As we all know, the Johannesburg Art Gallery (JAG) is currently facing multiple crises that have put both the building and art collection at great risk. The Johannesburg Heritage Foundation and the Friends of JAG (FOJAG) have managed to engage with the City of Johannesburg (COJ) on several occasions but have not been able to make any significant progress with the authorities. Since each new rain storm brings the threat of further damage, there is no more time for delay – action is needed now!
You can read our latest updates on the JAG situation below, followed by links to various media interviews and articles. For more context on the initial legal letter and additional media links, click HERE.
To see some highlights of the JAG Collection on Google Arts and Culture, click HERE.
Press Release: Situation Report on the Johannesburg Art Gallery – 20 November 2024
The Johannesburg Heritage Foundation (JHF) and Friends of the Johannesburg Art Gallery (FOJ) have noted the publication of several media reports regarding the very poor condition of the Johannesburg Art Gallery (JAG) and its important collection. We would like to take this opportunity to summarise the current situation from our perspective.
On 28 August 2024, after noting the ever-worsening deterioration of both the JAG art collection and the JAG building in Joubert Park, the JHF and FOJ jointly issued a legal letter to the City of Johannesburg (COJ). This letter, drawn up by Webber Wentzel, stressed the cultural significance of the JAG and demanded that the COJ fulfil its mandate of care with regards to JAG as specified in the deed of donation (which granted the JAG and its collection to the people of Johannesburg, with the COJ acting as custodian).
A meeting was subsequently held six weeks later, on 16 October 2024, to discuss the issues raised in the legal letter. Attendees included representatives of the JHF, FOJ, COJ Executive Mayor Dada Morero, MMC for Community Development Kabelo Gwamanda (since dismissed from his post), and the COJ Director of Arts, Culture and Heritage, Vuyisile Mshudulu. Three main issues were discussed:
The safety of the collection: the JAG building is riddled with leaks, mould and water damage caused by many years of poor maintenance and botched renovations by the city’s agencies and contractors. Consequently, the art collection is being stored improperly and sustaining damage every time it rains. At the meeting, the JHF and FOJ presented the COJ with a comprehensive plan to relocate the collection to a place of safety in Pretoria, restore and digitise the collection, and then return the collection to JAG when the building has been properly repaired. This operational plan includes funding, costings from suitable service providers, and can be initiated within days – all that is required is approval from the authorities.
The response from COJ was that they have their own plan (which appears to match the JHF/FOJ plan in many respects) and will handle the relocation themselves. To date, we have not received any details on who will fund or manage the COJ’s relocation plan, nor have we received any kind of timeline for implementation. Furthermore, the COJ wants to only relocate part of the collection and is waiting on the adjustment budget in January 2025 to see if funds are available. Following this, they would still need to issue a tender to appoint a service provider, meaning that the COJ’s relocation plan would likely only begin in about 6 months’ time (or longer). This lack of urgency on the part of the authorities does not bode well for the collection, especially considering the COJ’s poor track record, complicated bureaucracy, and lack of transparency.
It is unclear why the COJ refuses to engage with our plan as it will reduce strain on the city’s fiscus and avoids the need to wait for the January 2025 Budget announcement.
Restoration of the JAG building: Designed by Edwin Lutyens, the JAG building is an important heritage resource in its own right. Discussions were held regarding the extensive repairs that would be necessary to make the structure fit for purpose once more, and all parties agreed to find ways to work together. However, given the long history of incomplete or ineffective repairs initiated by the COJ and its agencies, it is our position that the restoration of the JAG building requires independent oversight and should run externally from the city’s opaque tender processes.
Governance of JAG: over the years, it has become clear that the governance structure of JAG needs to be revised to be more direct, effective and adaptable. At the moment, timely decision making is hindered by a complicated hierarchy of managers, directors, executives, and (improperly constituted) governing bodies. The COJ was reluctant to discuss any possible changes to the JAG’s governance structure.
After reaching something of an impasse, it was agreed to arrange a follow-up meeting with the Director of Arts, Culture and Heritage, Vuyisile Mshudulu. This took place four weeks later on November 14, 2024, and resulted in no material progress. The COJ has still not shared details of their relocation plan, only providing a vague report which appears to be a copy/paste of the JHF/FOJ plan apart from several adaptations that serve the city’s agenda and will only slow things down.
At the conclusion of the meeting, further information was requested from Mr Mshudulu (including an up-to-date catalogue of the art collection) and follow-up meetings were planned. Despite the stalling, we remain committed to engaging with the COJ wherever possible. However, in the absence of any forward movement on the city’s part, we will continue to investigate the potential for additional legal action.
We have written to the Minister of Sports, Arts and Culture, Gayton McKenzie, requesting his input on this matter. And since parts of the collection have been inscribed as National Heritage Assets, we would also appreciate comment from the South African Heritage Resource Agency (SAHRA) as well as the Gauteng Department of Sports, Arts, Culture and Recreation. Tourism authorities may also wish to speak out as properly managed art galleries and museums can be major tourist attractions – something Joburg definitely needs.
We also note that the COJ Department of Community Development, which is responsible for Heritage, Galleries and Museums, is currently on its third MMC in six months (with the previous MMC now challenging his removal). This constant turn-over in the leadership and staff of Community Development removes any kind of continuity and destroys momentum. Nevertheless, we encourage the new MMC, Cllr. Tebogo Nkonkou, to make their voice heard.
In conclusion: Johannesburg is now in the midst of its rainy season and each downpour brings the danger of further damage to both the JAG building and the collection it is supposed to protect. It is nearly 3 months since the original legal letter was sent to the COJ and nothing concrete has been done to address the situation. This stasis cannot continue.
