Beginning at the site of world’s greatest cataclysm, which created the natural landscape and geology of the Reef, Johnny Clegg follows that elusive thread of gold, and the manmade landscape it has created in its wake, to discover the diverse ways in which artists have imagined and responded to it. On his journey Johnny meets artists Marcus Neustetter, Willem Boshoff, Sam Nhlengethwa, David Goldblatt, Hugh Masekela and Jo Ractliffe. He also ventures down the world’s deepest gold mine; samples age-old distilled beverages, and revisits memories of his childhood growing up on the reef.
A land of frontiers – physical, political and social – for centuries, Johnny Clegg makes his way through the densely layered histories of the Eastern Cape that are embedded in its landscapes, and its arts. This fascinating passage takes him from the Great Fish River to the towering Amathole Mountains; from the birthplaces of Nelson Mandela and Enoch Sontonga to the site of a devastating prophecy. Along the way he meets artists, dancers and musicians who bring to bear their own commentaries and creative responses to these histories and awe-inspiring landscapes.
Johnny Clegg ventures through deep, forgotten histories as well as current stories in the Northern Cape as they unfold along the great Gariep river, surrounded by a semi-desert landscape. From ancient caves and ancient artworks to sinister tales of watersnake spirits, Johnny also uncovers bold, vital contemporary expressions in this severe landscape that create a parallel fluid lifeline through a harsh, dry land.
The long, desolate stretch of the N1 highway is Johnny Clegg’s starting point in his journey through the Karoo. Along this journey he tries to understand that particular quality of silence and loneliness that defines this area: a loneliness that is fulfilling. Encountering some of the Karoo’s most surprising and inspiring art and artists along the way, these stories are as moving as they are eccentric in a place that from the outside appears blank, but which, through stopping to really look, reveals itself to be a place of rich, hidden treasures.
Anticipating a terrain steeped in its politically conservative reputation, Johnny Clegg discovers instead a very different reality and engagement with this land. Travelling through the intoxicating golden light of the Free State, past its vast, graceful farmlands and lyrical sandstone koppies, to extraordinary ancient rock art and other sites of deep spiritual connection, Johnny follows this radiant trail of space and spirit to experience the lesser known nature of this region.
Johnny Clegg navigates his way over and around the majestic beacon of the city of Cape Town, Table Mountain, to gauge the different lived perspectives of those that look onto it – and what the mountain represents to them. Johnny tracks various tales of the mountain: from untameable beast and bold giant, to the idyllic poetry inspired by the grapes it nurtures at its foot. He follows the city through its fields of fresh water springs to its harsh and dusty flatlands. He considers areas that stand as grim markers of devastation and loss, alongside people that still find the spirit to celebrate in spite of it. Johnny meets a host of amazing artists along his way through the city, including Sue Williamson, Hasan and Husain Essop and Andrew Putter, graffiti artist, Falko, poets James Matthews and Bernie Amansure, and novelist, Sindiwe Magona.
Johnny Clegg follows the ancient pathways that meander from the densely forested coastline of the Garden Route, over the mountains into the Little Karoo. These pathways lead him to follow tales of fabled elephants and monumental trees to accounts of mermaids and watermeide that hide in rocky pools; and ultimately to the artists that draw upon these long existing migrations and imaginings to conjure their own artistic expressions along the way.
Unlike the classically beautiful natural landscapes of many other parts of the country, Johnny Clegg explores the particular, peculiar beauty of the City of Gold – of eGoli – of Johannesburg. A constructed city of the imagination, that builds and rebuilds above as much as it burrows and tunnels below; that builds forests where only veld should naturally grow, and that garners shiny minerals when only yellow dust is evident, the art that Jozi has born is imbued with a comparable energy: bold, gutsy, urban and forthright. Meet artists David Koloane, Senzeni Marasela, William Kentridge, Kudzanai Chiurai, Anton Kannemeyer and Stephen Hobbs as they take Johnny on an urban voyage of discovery.
Johnny Clegg ventures into the heart of Zululand – his creative and spiritual home – and up to the coast of KwaZulu-Natal, to discover the multiple ways in which long tradition plays itself out in contemporary living. This epic and privileged journey through Johnny’s heartland reveals the complex histories and incredible creative legacies that have so richly shaped this region.
Beyond the Tropic of Capricorn, north along the Soutpansberg Mountains towards Zimbabawe, exists a region of the country that is almost opaque and impenetrable to an outsider, palpably shrouded in mystery, magic and steeped in belief. It is also the site of one of the richest and most extraordinary artistic communities in the country – specifically renowned for an elaborate woodcarving tradition that goes back centuries – as well as for one of the country’s most admired beading traditions. Through the artists that live and create here, Johnny is offered access through some of these veils, bringing further depth and meaning to that which is already so apparently powerful.
The north-western parts of the country have long been home to some of South Africa’s most revered and often flamboyant storytellers, and Johnny Clegg is following their thread. From those who have magically spun yarns with words to transport us into other realms of experience and adventure, to artists whose rich visions allow us keys into other worlds of seeing, Johnny makes his way – partly onboard a hot air balloon – through this wonderfully imaginative bushveld terrain, from Mafikeng to Groot Marico, and Mabopane to the Magaliesberg, meeting some amazing storyteller artists, including Tommy Motswai, Titus Matiyane, Norman Catherine, Ma Grace Masuku, Egbert van Bart and John Moolman.
Known mostly as bushveld and ‘Big Five’ country, interspersed with dramatic and spectacular lush hills, valleys, rivers and waterfalls, Johnny heads into Mpumalanga to find what else exists beyond boyhood dreams of adventure and taming the wilderness. Bordering on sister countries, Swaziland and Mozambique, and along the provincial borders of Limpopo, Gauteng, the Free State and KwaZulu-Natal, this region has been the long-time space of numerous migrations of people from many, many places. Johnny follows the histories and arts of some of them, through this place that for many, at some stage, has represented home.
This final episode of the series finds Johnny Clegg high up in caves in the towering and majestic landscape of the Drakensberg mountains of KwaZulu-Natal. Against this awe-inspiring backdrop, Johnny contemplates the extraordinary art of the San, and down below, discovers other pockets of humanity –inspired artists who still work and create, spiritedly and passionately, to create playful gestures that “tame the dragon”.