September 07 @ 12:30
In 2024 Lindokuhle Sobekwa won the FNB Art Prize. As the winner of the 2023 prize, Sobekwa spent the last year putting together a body of work that will premiere at the Johannesburg Art Gallery: a museum where the largest art collection, on the continent, resides. Now represented by Goodman Gallery, Sobekwa has expanded his practice by embracing photography’s potential relationship with performance.
An artist working in the medium of documentary photography, Sobekwa’s practice uses the camera, installation and performance to historically contemplate the present. Soaked in materialism and subtly resolving geographical and temporal distances, in his hand the camera invites absent presences, that were there when his images were made, into the present. Ahead of its public opening, the artist will host a private walkabout that will guide guests’ preview.
Details
Date:
September 07
Time:
12:30
Venue
Johannesburg Art Gallery
Cnr Klein and King George Streets, Joubert Park
Organizer
FNB Art Joburg
Email
vip@artjoburg.com
Johannesburg is the cultural and economic capital of Africa, and FNB Art Joburg is its leading art fair. We believe there is no better place than Johannesburg to show all of our best artists under one roof.
© 2024 Art Joburg. All Rights Reserved.
Johannesburg is the cultural and economic capital of Africa, and FNB Art Joburg is its leading art fair. We believe there is no better place than Johannesburg to show all of our best artists under one roof.
© 2024 Art Joburg. All Rights Reserved.
Collection tour of Anglo American
Location
144 Oxford Rd, Rosebank
Date
8 September 2023
11am
Event details
The Anglo American art and object collection is a combination of art collected over several decades through four different companies: Anglo American, de Beers Group, Anglo American Platinum and Kumba Iron Ore.
The collection comprises of 3600 works, with around 1000 pieces in the collection on display at the newly commissioned Rosebank offices. Although vast, the collection experienced an acquisition hiatus from the early 2000s until 2021 creating a significant gap in the collection’s representation of contemporary art. The collection now has a dedicated curator, Megan Scott, tasked with its cataloguing and digitisation, opening an exciting new chapter which will see the gradual procurement of significant works that reflect our contemporary South African and African art world.