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-1.47 %The 89-year-old legendary artist Esther Mahlangu is well-respected for her unmistakable style and for persevering with her art during the brutal apartheid regime.
A boldly patterned BMW stands at the entrance of the Wits Arts Museum in the vibrant Johannesburg neighbourhood of Braamfontein.
Its bright geometric shapes are part of 89-year-old South African artist Esther Mahlangu’s unmistakable style. The car is the centerpiece of an exhibition honouring her and her work.
Commissioned in 1991, it is among Mahlangu’s most well-known works and has been returned to South Africa this year after more than 30 years abroad.
She is respected for persevering with art at a time when Black artists, especially women, were hardly acknowledged.
“Mahlangu dared to travel an uncharted path during a time when Black women artists were systemically overlooked. I hope when people see just how much she has done, they will realise the magnitude of what she has offered to the arts,” exhibition curator Nontobeko Ntombela said.
Culture campaigner
The retrospective also includes a documentary about the artist, where she tells the story of her rural upbringing and her Ndebele culture.
For decades, Mahlangu has used her talent to promote that culture, becoming arguably the southern African ethnic group's most recognised representative.
Ntombela said much of the publicly available information about Mahlangu tends to repeat the same narratives, including her first international show in Paris in 1989.
“Some tend to overly emphasise the culture without the balance of discussing her work as an art form. The exhibition tries to complicate this and hopefully offers an opportunity of how her art moves across these different fields and disciplines," the curator said.
Some of the artworks showing umgwalo, or traditional Ndebele painting, were borrowed from collections locally and abroad. Ntombela said it took about two years to secure them.
International tours
“Numerous works are under the ownership of international collectors, so we needed a lot of funds to bring a lot of her work back to South Africa,” she said.
Mahlangu is a recipient of one of South Africa's highest national awards, the Order of Ikhamanga in silver, which is awarded by the head of state.
She briefly attended the launch of the exhibition last month but lives quietly in Mpumalanga province, where her colourfully decorated home remains an attraction for local and international tourists.
The exhibition will run until April 17, 2025 before it embarks on an international tour starting in early 2026.
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