Johannesburg

To see in Joburg – weekly exhibitions guide

08 May 2024

In our weekly art round-up we list the exhibitions on and worth your while, plus a few dates to diarise. 

Approaching the end of its run, we highly recommend you see Threading Through the Collections at Wits Art Museum (WAM) – charting the rich history and cultural significance of weaving in Africa. Inspired by this sweeping showcase, three contemporary practitioners join for a panel discussion on Sat, May 11 that's sure to be illuminating for those interested in this ancient craft. 

Elsewhere, we're curious to see Lebogang ‘Mogul’ Mabusela's storied solo iVum Vum at Bag Factory, while star designer Lukhanyo Mdingi's deep dive into Bantu heritage is still showing at Constitution Hill. A notable name in the art world, Michael MacGarry's new body of work draws curious viewers to Everard Read.

In a remarkable twist of fate, a series of works by visionary South African artist Mmakgabo Helen Sebidi was rediscovered after disappearing without a trace over 30 years ago. They're being shown to the public for the first time on home soil at UJ Art Gallery in the celebratory exhibition Ntlo E Etsamayang (The Walking House). Sebidi is a legend amongst us; make sure you see this show before it closes. 

Two of South Africa's most exciting art fairs are fast approaching from Fri, May 24 – Sun, May 26. Meet artists working in the heart of the city with Contra.Joburg's wonderfully packed line-up, and enjoy an art playground at RMB Latitudes, once again taking place at the magical Shepstone Gardens. Dual-ticket holders can catch a shuttle between the two events. It's going to be an art-filled weekend for the books.

For a full guide to what’s on in Joburg, explore our events calendar. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter published every Thursday morning. For extra daily updates, follow our Instagram page.

ART HIGHLIGHTS

Sat, May 11 at 12:00 – Threading Through the Collections at Wits Art Museum (WAM) is a journey through sub-Saharan Africa in textile form. Including raffia fibre and beaten-bark cloth, tapestries, embroideries, and fabrics dyed with indigo and mud, the works span a wide geographic region and illustrate the significance of textiles across the continent over time. It's just beautiful. Before the show concludes, it forms the backdrop for a panel discussion entitled Then and Now: Innovations in African Textile featuring UJ fashion design senior lecturer Dr. Khaya Mchunu, The Ninevites founder Nkuli Mlangeni-Berg, and textile maker Tinyiko Makwakwa.
 
A vast survey of African textiles, we recommend seeing Threading Through The Collections at Wits Art Museum (WAM) before it closes. Photo: Johannesburg In Your Pocket. 

Until Fri, Jun 14 – Pop culture and personal responsibility intersect in Lebogang ‘Mogul’ Mabusela's playful yet no less serious critique of South African automative culture at large and, more specifically, the relationship between men and their cars. Showing at Bag Factory, the solo exhibition iVum Vum borrows its title from kwaito star Brown Dash's song of the same name.
 
Popularly known as the “Gusheshe”, the 1992 BMW E30 325 (pictured in peacock green by Lebogang ‘Mogul’ Mabusela) is notorious within South African car spinning and racing. Photo: Bag Factory.

Until Sat, Jun 15 – In Still Waters at Goodman Gallery, the artist's first major solo exhibition on the continent, Remy Jungerman continues his exploration of Surinamese Maroon culture, the larger African diaspora, and 20th-century modernism.

Until Fri, May 17 – In 1991, Mmakgabo Helen Sebidi's art took her to Sweden where she was set to exhibit a series of works. While she waited, the pieces were lost without a trace. It's remarkable that 32 years since their disappearance, 28 of Sebidi's artworks were rediscovered and have since returned home. These long-lost treasures are shown to the public for the first time in Ntlo E Etsamayang (The Walking House) at UJ Art Gallery.

