The Borneo Post

Cape Town hosts retrospect­ive of iconic South African artist Esther Mahlangu

-

From an old BMW painted in colourful shapes to abstract works and historic photograph­s, a retrospect­ive of celebrated South African artist Esther Mahlangu opened this week in Cape Town.

The exhibition follows the 88-year-old painter and mural artist’s unusual trajectory from rural South Africa to global acclaim. After Cape Town, it will be taken on an internatio­nal tour.

Despite having no formal art training, Mahlangu earned an internatio­nal reputation with works referencin­g her Ndebele heritage and using skills passed down for generation­s.

“It’s in my genes to paint Ndebele,” the artist, wearing traditiona­l, brightly coloured blue, yellow and brown garments and jewellery — and white sneakers — told AFP in an interview.

Mahlangu learnt the art of Ndebele design as a child from her mother and grandmothe­r.

With just a chicken feather, she first painted mud huts and chipboards before moving on to luxury cars, vodka bottles, skateboard­s and footwear as her intricate patterns became huge commercial hits.

“The Ndebele art is within me, I was born with it. It is important for me, I don’t pretend to love it, I love it,” she said.

The retrospect­ive, which opened at the Iziko South African National Gallery on Sunday, features pictures, a short film and more than 100 contempora­ry works.

Among them is Mahlangu’s iconic BMW Artcar — a sedan she painted with her trademark colourful geometric shapes in the 1990s as part of a collaborat­ion with the German carmaker.

Yet the artist said she was hard-pressed to pick her best work. “I love everything I have painted, everything! I have no favourite,” she said.

Mahlangu’s first big internatio­nal break came in 1989, when she was 54.

Her ornately decorated house had caught the eye of French researcher­s who invited her to the Pompidou Centre.

However, South Africa was not quick to recognise Mahlangu’s talent — she gained internatio­nal prominence at a time when the art scene in her home country was focused on contempora­ry styles.

“The retrospect­ive pays homage to Dr. Mahlangu’s unique approach to art, which intersects African culture with modernity and the contempora­ry, symbolisin­g pride, self-determinat­ion and innovation,” said curator Nontobeko Ntombela.

After Cape Town the exhibition will move to Johannesbu­rg’s Gauteng province before departing for the United States and beyond.

 ?? Photo — AFP ?? Esther Mahlangu poses in front of a BMW 525i covered in her artwork during an interview ahead of the influentia­l Ndebele artist’s major new retrospect­ive opening at the Iziko South African National Gallery in Cape Town.
Photo — AFP Esther Mahlangu poses in front of a BMW 525i covered in her artwork during an interview ahead of the influentia­l Ndebele artist’s major new retrospect­ive opening at the Iziko South African National Gallery in Cape Town.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia