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(1972 – )
Coming from an education in the discipline of architecture, now working as an artist, my artmaking has always engaged instances of the missed, the ignored and the overlooked. I am captivated by the less legible – but no less important – aspects of life. Such not-so-obvious spaces, things and phenomena tend to occur in liminal zones, for instance along boundaries, on edges and at thresholds. In search of new ways of seeing, I mine such generally missed notions for the revealing and surprising possibilities they hold.
‘Undoing Architecture’ is the term I use to frame my artmaking practice. This practice relies on working with the overlaps of – and slippages between – art and architecture. Working in the frictional zone between the two disciplines, I produce artistic responses that challenge the status quo of current material, spatial, social, economic, and cultural phenomena. These occurrences are often poorly framed and oversimplified by an architectural discipline too slow and too complacent to seriously engage the multiple universal existential crises faced by humanity. In my work I set out to undo simplistic and often erroneously understood benign readings of such ostensibly innocent architectural framing, and flattening, of life. My chosen mode of undoing, whether speculative or concrete, provides new possibilities for a re-viewing and re-imagining of atrophied mainstream architectural practice. This approach has resulted in a steadily growing body of work expressed in numerous group and solo exhibitions since 2009.
My work has focused primarily on the spatially and socially fraught city of Johannesburg, in a sense the perfect locus for my work, precisely because it is such an imperfect city (inscribed with division even 25+ years after the political dismantling of apartheid). Locating my research in this fraught context adds further credence to my work, particularly in current times of dissonance linked to the complex layers of a ‘nation’ grappling with an emergent and unpredictable state of becoming or, as it feels to many now – considering this city and country’s multiple structural failings – a relentless state of un-becoming. Adding to these local tensions the world at large appears to have reached a simultaneity of breaking points, hinging on current widespread social unrest, political uncertainty, economic precariousness, creeping fascism and an apparently permanent state of othering and shifting of blame. These conditions play out in architectural space and place. In Johannesburg, such instances also unfold in many if not invisible then at least overlooked zones that exist in this sprawlingly uneven urban conurbation. These zones, what one might refer to as non-spaces and non-places, lend themselves to and deserve closer consideration in their essential yet elusive states of in-between-ness.
The conceptual ‘collisions’ I set up in my artistic work serve as a basis for my critically reflexive writings. Such writings complement and strengthen my art practice and facilitate a working-through and textual expression of my larger framework of undoing. My art practice – supplemented by my writing and teaching practices – situates the site-specific anomalies in Johannesburg I choose to work with, within a broader global discourse examining urban, national and trans-border spaces of conflict. The works which emerge from such artistic pursuits are, I hope, responsive, inclusive and adaptive, in the ways in which they set out to challenge the continued generally unquestioned relevance of the sluggish and self-assured discipline of architecture.
I work across an ever-expanding range of media, from photography and video, to drawing, collage, sculpture and installation. Photography, more than any other medium, serves as a critical cog in my practice. A way of seeing and un-seeing, I use it to build a loose archive of observations and latent potential ideas that may or may not become works. Chloë Reid, in a recent exhibition catalogue introduction (2021), outlines my use of photography as follows:
Opper, whose interdisciplinary work is concerned with spatial politics, uses the photographic mode to collect imagery. The images he collects represent immediate responses to his everyday environment and provide the material (both physical and conceptual) for critical and creative research.
Career highlights have been my first solo show, Separ(n)ation, at Goethe on Main (2013), for which I produced seven substantial works exploring the relational tensions and possibilities evoked by Johannesburg’s ubiquitous and only ostensibly banal condition of palisade fencing. In 2015 a key work from the above show, ‘Who’s Afraid of …’ (2013) was acquired by the Johannesburg Art Gallery (JAG) for its contemporary collection. Before this, in 2010, the making of Accumulation #1 (the first iteration of an envisioned open series of works), using as a medium dust which had settled on the cornices of the JAG’s exhibition spaces over the course of its, then, 100 years of existence, represents another key example of my spatial un/doings. More recently my large-scale artist’s book wall-installation Burning Issues (2017) critically engaged the complex role of language, and fire, exposed by 2015’s various #RMF and #FMF moments and campaigns. The 2021 works, 20 seconds and Figure/Ground mark my debut showing with GRAHAM Contemporary in Johannesburg.
As a cultural producer I have given numerous TV, radio and press interviews on my artistic practice (see, for example: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xgwSivZ3BVQ, featuring the second installation of the work Uitval (2013) as installed at the Gordon Institute of Business Science in 2015, in a version of the work called Uitval: Unfolded). A design studio I headed at UJ in 2008/09 illustrates one instance of how intensively my artistic practice flows into and is also informed by my academic research and teaching. This studio led to a reimagining of Johannesburg’s Goethe-Institut via the reinterpretation and entropic reconfiguration of its original alienating boundary wall (for more context, see my article: http://mg.co.za/article/2009-11-06-fall-wall-confronts-fear-and-paranoia-of-city-users). I have run local and international master classes, curated exhibitions on art, architecture and design and have presented my artistic projects in a broad range of places, including various German cities, New York, São Paulo and Abidjan. My work is held in public (The Johannesburg Art Gallery (JAG)) and private collections. A book I co-edited, ‘Das Bauhaus Verfehlen / Missing the Bauhaus’, was recently published by iwalewabooks, Germany and, in July 2022, I completed a month-long residency as a fellow of the Ampersand Foundation in New York City.
I was born in Pretoria in 1972 and left, literally as soon as I could, at 17. Cape Town was my next stop and the UCT School of Architecture set the scene for what it was I thought I should be doing with my life. Architecture as it turns out has simply served as a very useful critical arc to return me to an early instinctual desire for artmaking.
After my undergraduate studies I worked in various architectural practices between 1994 and 1997, the year I began my graduate studies in architecture in Berlin, a city I had moved to in 1995. Having had a German father, the pull to gain a fuller understanding of my German roots had always been strong. The entropic and site-specific nature of my future artistic work announced itself in my politically loaded master’s thesis, The Matter of the Castle (German: Schloß als Materie), completed at the University of the Arts (UdK) in 2001. My project offered a counterproposal to the farcical idea of rebuilding the former Berliner Schloß (Berlin Castle) as a Disneyfied copy of itself. The copy has since, sadly, manifested: as the Humboldt Forum, a new museum problematically housing, amongst other things and functions, a massive ethnological ‘collection’. This culminating project of my graduate studies remains of seminal importance for me as it birthed my driving approach of Undoing Architecture (I write more about this here: https://www.academia.edu/21407615/_Undoing_Architecture_2010_double_blind_peer_reviewed_paper_published_in_conference_proceedings_book_).
After graduating and qualifying as an architect I was invited, on the strength of my master’s project, to join the architectural team of Kühn Malvezzi Architects. The firm had won the invited competition to design the exhibition architecture for Okwui Enwesor’s Documenta 11 in 2002.
In 2005 I relocated to South Africa. After experiencing Berlin’s particular brand of cityness, Johannesburg was the only South African city I could imagine living, and thriving, in. In the second half of 2005 I taught a semester to first year architecture students at the University of Pretoria. It was my first teaching engagement and an experience I found very gratifying. After a short stint in a local architectural firm, I successfully applied for a fulltime teaching position in the University of Johannesburg’s Department of Architecture. I immersed myself in the possibilities this position afforded me to think and teach architecture differently (critically reflecting on the limits of the modernist tradition under which I’d been taught architecture). I went on to design and direct the university’s first ever architectural master’s programme. This programme catalysed very fruitful years of pedagogical experimentation using an approach I called ‘folding the studio into the field’, breaking with the typically inward-looking nature of architectural education prevalent in the school at the time. I employ this teaching approach to this day.
This period and the many ways in which Johannesburg served as a critical laboratory for testing and developing new approaches to architectural education proved highly significant for my emergent artistic career. It exposed me to the city’s many complexities and contradictions, based on, to highlight just one example, its entanglements of smooth and striated space (as described by Lindsay Bremner in her essay Themes and Theories, in her book Writing the City into Being (2010, Fourthwall Books)).
In 2009, UJ’s FADA Gallery served as the first significant opportunity for me to make a large-scale artistic installation, a work of institutional criticism. The faculty’s white cube gallery was the subject of this critique. Via an immersive work called Auseinandersetzung (German for a range of related words – conflict; confrontation; dialogue; engagement – and the intersections between them) employing an entropic approach of shifting, displacing and obstructing, I drew attention to the gallery’s failings. This early work marked the beginning of a critically reflexive practice of interrogating the fallout of the largely uncritical, linear and normative discipline of architecture. Since then, I have gone on to produce and exhibit a substantial body of work that – through my process of undoing – deals critically with, and derives meaning from, the politics of space.
2018
PhD studies: Affiliated Junior Fellow in the PhD programme of the Bayreuth International Graduate School of African Studies (BIGSAS), University of Bayreuth, Germany
2001
Master of Architecture (MArch), with Distinction: University of the Arts (UdK), Berlin, Germany
Master’s thesis title: Schloß als Materie (The Matter of the Castle)
1993
Bachelor of Architectural Studies (BAS): School of Architecture, Planning & Geomatics, University of Cape Town (UCT), South Africa
1985-1989
Pretoria Boys’ High School, Pretoria, South Africa
Solo exhibitions:
2015
Uitval: Unfolded, Gordon Institute of Business Science (GIBS), Johannesburg (04/02-26/02)
2013
Separ(n)ation, Goethe on Main, Arts on Main, Maboneng, Johannesburg (24/10-17/11)
See: https://vimeo.com/214627677
Group exhibitions:
2023
Sunny Side Up, Group exhibition, Graham Contemporary, Johannesburg, South Africa
2022
New Day, Group exhibition, Graham Contemporary, Johannesburg, South Africa
Romancing the Stone, KZNSA Gallery, Durban (21/09-21/10).
