The 30 Shortlisted Graaff-Reinet/ Robert Sobukwe Town residency proposals for the 2026 Social Impact Arts Prize Fellowship all have the potential to transform the Karoo town into a profound living arts laboratory where geological records of “deep time” converge with contemporary social discourse. Across the broad categories of Visual Art, Public Art, Art x Craft, Art x Performance, Art x Writing, Art x Photography, and Art x Community-based practices, they position the town as a living laboratory. Deep geological time of the Karoo intersects with complex environmental and social histories, including human development, historical entanglements, and contemporary rural economic realities. Each proposal demonstrates a commitment to engaging place not as backdrop, but as an active condition shaping both process and outcome.
A central thread running through these works is an urgent response to climate change and the fragility of the natural environment. The Karoo is portrayed not as a barren wasteland but as a sentient landscape marked by water scarcity and ecological resilience. Projects such as a “Living Archive: Camdeboo! Ecological Memory in the Anthropocene” or “Hortus Inconclusus: The Garden of Exchange” move beyond observation towards active remediation, using sustainable drainage systems and pollination corridors to address biodiversity loss. The animal kingdom serves as both a subject and a collaborator; whether through the study of prehistoric insect evolution or the tactile processing of a single sheep’s wool, the artists frame plantlife and animals as co-authors of the Karoo’s biography.
Materiality is central to this creative process. The artists reject mass-produced media in favour of a “ground-up” approach, utilising local ochres, minerals, clays, and stones to build and tell stories. This focus on raw materials—seen in the hand-forged “Karoo Toolkit” or various rammed-earth pavilions—connects the act of making to the earth’s physical ancient crust. Even the Karoo wind is treated as a material force, captured through acoustic sculptures and “wind-scales” that translate invisible atmospheric shifts into tangible sound and storytelling in “The Winds of Desolation”.
The social impact of these residencies is rooted in a radical model of knowledge transfer. By bridging the gap between institutional museum archives and the lived experiences of diverse communities, the projects empower local residents to serve as the primary custodians of their heritage. Skills-building is practical and diverse: youth participants master millinery as a form of “cultural entrepreneurship,” while elders lead “walking-talking” tours to map the town’s collective subjective memory or in “Hokmeisie” where the ancient N/uu (San) tradition of celebrating the moment when a girl becomes a woman, becomes an education resource transforming shame into pride.
The artists’ legacies are designed to be both physical and systemic. From permanent public monuments and “counter-archives” to functional community gardens and digital sound maps of the Khoikhoi language, these projects ensure that creative labour remains in Graaff-Reinet/ Robert Sobukwe Town. Ultimately, these interventions reimagine the valley as a place of possible healing and narrative repair, weaving together an indigenous past and the ecological future to build a more inclusive and resilient communal identity.




