never planned to work for other people. It happened naturally and as a consequence of his focus on the technical part of making a song; being a trained engineer, Valentin is inclined to apply this analytical, detail-oriented style of thinking to his work. Engineers are scientists, their thinking shaped to be able to problem-solve and constantly evolve in order to optimise whatever is in front of them – hence, Valentin’s music is precise – a kind of dream come true for artists who are perhaps needing the meticulous influence that Valentin can bring to a track or project. Valentin has worked with French legends like hip hop giant DJ Pone and master-of-house music, Étienne de Crécy“Etienne was a big idol to me, so to have him reach out to me was crazy.” and this scientific style or approach is perhaps why Valentin is also a master sampler. To take snippets of existing sound recordings and recontextualize them to create entirely new compositions is an artform – and one that Valentin seeks to do, as a means to pay homage to music history and a vision for new sounds. 

With Boogie Vice as a growing extension of himself, I ask Valentin what the impetus was to create Gaston Blurry: an alter-ego that uses visual and auditory samples, spliced through both digital and analog methods, “Two years ago, I was a bit bored of Boogie Vice because I didn’t actually know where to go. I’ve always released more house music, but people here in South Africa were inviting me to play disco. I needed to find something with more of a consistent concept around it. I dreamt about the name, actually. It was so weird, I woke up and was like ‘Yo this is cool! I hope I remember it in the morning’ and thankfully, I did remember it.” 

Gaston Blurry Stills

When Valentin came across the generative ability of analog video synthesisers, he knew Gaston Blurry would become more than just a sonic project. Instead, Gaston Blurry is emerging as a collage of sampling techniques. As he explains, “I have always wanted to try and escape my computer. I wanted to work more analog and it took me about a year to figure out how to make it work. I don’t do editing on my laptop.” The visuals for Gaston Blurry are constructed out of abstract visual patterns, shapes, and textures, made by manipulating various parameters such as colour, shape, and modulation. This hands-on, tactile nature of analog video synthesisers adds a creative and improvisational aspect to the artistic process – and Valentin then overlays this onto visual samples, while the sound is from his immense archive of samples, with a focus on disco records (Valentin currently has an immense archive, waiting to be worked with.)

The visual samples for Gaston Blurry are pulled from French archives – old-school footage, the first track is titled ‘It’s Up to You’ has just dropped through Circa 99 (with an Étienne de Crécy remix dropping on 24th November), and features specifically French protests and freedom marches from the 20th century. For an artist who initially thought he didn’t have anything to say, this project is a kind of full-circle moment; maybe a new existential era for Valentin / Boogie? Though, music and freedom have always been indistinguishable for Valentin – so Gaston Blurry feels like an organic progression – even if he describes his role as more of an orchestrator than anything else. Valentin remarks, “it’s not my message, it’s the message of the sample. It is definitely linked to what I think, but I want to let the project speak for itself. The new track I’ll be releasing is ‘California Sunshine’ which as you know is a really great kind of acid – so I’ll be using footage related to drug legalisation. So, yes it resonates with my thoughts, but it’s more about how collectives and people respond to these big questions in our society.”

It’s up to you – Circa 99

IUTY 19063 by GASTON BLURRY

Gaston Blurry is obsessed with the sample as a transformative tool. Maybe it’s the nostalgic or emotional resonance, or the texture it adds to compositions – or the way a sample can constantly travel through time and be rebirthed over and over again, through different hands and minds. This style of repurposing by Valentin makes me wonder if it’s the environmental scientist in him that is also driving this concept forward: a kind of recycling that is regenerative, making what has already existed notable and exciting for a new audience, in a new context, in a new century. Though in its infancy, you heard it here first; Gaston Blurry is a creation for the ages, harnessing the very coolest of creative and technological pursuits. 

Listen to Gaston Blurry’s ‘Its Up To You’ HERE

Follow Gaston Blurry HERE
Follow Boogie Vice HERE

Written by: Holly Beaton

For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

The creative triumph of Artclub and Friends and Brand-Building as an Endurance Test

Running a brand is an endurance test. For Artclub and Friends founder, Robyn Keyser, this has meant being measured against all manners of experience, learning, adaptation – systems and operations – quality control, design-think and refining a point of view, through the lens of the label’s signature array of products and offerings. For the last seven years, Artclub and Friends has been unrelenting in its rise as one of South Africa’s most important fashion brands – in addition to this, is its role as a community network. Artclub has a cult-like following of fans, customers and artists for whom the brand stands as a symbol of creative triumph – and the hopes and potential of a local fashion scene to be proud of. Robyn is a mentor to many and a titan of industry and in the most pared back, behind-the-scenes way.