See: https://www.kznsagallery.co.za/Exhibitions/View/1014/romancing-the-stone
2022
Jan-Ken Paa/Paper, Studio Gallery SPG no. 3, Muizenberg, Cape Town (22/07-31/12).
2021
Interventions in Practice, University of Johannesburg, FADA Gallery, Johannesburg (10/08-15/10).
See: https://www.academia.edu/71809566/20_seconds_and_Figure_Ground_2021_chapter_in_exhibition_catalogue_
2017
Booknesses: South African Artist’s Books, University of Johannesburg, FADA Gallery, Johannesburg (24/03-05/05).
See: http://www.theartistsbook.org.za/view.asp?pg=booknesses&pgsub=exhibitions&pgsub1=fada_artists&pgsub2=ao
2017
Booknesses: Artist’s Books from the Jack Ginsberg Collection, UJ Art Gallery, Johannesburg (25/03-05/05).
2015
Past Imperfect // Future Present, FADA Gallery, Johannesburg (24/03-15/05)
See: https://static1.squarespace.com/static/59e717f380bd5e0c46840b11/t/5bb499170d92977697f51445/1538562384331/Past+Imperfect-Future+Present.pdf & https://static1.squarespace.com/static/59e717f380bd5e0c46840b11/t/5bf7f8040ebbe88c33834185/1542977563553/9781431425136.pdf(pages 111-122)
2015
GROUP, Gordon Institute of Business Science (GIBS), Johannesburg (08/04-22/04).
2014-15 }
TWENTY: Contemporary Art from South Africa, Turchin Center for the Visual Arts. Appalachian State University, North Carolina, USA. (11/07/14-07/02/15).
See: https://www.flickr.com/photos/turchincenter/15138351967/in/album-72157647509829938/
2010
Cloak & Dagger: The Curtain Raiser, Security Building, 95 Commissioner Street, Johannesburg (25/11-31/12).
2010
Draw links: An exhibition of contemporary drawings, Gallery Art on Paper, 44 Stanley Ave., Johannesburg (09/10-30/10).
2010
The Spirit is not an idea, Says the penguin, CO-OP, Juta Street, Braamfontein, Johannesburg (18/03-17/04).
2010
Time’s Arrow: Live readings of the JAG collection, Johannesburg Art Gallery, Johannesburg (21/02-18/04).
See: https://timesarrowatjag.blogspot.com/p/alexander-opper.html
2009
2nd Floor, Security Building, Security Building, 95 Commissioner Street, Johannesburg (28/11).
2009
FADA Staff Show, University of Johannesburg, FADA Gallery, Johannesburg (22/09-16/10).
See: https://www.viad.co.za/fada-staff-exhibition-2009
2009
The Double Body: being in space, University of Johannesburg, FADA Gallery, Johannesburg (20/05-21/07).
See: https://www.viad.co.za/times-arrow
Curated exhibitions:
2015
Exhibition and Auction of original drawings inspired by the City of Gold. Public exhibition and auction (04/10); Showcasing of 120 original drawings produced by the students of Unit 1: Architecture & Infrastructure – Drawing the city into being. The Gauteng Institute for Architecture (GIfA). Johannesburg (17/09-04/10).
2014
Monty Sack (1924-2009): Architecture & Art (Special Exhibition for the XXV International Union of Architects (UIA) World Congress: Architecture Otherwhere). Public exhibition (Co-curated with Albonico Sack Metacity Architects & Urban Designers); with inclusion of master’s student work (from the 2013 design studio Urban Update: Monty Sack). Durban Convention Centre. Durban (03/08-07/08).
2014
JAG: A catalytic discussion & exhibition. Public discussion and two-week exhibition of design work by UJ Master’s Architecture students considering the future of the Johannesburg Art Gallery (JAG). JAG.
Johannesburg (Opening & public discussion: 24/04).
2013
Monty Sack (1924-2009). Retrospective Exhibition: Architecture & Art. Public exhibition (Co-curated with Stephen Hobbs and Albonico Sack Metacity Architects & Urban Designers); with inclusion of master’s student work (from the design studio Urban Update: Monty Sack). FADA Gallery, UJ. Johannesburg (23/05-20/06).
2009
FallWall (Part of Cracking Walls) (2009). Goethe-Institut (G-I), Johannesburg. Public exhibition of 3rd Year UJ/FADA architecture student design proposals for future visions of the Goethe-Institut, Johannesburg, without walls. (07/10-31/10).
2018
Dogscapes: Etchings and Drawings by Sue Pam-Grant. The Gallery of the DST NRF SA Research Chair in South African Art and Visual Culture, University of Johannesburg (33 Twickenham Avenue, Auckland Park). (18/04-11/06).