Finally, the JHF and FOJAG encourage the COJ to properly consider their custodial responsibility towards JAG. In the deed of donation, the collection was left to the people of Johannesburg, not the city council. It is time to look beyond politics and focus on what’s best for the JAG.
For more information, please contact mail@joburgheritage.org.za or friend@friendsofjag.org.
For background and additional media links, click HERE.
JHF / FoJ response to media reports about work being conducted at JAG – 25 January 2025
The Johannesburg Heritage Foundation (JHF) and Friends of JAG (FoJ) have noted a news report (see link below) that there are workers on site at the Johannesburg Art Gallery (JAG) doing unspecified repairs, apparently in advance of a mayoral visit in two weeks’ time. As committed stakeholders who have been trying to work with the authorities to find a comprehensive and sustainable solution to the problems facing JAG, this new development is most alarming and comes as a total surprise.
Although repairs to the JAG are long overdue, this is not the correct way to go about things.
First: the Provincial Heritage Resource Agency – Gauteng (PHRA-G) mandates public participation prior to any work being conducted on state-owned heritage sites. We are not aware of any public participation process thus the work currently underway is likely being done without the necessary permits, making it illegal.
Second: haphazard repairs to the JAG for a mayoral visit is not an appropriate course of action. We have been advocating for a stakeholder engagement with qualified heritage architects and engineers to determine a ‘top to bottom’ solution. The City has attempted piece-meal repairs in the past with poor results that have only made the situation worse.
Third: undertaking any kind of construction or repair work in a building filled with art (most of which is improperly stored) runs the risk of further damaging a collection that is already at risk from water leaks, dust, debris, heat, etc.
Fourth: we have no information about who commissioned the work, nor who has been contracted to do the work, nor the scope of work to be done. Fixing the gardens is not a problem, but any work to the building itself needs to be done by qualified contractors and overseen by heritage practitioners with the specialised skills required.
In conclusion, if the latest news report is accurate, the current attempt to patch over the problems at JAG constitutes desperate and illegal action on the part of the authorities. We will be investigating our options regarding an urgent interdict to stop further work at JAG pending investigation.
JHF and FoJ have approached the City of Johannesburg (COJ) numerous times over the past year with a well-considered, fully-funded and comprehensive plan to address the issues at JAG, both in terms of the art collection and the building. This plan has been endorsed by the Minister of Arts and Culture, Business Arts South Africa, the Lutyens Trust, potential donors, artists represented in the gallery, cultural practitioners, etc. However, we have been constantly rebuffed with explanations that the city ‘has its own plan’.
If this is any indication of the city’s ‘plan’, we fear that the JAG will only continue to deteriorate. We urge the City to reconsider their course of action and collaborate honestly with stakeholders so that together we can restore JAG correctly and sustainably.
Issued on behalf of the Johannesburg Heritage Foundation and the Friends of JAG.
- www.currencynews.co.za: The great Joburg art grift (18/11/2024)
- www.dailymaverick.co.za: Johannesburg Art Gallery can’t survive another season of rain, experts warn (18/11/2024)
- www.ewn.co.za: Deteriorating Johannesburg Art Gallery in further crisis ahead of rainy season (18/11/2024)
- www.currencynews.co.za: The tragic farce of the Dali in the JAG filing cabinet (18/11/2024)
- SAFM: The Talking Point – JAG and the dilapidation of public art (19/11/2024)
- www.dagauteng.org.za: DA blocked from oversight at Joburg Art Gallery (19/11/2024)
- www.news24.com: Art Attack – damaged, leaking Joburg Art Gallery displays empty cabinets and bare walls (21/11/2024)
- www.dailymaverick.co.za: After the bell – Should we just sell the art in the Johannesburg Art Gallery (20/11/2024)
- www.dailymaverick.co.za: Transforming the Johannesburg Art Gallery from white elephant to catalyst for sustainable growth in heritage (22/11/2024)
- www.enca.com: Priceless artworks at risk as Johannesburg Art Gallery falls apart (27/11/2024)
- www.change.org petition: Revitalise Joburg’s inner city – make Joburg Art Gallery a #G20southafrica 2025 host venue
- www.currencynews.co.za: Nexus of power – the man at the centre of the JAG crisis (06/12/2024)
- SAFM Interview with Guilietta Talevi about JAG (09/12/2024)
- Business and Arts South Africa: BASA joins concerned organisations committed to saving the Johannesburg Art Gallery Collection
- www.mg.co.za: Systemic neglect of Johannesburg Art Gallery contrasts with creative industry growth (2025/01/08)
- currencynews.co.za: The great Joburg art grift – what goes on tour stays on tour (2025/01/20)
- www.news24.com: Repair efforts begin at Joburg Art Gallery amid public outcry over empty exhibition spaces (25/01/2025)
- www.dagauteng.org.za: DA to conduct oversight to the Johannesburg Art Gallery (26/01/2025)
- www.politicsweb.co.za: DA blocked from oversight at Joburg Art Gallery (27/01/2025)
- www.news24.com: Behind closed gates – Joburg Art Gallery renovation drama paints a murky picture (27/01/2025)
- Kaya FM: Interview with David Fleminger – JHF Chair (27/01/2025)
- www.citizen.co.za: DA denied access to Johannesburg Art Gallery (28/01/2025)
- currencynews.co.za: Still no open door policy at Joburg’s JAG (28/01/2025)
- currencynews.co.za: The War Has Started – Gayton Mckenzie (01/04/2025)
- currencynews.co.za: confusion as Joburg readies to move its art collection (19/05/2025)
- currencynews.co.za: JAG catalogue – city says no (02/06/2025)
- news24.com: city-brushes-off-calls-for-joburg-art-gallery-transparency (14/06/2025)

