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Ndikhumbule Ngqinambi: Motion, Memory and the Politics of the Figure

Ndikhumbule Ngqinambi (b. 1977, Cape Town) is one of South Africa’s quietly insistent contemporary painters: a figurative artist whose canvases vibrate with implied movement, theatrical staging, and a moral curiosity about who survives and who is allowed to live well. Over two decades, Ngqinambi has built a practice that sits at the intersection of painting, performance, and narrative — a practice nourished by film, sound, theatre, and dance, and informed by local histories and the artist’s Xhosa cultural background. This article traces his biography, the sources that animate his work, and the recurring formal and political concerns that make his paintings distinctive.  Graham’s and training: a hybrid path Ngqinambi’s path was not simply linear. Born in Cape Town in 1977, he undertook formal study at the Community Arts Project (CAP). He later studied aspects of animation and directing at AFDA (the South African School for Motion Picture Media and Live Performance). Yet galleries an...

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