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Urban Entanglements: How Art Reflects Citymaking featuring David Koloane, Sam Nhlengethwa and Kagiso Pat Mautloa

26 April - 29 May 2025
Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg

Goodman Gallery is proud to present Urban Entanglements: How Art Reflects Citymaking, spotlighting influential 20th-century masters from the African continent—the late David Koloane (1938–2019), Kagiso ‘Pat’ Mautloa, and Sam Nhlengethwa—whose artistic legacies remain impactful in the 21st century. The exhibition features a dynamic selection of paintings, drawings, and charcoal works on paper, created during and after the final years of apartheid in South Africa, spanning from the 1980s to the 2020s. These works reflect the shifting socio-political landscape, capturing the complexities of urban life in a city shaped by segregation and its aftermath.

These pivotal figures shaped South Africa’s artistic landscape, offering a powerful lens through which to explore the evolution of Johannesburg. Their work reflects how art can document, challenge, and reshape perceptions of place and identity, particularly within a city shaped by the legacy of colonial and apartheid spatial planning. Koloane, Mautloa, and Nhlengethwa’s careers are deeply intertwined with Johannesburg’s vibrant and complex landscape. Crossing paths from the 1970s onward, each artist developed a distinctive practice—across collage, painting, and printmaking—that reflects personal and collective experiences within this evolving urban environment.

Koloane’s charcoal drawings and mixed media works capture Johannesburg’s restless rhythm through expressive, gestural marks. His artworks convey the lived experiences of the city’s Black residents—navigating systemic oppression while forging their own paths to endure and thrive. Through his distinctive approach to African expressionism, Koloane transforms movement and tension into a visual dance of survival and creativity.

Artworks

Pencil and Acrylic on paper
70  x 100 cm
Pencil and Charcoal on paper
70 x 100 cm
Pencil and charcoal on paper
70 x 100 cm
Woven mohair tapestry
205 x 265 cm
Mixed media on paper
29.2 x 41.8 cm
Mixed media on paper
29.1 x 41.8 cm
Charcoal and pencil on paper
70.4 x 100 cm
Mixed media on canvas
41.7 x 59.4 cm
Mixed media on canvas
41.7 x 60 cm
Collage, acrylic, goldleaf on canvas
49 x 89.5 cm
Acrylic on Fabriano paper
26.5 x 31 cm
Charcoal on stiffen cloth
51 x 39 cm
Acrylic on canvas laid down on board
46 x 36 cm
Acrylic on canvas
90 x 51 cm
Acrylic on canvas, wood and Corrugated board
19.5 x 17.5 cm
Charcoal on stiffen cloth
49.5 x 31.7 cm
Pen watercolour and collage on paper
17 x 27 cm
Unavailable
Pen, watercolour and collage on paper
17 x 27 cm
Pen, watercolour and collage on paper
17.2 x 21.5 cm
Pen, ink and watercolor on paper
16 x 24 cm
Unavailable
Pen, ink, watercolour and collage on paper
17 x 27 cm
Pen and ink on paper
15 x 20 cm
Unavailable
Collage and acrylic on wood
85 x 83 cm
Unavailable
Watercolour and collage on paper
17 x 16 cm
Unavailable
Watercolour and collage on paper
14.1 x 23 cm
Unavailable
Acrylic and collage on canvas
120 x 200 cm
Charcoal, pastel and acrylic on paper
86 x 198 cm

About

David Koloane image

David Koloane

David Koloane (1938 – 2019) was born in Alexandra, Johannesburg, South Africa. Koloane spent his career making the world a more hospitable place for black artists during and after apartheid. Koloane achieved this through his pioneering work as an artist, writer, curator, teacher and mentor to young and established artists at a time when such vocations were restricted to white people in South Africa. A large part of this effort involved the initiatives Koloane helped establish, from the first Black Art Gallery in 1977, the Thupelo experimental workshop in 1985 and the Bag Factory Artists’ Studios in 1991, where he served as director for many years. Koloane also tutored at the Federated Union of Black Artists (FUBA) in 1979 and became the head of the fine art section and gallery from 1985 to 1990.

