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"description": "The Syrian Rose and other Johannesburg highlights.",
"path": "/those-shawarmas-tho/",
"publishedAt": "2026-05-27T18:36:33.000Z",
"site": "https://aswimmingpoollibrary.net",
"tags": [
"intermittently dispiriting and infuriating",
"Erin Conway-Smith",
"HOMECOMING",
"a pitiful state",
"controversially stored elsewhere",
"Latitudes Art Fair",
"The Artists' Press",
"Dada Khanyisa",
"Above and Beyond",
"Peter Clarke",
"The Contortionists",
"Market Theatre",
"Afropocalypse",
"Bridge Books",
"paperback edition",
"online",
"PULP Paperworks",
"Rhyme & Riso",
"Risograph",
"publisher",
"this method",
"training",
"Pocket Hardback",
"Artists’ lo-fi, DIY and Alternative Publications in South Africa",
"Nina",
"Father",
"AirSpace",
"Pocha",
"Field Notes"
],
"textContent": "Johannesburg has lured people from across the globe – and, if you know where to look, it has culinary offerings that richly reflects that. In Fordsburg, following a paratha starter and chai at the night market, we hopped over to a Syrian shawarma joint where hunky men were turning skewers and slicing spit-roasted meat. The shawarmas and date milkshake I had there has been one of several reminders that while Joburg might be intermittently dispiriting and infuriating, the metropolis also offers plenty of inspiration and delight too.\n\nAnd so, here are a few other highlights.\n\n* * *\n\n**Highveld cloudscapes.**\n\nNuff said, really.\n\nSoooooo dreamy.\n\n* * *\n\n**The Johannesburg Library – reopened at last.**\n\nOriginally built in the 30s, the main branch of the Johannesburg Library got a major revamp in 2009-2012 courtesy of some Carnegie Corp cash. In 2021, it was shut again due to fire safety concerns. A long four years later – following further sprucing – it finally reopened last year. I visited on Saturday when the stacks were closed to browsing, but I did get to walk its upstairs levels which were being used by Joburgers to read, write and study.\n\nSnapping the stacks. Photo by Erin Conway-Smith.Empty bookshelves on a mezzanine floor.The Africa Day literary showcase in the library's foyer seemed particularly poignant at a time when xenophobic protests against African foreign nationals have returned to South Africa's streets with a vengeance.\n\n* * *\n\n**Weird/interesting/beautiful buildings.**\n\nIn Joburg's inner city, the view from the rooftop of the Barbican.\n\nMy Airbnb was about as chic as the janitorial cupboard in an East German nuclear fallout shelter BUT at least it was very affordable, a short walk from/to the Rosebank Gautrain station and – best of all – within Macedon, a gorgeous mid-century block of flats (that so far has withstood the encroaching tide of sterile, flashy blandly generic mid-rises that have soared up around it).\n\nA Macedon resident has created a little free lending library in the foyer.\n\n* * *\n\n**So many streetside indigenous plants.**\n\n(Many of them hardy succulents, ideal for those prolonged water outages.)\n\n* * *\n\n**The art.**\n\nJoburg might have conceded the \"South African art capital\" crown to Cape Town (one telling symptom: the closure of venerable commercial gallery Stevenson's Jozi outpost) but there's still a scene here.\n\n****No wonder bank charges are so high!**** My favourite – but too darn expensive – locally-made hand soap (and its lotion sibling) in the bathroom at the Standard Bank Art Gallery. Although a philanthropic arm of one of the country's largest banks, the Standard Bank Art Gallery is currently showing HOMECOMING, a selection of works from the municipally-run (municipally-mismanaged?) Johannesburg Art Gallery (JAG). JAG's building is in such a pitiful state that its collection will be controversially stored elsewhere while restoration and repairs are underway. That's the plan, anyway.\n\nI found Latitudes Art Fair a bit of a _meh_ hodgepodge but still worthwhile – two favourites: The Artists' Press stand and Dada Khanyisa's extraordinary sculptural installation Above and Beyond. I also fell obsessively in love with Peter Clarke's drawing from 1970, The Contortionists_,_ which was to be auctioned off by Strauss & Co (I did not place a bid and will probs always regret that).\n\nOn the performing arts front, the Market Theatre continues to shine brightly. I watched the goofy, funny and touching Afropocalypse there which was performed with such heart, urgency and balletic verve by its talented cast. If only that bunch were running the city administration.\n\nNicola Bailey's sublime show (now on at Everard Read Johannesburg).\n\n* * *\n\n**Printed treasures**\n\nEvery time I visit Bridge Books I leave so happy and inspired – and weighed down by a stack of obscure, delightful gems. (And some mainstream treats too; ZAR 3.00 for a mint condition copy of _The English Patient_? Yes please...)\n\nMy kind of candy store.A partial selection of my latest Bridge haul.\n\nThis time my Bridge browsing was even more joyful as I got to see the brand new South African paperback edition of my novel, _The President_ , on its shelves.\n\nThe novel is available from Bridge in-store and online (and, in partnership with Protea Boekehuis, Bridge is also distributing this edition to bookstores across South Africa).\n\nSpeaking of _The President_ , I also visited the studio and new retail outlet of PULP Paperworks – the folks who printed and hand-bound both of its collectable editions (PULP still has a handful of Artist Editions in stock). I bought a fresh supply of my favourite writing notebook (blue cover; B5-sized blank pages inside) and stocked up on copies of PULP's latest book projects.\n\nI'm burying the lede here, but perhaps the most exciting thing I did in Joburg was check out Rhyme & Riso, a brand new Risograph printing studio at the Open Window Institute in Blairgowrie. Exciting because I **love** Risograph – and, as a nascent publisher, I want to bring out publications that have been printed with this method (Riso is particularly well-suited to short[er] things like chapbooks, broadsides, posters). The studio will also be offering workshops and training – so I'm hoping I'll actually learn how to print with Riso, too! (As labour is one of the biggest costs in a printing studio, being able to print there myself would also significantly lower the cost of doing so.)\n\nOn left, three new books from Pulp (and 3x my beloved B5-sized notebook). __Carmilla__ , btw, is a pocket hardback, part of a series from PULP and Old Hat Books which inspired me to publish the A6-sized Pocket Hardback version of __The President__. On the right: printed stuff I got at Rhyme & Riso. Super stoked that my haul includes the print version of Artists’ lo-fi, DIY and Alternative Publications in South Africa (thanks, Nina!).\n\n* * *\n\n**Smash hit.**\n\nBy the time I left gym on Monday night and was headed to my Airbnb I was having a hard time finding somewhere still open and serving food. Thankfully, Zuney, a wagyu burger chain from Cape Town, was going strong (Cape Town is not quite as aggressively diurnal as its early-to-bed inland sister). It was an excellent burger. The sweet potato fries were darn tasty, too.\n\nDemolition job.\n\n**Other yums:** Father's cortado holds its own against rivals in SF, London, Melbourne (granted, its AirSpace decor gives one the sense you might indeed be in any one of those cities; thankfully its prices don't). Pocha sated my Korean cravings (please open in Cape Town!).\n\n* * *\n\nThis is the latest in a sequence of irregular Field Notes from _a swimming pool library_.",
"title": "those shawarmas tho",
"updatedAt": "2026-05-28T08:40:42.438Z"
}