Looking for the best art galleries in Cape Town?

South Africa features a number of homegrown exports who have gone on to create amazingpieces of work as well as contributing to the global art discourse. Among these are William Kentridge, ZaneleMuholi, KemangWaLehulere, David Goldblatt, Mmakgabo Helen Sebidi and Mary Sibande. We’re also very proud of icons such as Esther Mahlangu, a painter of large-scale works with references to the Ndebele heritage, who has exhibited and collaborated with international artists including Yoko Ono.

South Africa is known to have a number of great institutions such as The Wits School of Arts in Johannesburg (offering programmes in digital art, fine art, film & television, history of art, theatre/performance and more), Michaelis School of Fine Art in Cape Town, and the Market Photo Workshop in Johannesburg. Over times, these have been prominent in inculcating a solid connection between art and activism.

Metropolitan towns such as Johannesburg, Durban and Cape Town make up an important part of the South African artwork, but some smaller cities have and continue to make a name for themselves. Among these are Parys in the Free State and Grahamstown in the Eastern Cape (to be renamed Makhanda, honouringNxele, a Xhosa warrior, philosopher and prophet). Grahamstown is a big town to the The National Arts Festival, a major event in South Africa’s arts calendar. The festival started in 1974 and has captured tremendous reputation as the top-most arts festival, showcasing the best art in Africa through performances, comedy shows, visual art exhibitions and more.

If you are searching for the best art galleries in Cape Town, it is necessary for you to understand that there are many that are known to feature some amazing collection of South African artwork. Despite typical modern art dominating the conversation, initiatives have been taken to join artists on the outlying. One of these is through The Joburg Fringe, often termed as “the gutsy, independent, streetwise, annual art fair”, which runs alongside the popularJoburg Art Fair and congregates art lovers, collectors, galleries and philosophers around African contemporary art. Joburg Fringe creates a space for independent and emerging artists to engage with curators, collectors and the public, and takes place at Victoria Yards in the suburb of Lorentzville, an industrial region turned artist hub cum urban farming landscape, cultivating not only some of the best art in the city but also seasonal fruit and vegetables. Victoria Yards is also home to a number of contemporary galleries and print studios, including Daville Baillie Gallery, Danger GevaarIngozi Studio (DGI) as well as artist studios with visual artists Blessing Ngobeni and AyandaMabulu.

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