The late, great Riky Rick was an ardent supporter of Robyn’s work – putting her on, back in 2019, when the label as Robyn describes ‘was a small, passionate idea and a stand at the Biscuit Mill’ – Riky would go onto be a close friend of the label and inspire a culture of local, fashion-centric energy within South Africa. When Tanya Slater,  Artclub’s ‘conductor’ (whose strength is orchestration and minute details that have seen the label go from strength – Tanya ‘keeps the ship sailing’, Robyn notes in our conversation) joined the label in 2019, everything changed. For a founder and creative director, going it alone is incredibly challenging  And Robyn will be the first to tell you that Artclub’s endurance and its success is precisely because of the team behind it, who along with Robyn and Tanya, is comprised by Galima Alexander (Garment Technologist and Quality Controller), Jess Speller (Studio and Stock Manager), Abigal Chamaita (Watershed Store Manager) and Chelsea Mutizira (Watershed Store Sales Assistant).

The team behind Artclub and Friends, captured by Anke Loots

On Artclub’s earliest lore, Robyn says; “Technically, Artclub was launched in November, 2016. It survived for about three months before I ran out of money and had to go back to the film industry. I laugh about it now, but that was a big heartbreak – it was funded from bartending and styling money. I totally underestimated how expensive it was to produce or how long it took to actually design things.” The vision was to create local clothing that was ‘made by artists, for artists’. Taking her cue from the unity inherent to ‘uniforms’ as a dress code, Robyn hadn’t foreseen the difficulty in building a small-business from the ground up, at 22 years old. The boldness of youth has gone onto be one of Robyn’s key assets as a designer – nobody can dress youth, like young people can. This remains true for the brand whose design DNA is immediately recognisable – clean, deliberate and incredibly well-made. Robyn reflects on the early days, “in July 2018 – after working on it part time – I got my first studio space. A year later, Tee (Tanya) joined. Artclub exclusively existed as a Biscuit Mill stand and an online store – it was very slow. At the time, people loved the idea of local brands but they weren’t really buying local. We had more ‘fan’ style engagement online then, than actual customers. I personally believe our conversion from an admirer of the brand to customers, kicked off during the pandemic.” 

Initially, one might think of Tanya’s role as being Robyn’s right-hand in the brand, but in our conversation, it is quickly clear to me that the two of them are more akin to a Yin-Yang, two-halves of a whole than anything else. In fact, the structure of Artclub’s team of women is far less top-down than it is a circle of people with incisive skills, each with a profound role to contribute. Robyn describes her and Tanya’s relationship, “Artclub totally changed when Tee joined, for many reasons. Firstly, we doubled our work-power! Also, I was able to have a soundboard and someone that knew me – and had a fresher view of the brand, from the outside looking in.  Artclub wouldn’t be where it is today if Tee hadn’t taken a huge leap of faith to join. When it’s been hard, to have one another is invaluable. People say ‘don’t work with your friends’ – but when it works, it’s unmatched.” 

One of the greatest fashion fallacies is that it’s easy to make clothing. You just design, choose fabrics and have your pieces made: right? With the dwindling of South Africa’s textile and garment industry in the last two decades; though this a story for another day, Claire Bisseker’s report from 2009, ‘Hanging By a Thread’, provides a clearer picture as to the intersection between globalisation, job-loss and lack of investment. As Tanya says, “I didn’t study fashion at all so when I came in, I was like – ‘oh, t-shirts, easy!’. It’s absolutely not. With every single production run that we do, we learn something. It teaches us a lot of patience and a lot of resilience.”