Until Mon, Jun 17 – There's no denying his artful eye when it comes to garment construction, but Lukhanyo Mdingi is venturing further into the art world with The Provenance Part II. Showing in the Women’s Jail at Constitution Hill, the exhibition is concerned with the preservation of archives – textiles, literature, and music – as they relate to Bantu heritage. Read our reflections on the show here

LAST CHANCE TO SEE

Until Sat, May 11 – In Umpteen Impossible Things Before Breakfast at Gallery 2, see recent works by the University of Johannesburg's dynamic staff in the faculty of art, design, and architecture including Kim Berman, Bevan de Wet, and Gordon Froud.
Until Tue, May 14Guns & Rain's group show Into One's Own: Reckoning with Monuments & Memory is an intimate look at how artists in South Africa, Namibia, and Zimbabwe have grappled with colonial legacies.

SOLO SHOWS

Until Sat, May 18 – A solo project by Peter Cohen, Dissolving Realities opens at David Krut's The Blue House. The artist creates layered daydreams out of commonplace scenery to interrogate the reliability of memory. Read our 2022 interview with Cohen here.
Until Mon, May 20 – Abdus Salaam explores love in its terrestrial, ethereal, and divine forms in Insaan (Human Being) at Nirox Sculpture Park.
Until Sat, May 25 – Fumani Maluleke's scenes of the South African countryside come to life on grass mat canvasses in Tsalwa lerintswa (The New Scroll) at Everard Read's Circa Gallery.
Until Sat, May 25 – In the solo show Formed at Everard Read's Circa Gallery, Lionel Smit continues his exploration of the symbiotic relationship between sculpture and painting.
Until Sat, May 25 – Michael MacGarry's solo exhibition The System Absorbs All Opposition at Everard Read continues his legacy as an artist refusing neat definition. You'll have to see it for yourself. 
 
The new solo by Michael MacGarry's new solo is curious, disarming, and not without humour. Photo: Everard Read

Until Sun, May 26 – Following his six-week residency, Abdus Salaam’s first solo exhibition is held at Nirox Sculpture Park. Spread across three spaces, the artist explores love in its terrestrial, ethereal, and divine forms in Insaan (Human Being).
Until Thu, May 30 – The title alone for August House resident artist Itumeleng 'Mamase' Koloko's solo show at Rand Club packs a punch: This is a Man's World, but it Wouldn't be Anything Without a Woman or a Girl. Through mixed mediums of oil, charcoal, pastel, and acrylic, it's the artist's ode to the numinous nature of women.
Until end May – One of the leading South African artists in the Expressionist movement, Maggie Laubser's utterly lovely works show in the Annex of Keyes Art Mile's Trumpet building. (Viewings are by appointment only; email info@tmrw.art to arrange a timeslot.)
Until end May – Offbeat Cape Town-based graffiti artist Slegh (aka @krinkywinky) gets his first solo exhibition of paintings, prints, embroidery, and more in Infekted by Dolphins at Braamfontein's Grayscale Gallery.
Until Sun, Jun 2 – Sculptor and ceramicist Natalie de Morney honours her San ancestry in her first solo exhibition, Re-Connections, at Berman Contemporary. Also at 223 Jan Smuts, Dalingcebo (Dali) Ngubane explores the concept of chaos in religion, mathematics, community, and the individual, in Chaos, A Theory with Candice Berman Gallery.
Until Sat, Jun 19 – The result of seven years of archival and field research, writer and artist Bettina Malcomess's film cycle Sentimental Agents tracks the journey of "a technician of minor histories, trying to tell the story of cinema's place in the South African War". Public programming around the exhibition at Wits Art Museum (WAM) responds to the resonance between this war history and our contemporary moment, making this a show you'll want to re-visit.
Until Sun, Jul 7 Tatenda Magaisa's multimedia exhibition It wearies me; you say it wearies you at Johannesburg Art Gallery (JAG) explores themes of sanity and overwhelm with a dose of humour. 
 
Johannesburg Art Gallery (JAG) gets a pastel pink makeover to host Tatenda Magaisa's work. Photo: Katiso Mabuza.

Ongoing – Renowned artist and photographer Roger Ballen's semi-permanent exhibition End of the Game at the Inside Out Centre for the Arts chronicles the practice of unrestrained hunting. Ballen will host walkabouts of the show, which will change periodically with input from various collaborators, on the first Saturday of every month. Follow @insideoutcentre on Instagram for details.