2012
(In)visible City Revisited, Nirox Projects. Arts on Main. Johannesburg. Showcasing the nocturnal photography of Johannesburg of architect and photographer Leon Krige (01/06-16/06).
2010
GAZART. Curatorial intervention. Main Street Life, Maboneng. Johannesburg. Co-curated with Tegan Bristow, in collaboration with Molemo Moiloa and Nare Mokgotho, of MADEYOULOOK (07/08).
2009
(In)visible City. FADA Gallery. Johannesburg. Showcasing photography by Leon Krige and Sally Gaulle. Co-curated with David Paton and Rosalind Cleaver (01/08-31/08).
As someone who has written and published extensively, I’m a well-respected researcher both locally and internationally. In 2017 I was been awarded the academically coveted rated-researcher status by the National Research Foundation (NRF). I have penned over fifty texts about art, design and architecture across numerous publications. These include a total of 15 double-blind peer-reviewed publications. A selection of my chapters, articles, essays and reviews can be found here: https://johannesburg.academia.edu/AlexOpper
In the paper ‘Undoing Architecture’ (2010) I describe my approach to making art in the frictional space between the disciplines of art and architecture.
See: https://www.academia.edu/21407615/_Undoing_Architecture_2010_double_blind_peer_reviewed_paper_published_in_conference_proceedings_book_
Most recently my co-edited book Das Bauhaus Verfehlen / Missing the Bauhaus was published under the imprint iwalewabooks(2022).
Publications on my work:
Reid, C. 2021. Introduction. In Interventions in Practice (online exhibition catalogue). Discussion of my work, part of the above exhibition, held at FADA Gallery, UJ, Johannesburg: 2-5. 10 Aug-15 Oct.
See: https://www.uj.ac.za/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/interventions_catalogue_08-2.pdf
Wood, G. 2015. A fence to bring us together. Review of my 2015 solo exhibition Uitval (Unfolded), held at Gordon Institute of Business Science (GIBS), Johannesburg (4-26 Mar). In Times Live (online). 10 Mar.
See: https://www.timeslive.co.za/news/south-africa/2015-03-10-a-fence-to-bring-us-together/
Wood, G. 2015. Dusting of JAG: Six exhibitions and a book celebrate gallery’s centenary. Includes a reflection on my work on the exhibition Time’s Arrow: Live readings of the JAG collection, held at the Johannesburg Art Gallery (JAG) (21 Feb-18 Apr 2010). In Times Live (online). 10 Nov.
See: https://www.timeslive.co.za/news/south-africa/2015-11-10-dusting-off-jag-six-exhibitions-and-a-book-celebrate-gallerys-centenary/
Andrew, D. 2014. Separ(n)ation: Alex Opper’s Undoing of Johannesburg Space. Review of my 2013 solo exhibition, Separ(n)ation, held at Goethe on Main, Johannesburg (24 Oct – 17 Nov). In Safundi – The Journal of South African and American Studies. Vol. 15. Iss. 2-3: 420-22 (special issue on SA photography).
Smith, T. 2013. The ins and outs of SA’s divisive palisades. Review of my 2013 solo exhibition, Separ(n)ation, held at Goethe on Main, Johannesburg (24 Oct – 17 Nov). In The Sunday Times. 3 Nov.
See: https://www.timeslive.co.za/sunday-times/lifestyle/2013-11-03-the-ins-and-outs-of-sas-divisive-palisades/
Buys, A. 2012. The Spirit is Not an Idea, Says the Penguin. Exhibition review in Artthrob.
Bester, R. 2010. Time’s Arrow. Johannesburg Art Gallery. Johannesburg. (exhibition review). In Art South Africa. Vol. 08. Issue 04. Winter: 104-105.
Buys, A. 2009. The inspirational quirk (review of the 2009 FADA Staff Exhibition). In Mail & Guardian. Friday, 2 Oct: 6.
Gray, B. 2009. The Double Body: being in space (exhibition review). In FADA Research Newsletter. Issue 12: 10-11.
Conference presentations:
19-23 September 2022. Alexander Opper. Photo/graphing Stone: The lasting concretisation of politics and the politicisation of concrete in David Southwood’s photographs of Johannesburg water towers; The 36th Annual SAVAH Conference (‘Romancing the Stone’). Faculty of Arts & Design, Durban University of Technology, Durban.
27-29 May 2019. Alexander Opper. Breaking Johannesburg’s Fourth Wall: An interrogation of three façade-conditions as interstitial sites of appearance, reality and possibility; ‘Inclusion and Accessibility’ Conference. Kardinal-Wendel-Haus-Katholische Akademie, Münich.
23-26 March 2017. Alexander Opper. Undoing the Artist’s Book. Booknesses Book Arts Colloquium: Taking Stock of the Book Arts in South Africa (International colloquium at FADA, UJ). Johannesburg.
18-20 March 2015. Alexander Opper. Derrière les panneaux publicitaires (Behind the Billboards). Viaduct 2015 – Archival Addresses: Photographies, Practices, Positionalities (International platform at FADA (FADA Gallery), UJ). Johannesburg.
