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Wolff Architects

Cape Town, South Africa

Website

Informed by the colonial history of their home in Cape Town, Heinrich and Ilze Wolff established their eponymous architecture firm as a vehicle for addressing social inequities as well as the erasure of indigenous landscapes and narratives. While spatial design is at the heart of its activities, the firm distinguishes itself through its reliance on a diverse set of employees and collaborators—including photographers, artists, filmmakers, and writers—and an expansive practice that encompasses social justice advocacy, research and scholarship, and conceptual art. Wolff bolsters its practical design business with consultancy services, an in-studio art gallery, a publication, and site-specific artistic interventions, all of which emphasize innovation and social engagement, blurring the lines between design, art, and activism. The firm’s recent honors include a South African Institute of Architects National Award of Merit, a South African Property Owners’ Association Innovation Award, and a Social Habitat prize at the Pan-American Architecture Biennial, Quito, Ecuador.

CAB 3 Contribution

Project Overview

Summer Flowers, 2019 Wallpaper, single-channel video (31:25 min., sound), audio, pressed-flower display, publication Thanks to Mosadinyana Mayombela; Bosele Sianana; Lesedi Harrison Keatewa; the Bessie Head Heritage Trust, in particular Tom Holzinger, Leloba Molema, Mary Lederer, and Harold Head; the Khama III Memorial Museum in Serowe, in particular Kana Tlhaodi and Gasenone Kediseng; the Kids Art Collective; and the Bailey Archives Johannesburg, where key conversations were had with Sean O’Toole, Claudette Schreuders, Kemang Wa Lehulere, James Matthews, Khalid Shamis, Lerato Maduna, Ntone Edjabe, Jane Taylor, Josh Ginsburg, Werner Voigt, Desiree Lewis, Zayaan Khan, and Malik Edjabe

Informed by the colonial history of their home country of South Africa, Wolff Architects addresses social inequities and the erasure of Indigenous landscapes and narratives. Summer Flowers is a research project looking at the life of South African writer, activist, and gardener Bessie Head (1937–1986). Head’s writings were influenced by her experience as a person of mixed race living in South Africa under apartheid, and then later in exile in Botswana. In her life and work, Head advocated for Indigenous southern Africans’ sense of belonging in their own lands, given the forced removals and land grabs that the region’s colonial and apartheid regimes had enacted over the last three centuries. In 1969 Head designed and built a home and garden in Serowe, Botswana, and named it Rain Clouds after her first novel. In 2012 Botswana’s government designated it a national heritage site. Wolff Architects’research for Summer Flowers includes this installation and associated workshops, site visits to Rain Clouds, and ongoing exchanges with the Bessie Head Heritage Trust regarding the future of Rain Clouds and the continued resonance of Head’s work.

Hear the Summer Flowers playlist that can be listened to in conjunction with the publication, installation, and research project HERE

CAB 1 Contribution

Project Overview

Halo

The City is the Site