The Politics of Design

Page 231

CHAPTER TEN

‘It’s Fun In South Africa’

Harriet McKay

Interior Design for the Union-Castle Shipping Line 1948–1977

Sometime in the autumn of 2007 John Graves, the Curator of Ships’ History at the National Maritime Museum, Royal Museums Greenwich, took design historian Professor Anne Massey and I on a research visit into one of the museum’s conservation studios. He wanted us to look at an object that was being treated for preservation. On a table in the studio lay a large, beautifully coloured poster: an advertisement for the Union-Castle shipping line. In my memory, the poster exists as being a considerable size (at least two metres in height by oneand-a-half metres wide). I was therefore surprised when revisiting the Maritime Museum’s online records to discover that it is in fact only 1020mm long and 635mm wide.1 That the poster should have assumed such large proportions in my mind, and that it should have made such a striking impression upon me, was not simply due to the object’s quality. Rather, it was the imagery and message that I encountered that day which became engraved on my mind and which, 13 years later, provide the leitmotiv for this chapter. The poster presents a chubby, smiling black toddler, wearing what might, at the time, have well been labelled “native dress,” jubilantly dancing barefoot in the sand. The object, dated circa 1960, broadcasts the message, “It’s fun in South Africa” (Figure 41). Of course, somewhere in South Africa, circa 1960, black children might have danced and felt joy on occasion. However, that an entire nation should be marketed according to a knowing obliviousness was what burnt the poster’s imagery onto my mind. More specifically – that at the height of the apartheid era, the viciousness of that regime, along with the enormously complicated political, socio-economic and infrastructural systems of a police state, should be deliberately hidden behind such a caricature is staggering. This chapter provides ‘It’s Fun In South Africa’

231


Articles inside

Chapter 16: "Towards Design Sovereignty" by Jason De Santolo and Nadeena Dixon

30min
pages 361-377

Chapter 15: "Whiria te Whiri – Bringing the Strands Together" by Donna Campbell

30min
pages 341-356

Chapter 14: "‘The Boeing’s great, the going’s great’" by Federico Freschi

34min
pages 315-334

Chapter 13: "He moko kanohi, he tohu aroha" by Jani Katarina Taituha Wilson (Ngāti Awa, Ngā Puhi, Mātaatua)

34min
pages 293-308

Chapter 12: "Art Over Nature Over Art" by Matthew Galloway

29min
pages 275-290

Chapter 11: “Do Something New, New Zealand” by Caroline McCaw & Megan Brassell-Jones

28min
pages 255-270

Chapter 10: "‘It’s Fun In South Africa’" by Harriet McKay

31min
pages 231-249

Chapter 9: "Whakawhanaungatanga – Making Families" by Suzanne Miller and Teresa Krishnan

28min
pages 211-224

Chapter 8: "Remnants of Apartheid in Ponte City, Johannesburg" by Denise L Lim

35min
pages 189-206

Chapter 7: "Reconciling the Australian Square" by Fiona Johnson and Jillian Walliss

34min
pages 163-182

Chapter 6: "Un-designing the ‘Black City’" by Pfunzo Sidogi

39min
pages 137-157

Chapter 5: "White Childhoods During Apartheid" by Leana van der Merwe

37min
pages 113-132

Chapter 4: "Marikana" by Sue Jean Taylor

32min
pages 91-107

Chapter 3: "Australian Indigenous Knowledges and Voices in Country" by Lynette Riley, Tarunna Sebastian and Ben Bowen

39min
pages 65-86

Chapter 2: "Singing the Land" by Lynette Carter

19min
pages 53-62

Chapter 1: "Beyond Landscape" by Rod Barnett and Hannah Hopewell

31min
pages 35-50

Introduction: "Privilege and Prejudice" by Federico Freschi, Jane Venis and Farieda Nazier

32min
pages 15-32
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