19-22 March 2014. Alexander Opper. Separ(n)ation. 16th ACASA Triennial Symposium on African Art. Brooklyn Museum. New York.
30-31 January 2014. Alexander Opper. Separ(n)ation. Practice-Led Writing Workshop. UJ, FADA. Johannesburg.
21-22 November 2013. Alexander Opper. Assessing pedagogical outcomes: Some reflections on Productive ‘Leakage’ and the ‘Folding’ of the Studio into the Field. URBAN LAB+. The Laboratory approach to Built-Environment Education. Johannesburg Colloquium. Wits (School of Architecture and Planning), Johannesburg.
23 May 2013. Alexander Opper. ‘Folding’ the Studio into the Field: Some Lessons learned and shared, between
Johannesburg & São Paulo. IBSA Working Group on Human Settlements (IBSA WGHS). Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC), Pretoria (live simulcast between Pretoria / Cape Town / Durban).
29 April 2013. Alexander Opper, with Anne Graupner (26’10 south Architects). Informal Studio: Marlboro South, Johannesburg, South Africa. Baukulturwerkstat. Weltstadt-Stadtwelten. Deutschen Architektur Zentrum (DAZ). Berlin, Germany.
26 October 2012. Alexander Opper, Thiresh Govender & Monika Läuferts. Change Room (‘Art and the Creative Industries’): presentation on the possible future(s) of Johannesburg’s Gas Works. Sustain our Africa Summit. Cape Town. 24-
13-17 September 2012. Alexander Opper with Thorsten Deckler. Informal Studio: Ruimsig – Unsettling the Status Quo. AZA 2012 Conference. Cape Town.
3 May 2012. Alexander Opper with Thorsten Deckler. Informal Studio: Ruimsig. One-day Sub-Saharan Regional Conference, Goethe-Institut. Johannesburg.
3-5 November 2011. Alexander Opper with Thorsten Deckler. Informal Studio Ruimsig. African Perspectives, Casablanca. Morocco.
28-29 October 2011. Alexander Opper. New Iwalewa (presentation of design concept for the domicile of the New Iwalewa Haus). Contact Zone – New Iwalewa. Bayreuth, Germany.
16-17 April 2011. Alexander Opper. (Not) Everything counts in large amounts: Dusty Realism and the productive ‘archive’ of the in between. Synthetic Dirt. Rhodes University. Grahamstown.
11-15 January 2011. Alexander Opper. Landscapes and Trajectories of Displacement: Finding Place in Hotel Yeoville; SAVAH Conference (Other Views: Art histories in (South) Africa and the Global South). Wits, Johannesburg.
22-24 September 2010. Alexander Opper. Playing Ball: A Friendly Between Two Private Publics. AZA Biennale 2010: Event + City (Reimagining Johannesburg). Johannesburg.
15-16 October 2009. Alexander Opper. Undoing Architecture. On Making: Integrating Approaches to Practice-Led Research in Art and Design. FADA, UJ. International colloquium. Johannesburg.
9-11 April 2008. Alexander Opper. The Physical Relocation of Cultural Memory and the Political Dislocation of History through Architecture; Johannesburg and Megacities Phenomena Conference. Johannesburg.
22-24 August 2007. Alexander Opper. The Physical Relocation of Cultural Memory and the Political Dislocation of History through Architecture. Second International Conference of the Arts in Society. Kassel, Germany.
Talks, launches & walkabouts:
3 September 2022 (15:00-18:00). Public book signing for Das Bauhaus Verfehlen / Missing the Bauhaus: Alexander Opper & selected authors. FnB Art Joburg, Sandton Convention Centre, Johannesburg.
9 June 2022 (11:00-13:00). Second public book launch for Das Bauhaus Verfehlen / Missing the Bauhaus: Alexander Opper & co-editor. Gauteng Institue for Architecture (GIfA), Johannesburg.
24 March 2022 (18:00-21:00). First public book launch for Das Bauhaus Verfehlen / Missing the Bauhaus: Alexander Opper, co-editor & selected authors. Breezeblock Café, Brixton, Johannesburg.
17 July 2017 (20h00-22:00). Public lecture (Burning Issues): on the politics of language(s) in the context of #FMF and #RMF discourses in SA (using the artist’s book, Burning Issues, as a critical lens). Iwalewahaus, Bayreuth, Germany.
11, 18 & 25 March 2015 (13h00-13h45). Exhibition walkabouts (Uitval: Unfolded): Three public walkabouts of my solo exhibition at the Gordon Institute of Business Science (GIBS). Johannesburg.
24th April 2014. Public discussion (JAG. A Catalytic Discussion): Alexander Opper, with Antoinette Murdoch and Stephen Hobbs. Public discussion on the future of the Johannesburg Art Gallery (JAG). JAG, Johannesburg.