It is precisely this greater environmental context rife with challenge that makes Artclub’s success a triumph beyond simply their own endurance. The brand represents an early, ableith small, wave of young designers and entrepreneurs determined to redirect the course of local fashion – to this degree, Robyn is Mother. Young brand owners who know Artclub will tell you that Robyn has hacked many of the cheat codes to make what is happening now in South African fashion possible. Regarding the context in which Artclub was built, Robyn explains, “I’ve spoken to a few brands of our size and positioning in other parts of the world and we have compared notes. There are things that we just don’t have here – like textile hubs or incubators. I spoke to a designer from Italy and they were telling me about the funding options, the mentors – the sharing of manufacturing leads. The ability to go from an idea to being in-store, and it being quality and affordable, is nearly impossible in South Africa. Usually, something has to give. I think we are seeing a shift, though, from so many brands. We are totally in our infancy – Artclub as a brand – but more than that, as a local design industry.” In a truly South African way, this mood of hope laden with challenge often proves to be a kind of fuel for the country’s creatives.

The team behind Artclub and Friends, captured by Anke Loots

As Robyn explains, there is a shared spirit among brand-owners in South Africa, “Ayo Ojo – the fashion journalist AKA Fashion Roadman– was in Cape Town and he said that he was so taken by how everyone put everyone else on – he was going to brands to find out about what they do and all they wanted to do was tell him about other brands! There is this awareness now that if I win, you win – that if someone is buying locally from us, then they’re opening to buying locally from other brands. There is this co-operative flow with the fashion space now.”

The perennial thread throughout Artclub’s growth lies in its central philosophy. Like a kind of living, breathing manifesto (one that is always changing too, according to Robyn) – is this notion of ‘by artists, for artists’. I ask Robyn of the hindsight around her initial product offering: creating the perfect, locally made T-shirts with prints by collaborating artists – now, Artclub is fully-fledged clothing brands; as Robyn says, “when you start a business when you’re 22 or 23 – you don’t really have a business plan. I had a gut feeling and the name came to me, along with this very blurry idea of what it might look like. I knew I was going to bomb working in a corporate job. All I knew was that I wanted to work with artists. This year, we’ve come to realise what Artclub is : a vessel to amplify artists. We learn these things as we go.” Artclub has never done any influencer-marketing or paid people to wear their pieces; for Robyn and Tanya, their belief is that organic growth through relationships is the Artclub pathway to community-building. 

Now, the ‘term’ artist has become more enriched as Artclub and Friends has grown; “The people that are “making” our clothes are artists. I’m actually more of a product developer than a designer. I am so happy to let go of any need to be a designer; I’m so into product and tactile things and working with the artisans around us. Galima, our garment technologist, has taught us so much about how to make good clothes. Our first sweaters? She said, ‘are these in store? You need to bring them all back!’ ” muses Robyn. I ask how she would now describe what they do; “I used to use the word streetwear to describe what we do –  mostly because it was how other people described us. The more I’ve come to understand the term ‘streetwear’ and it’s quite specific history, the more I would liken what we do to a mix of contemporary apparel and ready-to-wear – with definite elements of streetwear.”

This conversation would be amiss if we didn’t broach the subject of being a woman and a brand-owner. I ask Robyn and Tanya what their experience has been so far, to which Robyn explains that “A lot of the artists we are working with are women and I have only hired women so far, which is not a hard-rule that I might always stick to – it’s just worked out that way and so far, it’s been amazing. I think we are getting to a point where women aren’t waiting to be offered things, we are taking up space. Imposter syndrome is a thing and I think it’s very prevalent among women. I don’t have a single woman in my family who has ever attempted anything close to something like this.” Among women, power is generally expressed through a circle – this goes back to Robyn and Tanya’s duo-ship and how the two of them lead the Artclub and Friends team.

The team behind Artclub and Friends, captured by Anke Loots

Robyn professes that if we looked in her wardrobe, we would never know that she worked in fashion. This is perhaps the reason that the sense of ‘uniformity’ within Artclub’s design philosophy feels so authentic; Robyn would rather people bought less overall and bought more locally – without compromising on quality. Robyn explains that “a lot of my designs are informed by my own feelings around clothing. I have realised that I am much more of a product developer than a designer; I love product and letting go of the need to prove myself as a designer has been really great. In a South African context, we have a huge focus on sentimentally – designing for our customers to have something special that will last for a long time, without it being hugely expensive.” Critical to Artclub’s presence is their muted palette – with pops of the iconic cobalt blue synonymous to the brand – although, Robyn mentions that we can expect more colour ahead. Alongside this, is a focus on construction that makes the silhouettes coming out of Artclub, a jewel in the crown of South African fashion. Robyn reminds me of something I noted sometime ago: local fashion brands in South Africa are inherently sustainable, for their small-scale and commitment to the social and artistic enhancement of customers, manufacturers and sellers. 

