Skip to main content

Posts

Featured

Sam Nhlengethwa: Chronicle of a South African Visual Storyteller

Jabulani Sam Nhlengethwa (born  9 January 1955  in Payneville Township, Springs, Gauteng) is one of South Africa’s most influential contemporary artists, celebrated for his intricate  collage work, figurative painting, printmaking, and visual narratives grounded in township life, jazz culture, and social identity . His career, stretching back to the mid‑1970s, has forged a visual archive that documents not only the aesthetics of everyday existence in South Africa but also the  political and cultural transitions of the late apartheid and post‑1994 era .  Nhlengethwa’s oeuvre is distinguished by its  hybrid technique : he combines cut‑outs from found printed images, magazine clippings, etchings, and photogravure with painterly gestures, overlaying drawing, painting, and photographic fragments into cohesive, layered compositions. This method produces a collage that is at once  narrative and associative , a kind of visual memoir shaped by both personal mem...

Latest Posts

The Cozy Wall: Art, Shelving, and the Power of Personality

Wopko Jensma: Between Myth, Madness, and the Making of a South African Avant‑Garde

Why Everyone Is Adding “Third Spaces”: The Rise of Nooks, Alcoves & Mini Rooms

When You Hang a Painting on Your Wall, You Become Part of Its Story

Intentional Clutter: The New Maximalism

Absolutely Everything Has to Be Beautiful — Or It Has to Go