19 October 2012. Special School Talk (‘Ohne Titel / Untitled – Deutschland: of some terrains …’): Presentation to FADA members of faculty and students, of a week-long research trip (Sept 2012) undertaken to Germany, upon the invitation of the Goethe-Institut’s Visitor’s Programme. UJ. FADA Auditorium. Johannesburg.
8 December 2011. Invited university lecture (‘Hotel Yeoville’): Presentation of the project and exhibition design of Hotel Yeoville. University of Tübingen, Germany.
17 September 2011. Public lecture and tour (of the Goethe-Institut’s Cracking Walls project): for Gauteng school pupils participating in Growth and Development Strategy (GDS) 2040. Goethe-Institut, Johannesburg.
13 September 2011. Public presentation (Enabling Safety through Urban Design and Management): I presented in the context of Growth Development Strategy (GDS) 2040’s Outreach Programme (during the Community Safety Week, from 11-17 Sept). Cosmo City, Johannesburg.
13 July 2011. Invited university lecture (Two-part lecture on ‘Hotel Yeoville’ and ‘Undoing Architecture’): Invited by Dr Kerstin Pinther. Free University, Berlin. Art Historical Institute. Berlin, Germany.
1 July 2011. Invited university lecture (Two-part lecture on ‘Hotel Yeoville’ and ‘Undoing Architecture’): Invited by Dr Ulf Vierke. University of Bayreuth. Iwalewa Haus. Bayreuth, Germany.
19 May 2011. Invited public lecture (The Residual Power of Uitvalgrond): Afternoon Colloquium on Art and Public Space. Organised and hosted by GIfA and Fourthwall Books. Johannesburg
20 April 2010. Invited guest speaker (Creating meaning in architecture and furniture design in a South African context: searching for interdisciplinary lessons between two disciplines ): Invited guest speaker at annual prize-giving of the Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University’s (NMMU) School of Architecture. NMMU. Gqeberha (then Port Elizabeth).
7 October 2009. Public presentation (Presentation of the Cracking Walls designs by 3rd year students form the UJ FADA’s Department of Architecture): In the context of the symposium Boundaries: How we define safety in public spaces. Goethe-Institut, Johannesburg.
21 August 2008. Public Talk (Cities Talk): Invited talk with Thorsten Deckler and Henning Rasmuss, on Maputo, New York and Beijing, respectively. At 26’10 south Architects, as a contribution to the ‘Friday Sessions’ (#34), Johannesburg.
3 March 2008. Invited School Talk: Practice presentation, in the context of the Practice Makes Perfect series. WITS School of Architecture & Planning, Johannesburg.
28 September 2007. Public Talk (The Physical Relocation of Cultural Memory and the Political Dislocation of History through Architecture): At 26’10 south Architects, as a contribution to the ‘Friday Sessions’ (#33), Johannesburg.
20 April 2007. School Talk (Design & Process – Process & Design): University of Johannesburg, Faculty of Art, Design and Architecture, Johannesburg.
2006. School Talks (Design & Process – Process & Design): Two school talks (Universities of Pretoria and Free State (Bloemfontein)), respectively.
26 September 2022. Radio interview: by Kofifi FM, on a public art mural executed in Westbury with my 3rd year architecture students from the University of Johannesburg’s Department of Architecture.
31 March 2015. Television interview: by BusinessDay TV (The Business of the Arts), on solo exhibition Uitval: Unfolded, at Gordon Institute of Business Science (GIBS), Johannesburg. The interview was broadcast, in edited form, on BusinessDay TV on 31 March 2015. See: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xgwSivZ3BVQ
17 November 2013. Television interview: by eNCA, on solo exhibition Separ(n)ation, at Goethe on Main. The interview was broadcast, in edited form, on eNCA on 17 Nov 2013. See: https://youtu.be/4TVWwSX7T6k
16 November 2013. Radio interview: on SAfm’s Art Matters show, on solo exhibition Separ(n)ation, at Goethe on Main.
29 October 2013. Press interview: published as The ins and outs of SA’s Divisive Palisades. Interviewed by
Tymon Smith, for The Sunday Times (published: 13 Nov 2013 – under Opinion & Analysis:19), on solo exhibition Separ(n)ation, at Goethe on Main.
7 June 2011. Press interview: published as Turning the City into a 3-D School. Interviewed by Theresa Taylor, for The Star (published: 9 Jun 2011), on the student project and public exhibition, Re-educating the City.
7 June 2011. Press interview: published as Soft Touches in Concrete. Interviewed by Andrea Nagel, for The Times (published: 9 Jun 2011), on the student project and public exhibition, Re-educating the City.
11 November 2009. Radio interview/discussion: as one of David Gleason’s guests on CLASSIC fM’s The State of the Nation show, on the Cracking Walls project for the Goethe-Institut, Johannesburg, Discussion revolved around notions of safety and security in the context of Johannebsurg’s many physical and mental walls.
