Top 20 Famous South African Painters And Their Paintings
Discover the rich tapestry of South African art through the works of its most distinguished painters. This article presents the top 20 famous South African painters, showcasing the diversity and depth of the country's artistic heritage.
From the internationally acclaimed William Kentridge and the vibrant Esther Mahlangu to the expressive Marlene Dumas and the pioneering Gerard Sekoto, each artist offers a unique lens through which to view South Africa's complex history and vibrant contemporary culture. Their paintings, full of color, emotion, and narrative, are a testament to the enduring spirit and creativity of South Africa.
Here is a list of famous South African painters:
- William Kentridge
- Bonnie Ntshalintshali
- Jane Alexander
- Vladimir Tretchikoff
- Marlene Dumas
- Jackson Hlungwani
- Durant Sihlali
- Sue Williamson
- Walter Battiss
- Gerard Sekoto
- Esther Mahlangu
- Noria Mabasa
- Irma Stern
- Jacobus Hendrik Pierneef
- Penny Siopis
- Athi-Patra Ruga
- Abdoulaye Konaté
- George Pemba
- Chéri Samba
- Ibrahim el-Salahi
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1. William Kentridge
William Kentridge is South Africa's most popular and famous artist. He works with an assortment of mediums including print, painting, sculpture, and movie, his artworks have been shown at New York's MOMA and the Louver in Paris.
What influenced William Kentridge?
His enthusiasm for theater—explicitly in acting —influenced his artistic style and roused a longing to combine film and drawing.
Kentridge's drawings are rendered utilizing pastels and charcoal. His work was further propelled and influenced by famous painters, including HonorĂ© Daumier (French, 1808–1879), Francisco de Goya (Spanish, 1746-1828), and William Hogarth (British, 1697-1764).Â
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2. Bonnie Ntshalintshali
Bonnie Ntshalintshali was conceived on Ardmore Farm in the Winterton region of KwaZulu-Natal in 1967.
She experienced polio as a young woman due to the situation, she was not strong enough to work, therefore her mother inquired her to start doing pottery.
What type of art does Bonnie Ntshalinthshali do?
In 1985, she was apprenticed to an artist named FĂ©e. While learning fundamental fire procedures in sculpting, Bonnie's capacity in both sculpture and painting was immediately perceived, and she was urged by FĂ©e to seek after her very own work.
In 1988 Bonnie got the Corobrik National Ceramic Award, and in 1990 she won the Standard Bank Young Artist Award mutually with FĂ©e.
That equivalent year, 1990, she spent a term at the University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, concentrating under Juliet Armstrong and Ian Calder.
In 1991, Standard Bank appointed a progression of unique prints. Bonnie created a progression of unique silk-screens that were demonstrated that year at the print celebration in Grahamstown.
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3. Jane Alexander
Best known for her sculpture, The Butcher Boys, which can be viewed as her reaction to the highly sensitive situation in South Africa in the late 1980s.
She makes sculptures and photomontages that are impressions of real occasions, individuals, or social and monetary issues that happen in her surroundings.
The greater part of her pieces represent the political and social view of South Africa.Â
The Butcher Boys Sculpture by Jane Alexander
Butcher Boys is a sculpture made by South African artist Jane Alexander of three life-size, oil painted mortar figures with creature horns. The work shaped part of her MAFA accommodation and was first shown at the Market Theater Gallery in Johannesburg in 1986.
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4. Vladimir Tretchikoff
Vladimir Tretchikoff is famous for his Chinese girl painting, famously known as 'The Green Lady', which stood out amongst other art prints that were sold during his time.Â
Tretchikoff was a self-educated artist who painted sensual figures, still lifes, and creatures.
With subjects, frequently inspired by his stay in China, Singapore, and Indonesia. He worked in oil, watercolor, ink, charcoal, and pencil.
The Green Lady by Vladimir Tretchikoff
The painting is of a Chinese young lady and is best known for the irregular skin tone utilized for her face—a blue-green shading, which gives the painting its prominent name The Green Lady.
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5. Marlene Dumas
Marlene Dumas works investigate subjects of sexuality, love, passion, and drama, regularly referencing art history, pop culture, and current affairs.
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Snowwhite in the wrong Story by Marlene Dumas
Her subjects are drawn from open references. The outcomes are regularly personal and on occasion disputable, where governmental issues become sensual.
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6. Jackson Hlungwani
Jackson Hlungwani had no conventional preparation as an artist and figured out how to cut wood from his dad who made things for his local village.
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7. Durant Sihlali
Durant Sihlali worked in a wide scope of media, including painting, sculpture, printmaking, and 'mash paintings'. Sihlali demonstrated enthusiasm for art since he was a child. Inspired by his dad whose leisure activity was drawing and painting.
