African Design Magazine October 2014 | Page 69

Feature: #BewareOfColour Against in the drab prison grey of Joburg, a splash pf pink was enough for me to slow down and gawk. Shakespeare House in Commissioner Street was crying pink from every window. It looks cool. Someone was obviously bored. Nodding in approval, I sped off before I got a wallet collector interested. It was only on the way home again down Simmonds and then Rissik Street – when I saw more buildings covered in bright pink, splashed on the wall and running down from the windows – that I realised that it was the work of more than just a bunch of bored teenagers. Now it was screaming rebellion; it was crying for attention and most certainly pushing back against the status quo. This was organised, and I wanted to find out more. It didn’t take long for me to find what I was looking for, and I was right, it was an act of activism. #BEWAREOFCOLOUR is a group of rogue artists trying to say something. To understand what exactly, one would have to understand the little known language of eccentric – their manifesto reads: this is an urban experiment. it is a questioning of what the city is, what it has been, and what it will be. it is a re-framing of buildings that have been forgotten. they re-appear before us through pink. it is a re-invention of space. a celebration of the unapologetic. it’s a new story that needs to be written. a love letter from our creatives to our land owners, our chief executives, our politicians. we look at buildings that have been left behind by time and we caress their walls with our paint brushes. we tickle them in hopes that they will tickle her. she who walks to work in the morning her heels Stella Mansions africandesignmagazine.com 69