4 November 2009. Television interview: by German channel ZDF, on the Cracking Walls project for the Goethe Institut, Johannesburg. Interview revolved around the design process carried out by my 3rd year students at the time – from the University of Johannesburg’s Department of Architecture – that led to the design of the re imagined landscape around the Goethe-Institut in Parkwood, Johannesburg. The interview was broadcast, in edited form, on German national television (Channel: ‘3Sat’) on 9 Nov 2009.
Opper’s work is held in private collections and the following public collections:
2022
Aawarded the rare privilege of becoming a fellow of the residency programme of the Ampersand Foundation Fellowship in New York City. Oppertook up the residency for the month of July.
2016
Awarded an NRF (National Research Foundation) rating as a rated-researcher for the period 2017-2022. Opper recently applied for a re-rating for the upcoming period.
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(1975 – )
Using oil paint as the primary medium and the suburban landscape as a departure point, the paintings suggest a collision of inner and outer realities, an impression that meaning is fleeting and intimately personal. Focusing on themes of doubt, ambiguity, and contradiction, all interpretations are welcome, necessary, to create an almost cinematic suspense, an awareness that something is about to happen, or has just happened. In acknowledging that the world is not something to be known and understood, but rather to be seen and queried, the artist strives to create works that are poignant, melancholic, and beautiful.
Andrew Kayser (b. 1975, South Africa) is a contemporary artist living and working in Johannesburg, South Africa. He graduated from the Koninklijke Academie van Beeldende Kunsten (Royal Academy of Art), Den Haag, Netherlands in 2001 and went on to participate in several exhibitions in and around the Netherlands before returning to South Africa in 2005.
After a lengthy struggle with alcoholism, Kayser regained sobriety, resuming his professional practice of art in 2014. He has since held 5 solo exhibitions: Fragments of Longer Stories (Graham Contemporary, 2023) Not Enough Time to Do Nothing (THK Gallery, 2021) A Moderate Bliss (THK Gallery, 2019) Christ Haus!! (Kalashnikovv Gallery, 2019) and At Home After Dark (Kalashnikovv Gallery, 2017).
He has participated in numerous group exhibitions – most recently Collide (The Featherstone Center for the Arts, Massachusetts, USA) – and his work has been shown at a number of international art fairs including Enter Art Fair (Copenhagen), Cologne Fine Art & Design, AKAA (Also Known As Africa) Art & Design Fair (Paris), 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair (London) and Contemporary Istanbul Art Fair.
2023
Fragments of Longer Stories, Graham Contemporary, Johannesburg, SA
A Line Around Your Thoughts, with Rhett Martyn, Gallery 2, Johannesburg, SA
Optimal Vibration, Group Exhibition, Graham Contemporary, Johannesburg
Sunny Side Up, Group exhibition, Graham Contemporary, Johannesburg, South Africa
2022
Summer Salon Group Exhibition, Graham Contemporary, Johannesburg, South Africa
New Day, Group exhibition, Graham Contemporary, Johannesburg, South Africa
2021
Not Enough Time to do Nothing, THK Gallery, Cape Town
Transform Group Show, THK Gallery, Cologne
2020
Investec Cape Town Art Fair, THK Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
Cubicle Series January 2020, Everard Read Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
2019
Cologne Fine Art & Design, THK Gallery, Cologne, Germany
Also Known as Africa (AKAA) Art & Design Fair, THK Gallery, Paris, France
FNB Joburg Art Fair, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
Contemporary Istanbul Art Fair, THK Gallery, Istanbul, Turkey
A Moderate Bliss solo exhibition, THK Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
Christ Haus!!, solo exhibition, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
Studio Show with Jake Michael Singer at August House, Johannesburg, South Africa
Investec Cape Town Art Fair, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
2018
Turbine Art Fair, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
Dark Dogs and Candyfloss, duo exhibition with Manuela Karin Knaut, Graham’s Fine Art Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
The Cat Show, David Krut Projects, Johannesburg, South Africa
Kalashnikovvgallery 3.0, group exhibition, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
Memento Mori, group exhibition, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
Investec Cape Town Art Fair, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
A Contemporary Showcase, Graham’s Fine Art Gallery in collaboration with Kalashnikovv Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
2017
The Invisible Exhibition, Centre for the Less Good Idea, Johannesburg, South Africa
Super Salon II, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
Magiciens d’Afrique, group exhibition at ODA Fine Art Gallery, Franschhoek, South Africa
FNB Joburg Art Fair, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
At Home After Dark, solo exhibition, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
Another Antipodes / Urban Axis, group exhibition, Perth, Australia
Investec Cape Town Art Fair, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
Untitled Berlin, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Berlin, Germany
2016
Super Salon, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
The Scramble for Africa, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Berlin, Germany
Berliner Liste Art Fair, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Berlin, Germany
FNB Joburg Art Fair, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
Turbine Art Fair, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
#ULTRACONTEMPORARY #EMERGENCYART #AFRICA, group exhibition, Museum of African Design, Johannesburg, South Africa
From Whence They Came, a collaborative group exhibition with Smith Gallery and Kalashnikovv Gallery, Smith Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
No lack of Void / The Gulag Rim, duo exhibition with Jason Bronkhorst, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
August House, group exhibition, Hazard Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
Investec Cape Town Art Fair, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
2015
Cross-Sections, group exhibition, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
Transitions, group exhibition, Old Transvaal Post Office, Johannesburg, South Africa
FNB Joburg Art Fair, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
Turbine Art Fair, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
Young Collectors, group exhibition, Kalashnikovv Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
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(1984 – )
Born in 1984, Athi-Patra Ruga is a South African artist who uses performance, photography, video, textiles and printmaking to explore notions of utopia and dystopia, material and memory. Ruga confronts and challenges the colonial history of South Africa by imagining an idealized future that incorporates highly constructed cityscapes and glamorous interpretations of spiritual and celebrity figures. In addition, his work also explores the body in relation to sensuality, culture, and ideology. So, themes such as sexuality, HIV/AIDS, African culture, and the place of queerness within post-apartheid South Africa also permeate his work.
