Next week Thursday, 20 June, the ‘curtain will rise’ in Makhanda on the fiftieth edition of the globally renowned Festival.
What started as a showcase of some 60 works in an attempt to preserve English culture and 1820 Settler heritage during the depths of apartheid, has transformed into South Africa's longest-running and most diverse arts festival, featuring works across language and genre that attract an increasingly diverse South African and international audience.
Selected through a process of application, and a lengthy curatorial panel review, the National Arts Festival's Curated Programme is a creative litmus test of society and a reflection of the artists' lens on South Africa and the world. The 2024 Curated Programme is a dialogue of ideas in a restless era as world orders shift, violence escalates and uncertainty prevails on the cusp of a post-truth world.
Says Artistic Director Rucera Seethal, “To encompass all that the Festival could and has ever been in a landmark year such as this is an overwhelming task and belies the Festival's role in breaking out new work and reimagining older ones. So in creating this programme, we have played with the juxtaposition of old and new and the emergence of ambitious ideas that bring the Festival into a new era of cross-border and international collaboration.”
Some of the highlights from the Curated Programme include the world premiere of Third World Bunfight's The Stranger, the cutting-edge new work 1789 by Sibikwa Arts Centre, a tribute to artists passed by Mandla Mbothwe and the innovative new works of the Standard Bank Young Artists. Through several visual art exhibitions, the history of the Festival is brought into the conversation, and exciting new projects that connect artists and creators from Africa take the Festival into a new direction for the future.
View this post on Instagram
The Fringe programme is loaded with works that satirise, experiment and intrigue, marking the exceptional energy of our nation's creatives. The Fringe has been a feature at the National Arts Festival since it was introduced onto the programme in 1979.
View this post on Instagram
For everything you need to know go to :
https://nationalartsfestival.co.za/
https://www.instagram.com/nationalartsfestival/?hl=en
or
https://www.facebook.com/nationalartsfestival
The Festival organisers believe that art should be accessible at all levels. That's why, every year, the National Arts programme has several events that are free and open to the public.
View this post on Instagram
If you are still looking for accommodation click on the link below :
View this post on Instagram