Popular South African Artists You Would Love to Know About

Are you an art admirer and looking for original art for sale online? If yes, the first thing you need to do is to gain thorough knowledge about the popular contemporary artists who stunned the world with their amazing art works.

For many years, South African is largely considered as a hub of both traditional and modern painting works. The contemporary art scenario of South Africa is defined by a vibrant list of creators, who understand and embrace socio-economic authenticities, political tasks, rich traditions and multi-dimensional beauty. Here some of the most leading and emerging artists who continue to influence the growth of contemporary art in Africa.

Meschac Gaba

Meschac Gaba stored critical approval for his travelling exhibition, Museum of Contemporary African Art, launched in 1997 at Amsterdam’s Rijksmuseum. Gaba’s amazing art project is made up of 12 exhibition spaces, including Summer Collection Room, Museum Restaurant and Draft Room, established across different European art institutions over the past years – in an effort to place African art in the light of international audiences. In 2013, the Tate Modern bought and showcased Gaba’s entire ‘museum’, featuring khayelitsha art paintings, ceramics and multimedia installations employing materials including plywood, paint, plaster, stones and mothballed bank notes.

Tracey Rose

Durban-born Tracey Rose is a well-known contemporary multimedia artist and honest feminist, best known for her solid performances, video works and captivating photographic works. Rose challenges the politics of identity, including sexual, racial and gender-based patterns, and often discovers her multi-ethnic ancestry. She skilfully cartels elements of prevalent culture with sociological theories to evoke powerful depictions of South Africa’s political and social landscape. Rose has held single exhibitions in South Africa as well as Europe and America, and has taken part in a number of global events, including the Venice Biennale.

Sokari Douglas Camp

Nigerian-born, London-based Sokari Douglas Camp adheres to the first cohort of African women artists that seized the international landscape. Douglas Camp, who has emerged a large Kalabari town in the Niger Delta, is immenselyenthused by Kalabari culture and traditions, and she pays modern sculptural techniques with the predominant use of steel, to create large, semi-abstract figurative paintings in Cape town. She has had various solo and group exhibitions all over the world, and her works live in the enduring collections of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington DC and the British Museum in London.

If you are looking for original art for sale online, the above given knowledge would provide beneficial to you in choosing the right product at the right price. Moreover, you would be able to negotiate better with such type of knowledge in your end.

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