- Curatorial intervention in the Archaeology department
- Online exhibition of Martin West collection
- Annex Residency Programme
- Health sciences turns 100
- Imperfect librarian
- Artist in Residence: Mark Dion
- Context
- UCT engineers help make medical history
- Threshold
- Centenary celebration of Hiddingh Hall library
- Historic Hiddingh Campus
- Visual Practices Across the University - a lecture by James Elkins
- The Michaelis Galleries
- A Conversation with the Bolus Collection: Science, sensibility, sensuality
- Synechdoche, Upstairs Gallery
- Kimberlite collection
- Irma Stern museum
- UCT works of art collection
- Dialogue at the Dogwatch
- 1:nineteen
- Pathology learning centre
- Forensic pathology slides
- Five: 20 – Operas made in South Africa
- M.R. Drennan anatomy museum
- Centre for popular memory
- The Bolus herbarium and library
- P.D Hahn - Chemical Engineering building
- Rare books & special collections
- Curiosity CLXXV
- AIDS archive at UCT
- Zamani project - Lalibela
- The digital Bleek and Lloyd
- Lydenburg heads
- Face value
- Kirby collection
- Similitude
- Teaching sociology with images
- Physics collection of demonstration models and Dem Online website
- Made in translation
- Subtle thresholds
Columbarium
1. a. Rom. Antiq. A subterranean sepulchre, having in its walls niches or holes for cinerary urns; also one of these niches or recesses.
b. A similar structure in a modern crematorium.
2. A pigeon-house, dove-cote; a pigeon-hole.
3. A hole left in a wall for the insertion of the end of a beam.
1. a. Rom. Antiq. A subterranean sepulchre, having in its walls niches or holes for cinerary urns; also one of these niches or recesses.
b. A similar structure in a modern crematorium.
2. A pigeon-house, dove-cote; a pigeon-hole.
3. A hole left in a wall for the insertion of the end of a beam.
P.D Hahn - Chemical Engineering building
Fritha Langerman was commissioned by the UCT Works of Art committee to produce artworks for the PD Hahn building, STOICHEIA was the first in a series of installations for the Chemistry department. In August 2011 Langerman finished the commission with the installation of cabinets in the entrance hall. The cabinets are in PD Hahn Southside entrance and acknowledge PD Hahn, the man, his instrumental role in admission of women to UCT, the building and the history of Chemistry at UCT.