Through his expressive, evocative and poetic artwork, Koloane interrogated the socio-political and existential human condition, using Johannesburg as his primary subject matter. Koloane’s representations of Johannesburg are populated with images of cityscapes, townships, street life, jazz musicians, traffic jams, migration, refugees, dogs, and birds among others. Imaginatively treated, through the medium of painting, drawing, assemblage, printmaking and mixed media, Koloane’s scenes are a blend of exuberant and sombre, discernible and opaque pictorial narratives.

Koloane’s work has been widely exhibited locally and internationally. In 1999 he was part of the group exhibition _Liberated Voices_ at the National Museum of African Art in Washington DC. In 2013, Koloane’s work was shown on the South African pavilion at the 55th la Biennale di Venezia and on the group exhibition _My Joburg_ at La Maison Rouge in Paris. In 1998, the government of the Netherlands honoured Koloane with the Prince Claus Fund Award for his contributions to South African art. Koloane was also awarded an Honorary Doctorate twice, once from Wits University in 2012, and again from Rhodes University in 2015. In 2019 Koloane was the subject of a travelling career survey exhibition, _A Resilient Visionary: Poetic Expressions of David Koloane_, which opened at IZIKO SANG and later travelled to Standard Bank Gallery and Wits Art Museum in October.

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Sam Nhlengethwa image

Sam Nhlengethwa

Sam Nhlengethwa (b. 1955, Payneville, Springs) part of a pioneering generation of late 20th century South African artists whose work reflects the sociopolitical history and everyday life of their country. Through his paintings, collages and prints Nhlengethwa has depicted the evolution of Johannesburg through street life, interiors, jazz musicians and fashion.

Nhlengethwa was born in the Black township community of Payneville near Springs (a satellite mining town east of Johannesburg), in 1955 and grew up in Ratanda location in nearby Heidelberg. In the 1980s, he moved to Johannesburg where he honed his practice at the renowned Johannesburg Art Foundation under its founder Bill Ainslie. Nhlengethwa is one of the founders of the legendary Bag Factory, in Newtown, in the heart of the Johannesburg CBD, where he used to share studio space with fellow greats of this pioneering generation of South African artists, such as David Koloane and Pat Mautloa.

In 2014, a major survey exhibition, titled Life, Jazz and Lots of Other Things, was hosted by SCAD Museum of Art in Savannah, Georgia, which was then co-hosted in Atlanta by SCAD and the Carter Center.

Nhlengethwa’s practice features in important arts publications, such as Phaidon’s The 20th Century Art Book (2001).

Other notable exhibitions and accolades in South Africa and around the world include: in 1994 – the year South Africa held its first democratic elections – Nhlengethwa was awarded the prestigious Standard Bank Young Artist of the Year award; in 1995, his work was included in the Whitechapel Gallery’s Seven Stories About Modern Art in Africa in London; in 2000, he participated in a two-man show at Seippel Art Gallery in Cologne.

Group exhibitions include: Constructions: Contemporary Art from South Africa, Museu de Arte Contemporanea de Niteroi, Brazil (2011); Beyond Borders: Global Africa, University of Michigan Museum of Art, Michigan (2018).

Biennales include: 6th Beijing Biennale in (2015); 55th Venice Biennale, as part of the South African Pavilion, titled Imaginary Fact: Contemporary South African Art and the Archive (2013); 12th International Cairo Biennale (2010); 8th Havana Biennale (2003); Southern African Stories: A Print Collection, CCA (Caribbean Contemporary Arts), Trinidad (2002).

Collections include: Johannesburg Art Gallery (JAG), Durban Art Gallery (DAG), Iziko South African National Art Gallery (ISANG), Standard Bank’s Head Office, Absa, Botswana Art Museum, Museum of Fine Arts Houston, amongst many in South Africa and abroad.

Nhlengethwa lives and works in Johannesburg, South Africa.

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