GROUP EXHIBITIONS

Until end May – Incredible landscapes spanning mediums, styles, and eras are brought together in Near and Far at Keyes Art Mile's Gallery 1 and Atrium spaces. These rarely-seen works from a private collection are a joyous journey. (Viewings are open on Wed – Fri from 10:00 – 16:00 and Sat from 09:00 – 13:00.)
Until end May – Rick Baloyi, Mashudu Nevhutalu, and Vanessa Tembane reflect on the meaning of home in Lizamore & Associate's evocative group show at Workshop 17 Firestation.
 
Rick Baloyi is part of a trio of artists exploring the meaning of home in an intimate group show. Photo: Lizamore & Associates

Until Fri, May 31 – Lamis Haggag and Mina Nasr explore the connections between the hadeda and sacred ibis (a prominent figure in Egyptian mythology) in Navigating Iridescence at Goethe-Institut.
Until Sun, Jun 2 – Pretoria Art Museum gets its moment in the sun with 60 Years of Artistic Journey, a retrospective exhibition chronicling the museum's evolution since it was founded in 1964. There are sure to be some special works on show. 
Until Sun, Jun 2 – Berman Contemporary shines light on seven emerging and early-career artists in The New Vanguard at their 223 Jan Smuts gallery.
Until Sat, Jun 8 – Jonathan Freemantle unveils a series of paintings and woodcarvings created during his seven-month residency at the Hugo Burge Foundation in Scotland. The Fallen Tree at Gallery MOMO draws on diverse influences from Jackson Hlungwani, an artist Freemantle has long admired, as well as Japanese Zen painting, African ritual masks, and the natural world.
Until Wed, Jul 31 – In Resilience and Reflection, the Apartheid Museum showcases works from the Ifa Lethu Foundation's phenomenal collection. Created by black South African artists like Dumile Feni, Winston Saoli, and David Phoshoko Mothapeng, these pieces have been repatriated from 16 countries and provide a record of township life during apartheid.
Ongoing – The South African Gold Coin Exchange and the Scoin Shop are behind a permanent exhibition, We Love Mandela, at The Marc in Sandton Central. The group show charts some of the most important milestones in Nelson Mandela's life through paintings, textiles, and sculptural works.

SAVE THE DATE

Sat, May 18 from 11:00 – Join provocative photographer Roger Ballen as he reflects on his career and latest publication, Polaroids, at the Rand Club ballroom. There's no charge but bookings are essential. RSVP here.
Opening Sat, May 18 – The vivid imagination of Georgina Gratrix sings in Between Two Palms: New works from Durban, a solo show by the painter at Stevenson.
 
Georgina Gratrix's still life The Green Studio can be read as an extended love letter to her hometown of Durban. Photo: Stevenson.

Opening Sat, May 18 from 11:30 – Free State-based artist Wessel van Huyssteen presents his latest body of work in Flood at Gallery 2.
Fri, May 24 – Sun, May 26 – One of Joburg's premier art experiences returns to Shepstone Gardens this May. Early-bird tickets for the RMB Latitudes 2024 art fair are already sold out and we suggest you get yours soon – go here.
Sat, May 25 – Sun, May 26 – A unique, on-the-ground art festival, Contra.Joburg is the biggest open studios event in South Africa. Get your tickets here.
Tue, Jun 4 and Wed, Jun 5 – Calling South Africa's rising art stars: entries are open for the 2024 Sasol New Signatures Art Competition. Get your works ready for submission at one of several collection points across the country. In addition to a R100,000 cash prize, the winner gets a solo exhibition at the Pretoria Art MuseumRead our interview with the 2023 winner Nosiviwe Matikinca here.

Wondering what else to do this week? Read our weekly events guide here. For our latest updates, follow us on Instagram

Related Events

Every Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri
Group exhibition: We Love Mandela at The Marc

University of Johannesburg

​Cnr Kingsway and University Rd, Auckland Park​
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