He created watercolor paintings of shanty-town subjects which mirrored his own situation when he was growing up under apartheid.
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Durant Sihlali Mount Frere (Transkei Town Scape in Winter) by Durant Sihlali
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8. Sue Williamson
Sue Williamson is a Cape Town-based artist who is globally known for her work. She has spoken at numerous museums and galleries, including the Tate Modern, The Victoria, and Albert Museum, London, and the Museum of Modern Art in New York.Â
She was part of South African artists who started to make art, during the 1970s which tended to represent the social change and display apartheid in South Africa.
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One Hundred and Nineteen Deeds of Sale
The pieces of clothing will at that point be brought down and be sent to India, where they will be washed clean.
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9. Walter Battiss
Walter Battiss would end up being South Africa's first and most significant conceptual painter.
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10. Gerard Sekoto
Gerard Sekoto is generally perceived as a pioneer of dark South African Art.Â
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11. Esther Mahlangu
Esther Mahlangu learned conventional Ndebele divider painting and beadwork as a youngster from her mom.Â
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12. Noria Mabasa
Her work depicts the social reproach of women and children. In spite of the fact that she had no conventional art training, Mabasa's artistic skills are clearly displayed in her art.
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13. Irma Stern
Irma Stern was a painter and sculptor who ventured throughout Africa. She had her first exhibit appear with the assistance of German painter Max Pechstein. Her work was not generally welcomed upon display, yet in the long run, drew praise and she is now viewed as one of the main South African contemporary artists.
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14. Jacobus Hendrik Pierneef
The majority of his paintings were scenes of the South African highveld. Pierneef's style utilized structures, planes, lines, and shading to introduce the amicability of nature.
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15. Penny Siopis
"Siopis works in painting, film/video, photography, and installation. In the past, her work critically engaged the genres of still life and history painting. Locating her practice within a post-colonial context the artist continues to reflect on the complex intersections of collective and individual history and the construction of memory.
Her early interest in feminist aesthetics has shaped her later explorations of violence, shame, sexuality, and, more recently, grief. Conscious use of materiality as a signifier– both throughout her media and in the embodied awareness of her own process – characterizes all Siopis’s work, whether in painting, found object installations, or film."
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16. Athi-Patra Ruga
"His playful visual imagery draws from a diverse range of cultural references that are not limited to a specific biology, ancestral origin, or geographical location. The queer hybrid figures represented in Ruga’s work exist in a liminal world between the utopian dream and reality."
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17. Abdoulaye Konaté
Abdoulaye Konaté's artwork investigates socio-political and ecological issues. Konaté questions the manner by which social orders and people, both in Mali and past, have been influenced by variables.
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18. George Pemba
In the last few years of his life, this great pioneering South African artist. Wrote
“I do not know if ever I will become a great artist, but an artist of my own nation I surely am to be”.
 Pemba received recognition from the art world and South Africans at large.
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19. Chéri Samba
Samba depicts himself in much of his works and In 1975 Samba opened his very own studio.Â
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20. Ibrahim el-Salahi
A pioneer of the Sudanese Khartoum School and one of the main African artists to have a review at the Tate Modern in London, Ibrahim El Salahi consolidates European styles with customary Sudanese subjects in his art.
Famous South African Wildlife Artists & Drawing Artists In South Africa
- Uli Aschenborn
- Keith Joubert
- Steve Bloom
- Brent Stirton
- Barbara Pike
- Jacobus Hendrik Pierneef
- Maggie Laubser
- Dumile Feni
- Cecil SkotnesÂ
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9 comments
I am George Pemba’s granddaughter on my mother’s side. I request that the picture used of my grandfather be changed. That was a time when he was sick and not a great reflection of who he was. I am sure being in the profession you can find a better picture of him.
Sincerely
Tham-Tham
I have an original Tinus de Jong painting in black and white probably (charcoal) named
" Government Avenue Cape Town" which must have been painted before asphalt roads ever existed. It shows Government Avenue in gravel road with rows of trees on both sides of the road. Wonder what the value of such painting would be worth?
I have an original Tinus de Jong painting in black and white probably (charcoal) named
" Government Avenue Cape Town" which must have been painted before asphalt roads ever existed. It shows Government Avenue in gravel road with rows of trees on both sides of the road. Wonder what the value of such painting would be worth?
I have five paintings that I purchased during early 1960s, they are by Sue Wigley…. T Clarke…An excellent one by Nicols or Vicals
I don’t believe El-Salahi is South African… he’s an outstanding artist but should not be included on a list of South African painters