It is said that life occurs in seven year cycles. In astrology, every seven years, we undergo a profound shift in our reality and thinking. It is no wonder, then, that Robyn responds to my question for their vision ahead with the idea that they are entering a new phase; despite Artcluband Friends being in itself-described infancy, they have also paid many dues. Ahead, is the possibility of what more is in store. Robyn’s last words express a promise on the other side of the proverbial endurance test, “we are finally in a place where our head is above water – we have this amazing privilege looking forward, as we ask ourselves – who could we be? What do we want to focus on, what does our next phase of having a team look like? Where do we want to travel? I can’t believe we are finally getting to think in this way, but it’s happening.” 

Visit Artclub and Friends HERE 

All imagery by Anke Loots 

Written by: Holly Beaton

For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

Brandon Markell Holmes releases new single ‘Fuller’

Brandon Markell Holmes, a “slow-burning vocal-house juggernaut” (Rolling Stone) has released his new single, ‘Fuller’ on toucan sounds in anticipation of his second full-length album, coming in the spring of 2024. 

Described by Billboard as a vocalist who goes from “a low simmer to boiling passion,” and appearing on the GRAMMY-nominated Gorillaz album ‘Humanz’, Brandon Markell Holmes has swiftly become a go-to collaborator for some of the hottest house producers in Brooklyn and beyond, since relocating from Chicago where he was born and raised. His latest self-titled vinyl pressing, out on toucan sounds, sold out and features mixes by Derrick Carter, Dee Diggs, musclecars, and more.

Fuller 

His latest single ‘Fuller’ features his deep soulful vocal and has an atmosphere that brings you through an emotional journey. The pack includes a b-side, ‘I Bet’ with producer Liam Berkeley, and an extended edit of ‘Fuller’ made by label boss, Robert PM, that acts as a deceptively simple DJ tool.

Stream ‘Fuller’ HERE

Press release courtesy of Only Good Stuff

The Plastics release single ‘Nobody Like You’, the final track off their new album ‘EVE’

Nobody Like You is a groove soaked retrospect of what was and what went wrong. The upbeat nature of the song marries beautifully with the melancholic yet hopeful undertones of the lyrics. Woozy, jazz and dream pop infused guitar licks, colourful synth arrangements and a funky, driving drum and bass line interlock to create the backdrop for the emotional rollercoaster to freefall.

The Plastics are a beloved Indie-Psych pop band from South Africa. The Plastics music is filled with evocative lyricism and pop sensible song writing with vibrant grooves, sparkling guitars and vocal hooks .The Plastics have a thirst for creating music and art and aim to captivate, inspire and push their limits with every release. A 3 x South African Award Nominated group with a dedicated following. The Plastics are a contemporary for lovers of MGMT, The Strokes, Still Woozy and Phoenix. They have played every major music festival and extensively toured South Africa, toured Europe And the UK twice and Australia once. The Plastics have a thirst for creating and sharing their music and art and aim to captivate, inspire,and push their limits with every release.

Say, “thuh plas-tiks”
Collective jams, sleazy sweet mumblings.
Put it in, turn it on, turn it up, turn it up, switch tracks.
Falsetto sounds from Cape Town, listen close with your clothes off.

The Plastics EVE Album
The Plastics Between Hours single 
The Plastics Crazy Love Single
EVE is also out on November 10th and contains previous singles: Crazy Love and Between Hours as well as two other brand-new songs titled Thrashing Inside the Net and Eve. The five-track offering is a glimpse into the bands more bedroom and dream pop leanings whilst still maintaining a healthy edge of indie rock and psychedelia in both the evocative lyricism and the expansive arrangements and tones that comprise the record. Nobody Like You is the third and final single from The Plastics new album EVE.

 Stream ‘Nobody Like You’ HERE 
Listen to ‘EVE’ HERE

Press release courtesy of The Clique