Looking at the piece ‘Touched by an Angel’ in 2014, Ruga often works in the mediums of tapestry and embroidery and draws heavily from the iconography of the imaginary utopia he calls Azania. This utopian imagery also suggests itself in the 2014 multimedia series ‘Future White Women of Azania’, which explores the vast possibilities of a decolonized Africa.
The presence of Ruga’s work in South Africa’s pavilion at the 2013 Venice Biennale reinforces his status as a highly distinguished South African artist. His work has also been included in exhibitions for the Louis Vuitton Foundation, the Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art and the Smithsonian National Museum.
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(1984 – )
In my artistic practice, I am deeply fascinated by the representation of female characters who defy the rigid black and white constructions imposed by society. I am driven by a desire to challenge and disrupt the conventional narratives and expectations that often limit the portrayal of women. Through my art, I seek to explore the complexities and nuances of female identity, embracing the multifaceted nature of womanhood. I am drawn to the stories of women who exist outside the boundaries of societal norms, those who refuse to be confined by labels or predefined roles.
By creating art that celebrates the diversity and individuality of women, I aim to empower and inspire viewers to question the narrow definitions and stereotypes that have been ingrained in our collective consciousness. I believe that by presenting female characters who don’t conform to societal expectations, we can challenge the status quo and open up new possibilities for self-expression and acceptance. In my artistic process, I employ a variety of mediums and techniques to capture the essence of these unconventional female characters. Through bold brushstrokes, vibrant colors, and intricate details, I aim to convey their strength, resilience, and unapologetic authenticity. Each stroke of the brush is a deliberate act of rebellion against the limited representations of women that have dominated the art world for far too long.
My work is an invitation to engage in a dialogue about the complexities of female identity and the importance of embracing diversity. By presenting female characters who exist in the gray areas, I hope to challenge viewers to question their own preconceived notions and biases, encouraging them to explore the beauty and power that lies in embracing the full spectrum of femininity. Ultimately, my artistic practice is driven by a deep belief in the transformative power of art. I strive to create a space where women can see themselves reflected in all their glorious complexity, where they can find validation, inspiration, and a sense of belonging. Through my art, I aim to contribute to a more inclusive and equitable society, one that celebrates the vibrant tapestry of female experiences and embraces the beauty of individuality.
Group Exhibitions
2023
‘Green Fuse’ Group Exhibition at Graham Contemporary, Johannesburg, South Africa
2013
‘Don’t Jump Off Bridge’ solo exhibition at SMAC gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
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Michael Meyersfeld lives and works in Johannesburg, South Africa. His entire working life has embraced photography in various forms. A veteran of both fine art and advertising photography, he has an extensive local and international portfolio of exhibitions and campaigns. He is currently completing his master’s degree in Art History at the University of the Witwatersrand where he explores the role of the Camera Club of Johannesburg in South African Histories of Photography. Meyersfeld’s work has recently shifted to a contemplation of the inherent qualities in objects. Presented as social commentary, it is notable for its stark, sometimes sombre, lonely and edgy imagery that has separateness from reality. The volume of the external world has been turned down in order that both the artist and the viewer can hear and feel the silence. These images could be rendered as abstractions, as less representational, less reliant on meaning and understanding. They are images drawing on texture and dramatic tension more than a linear narrative, pictures more inclined to be felt, to be experienced, than to be understood. His experimental photographic gallery “Backlight” continued for five years. This initiative included interactive photographic workshops and discussion groups fostering innovation at the intersections of photography and art. These lively gatherings, mainly attended by young black photographers, provided an opportunity for exposure and networking, supporting and enhancing the work and career development of black artists, and thinkers. Special friendships were forged through the showing and discussion of each other’s work and sharing of critical perspectives, technical and professional experience. Meyersfeld has won numerous awards and his work hangs in public collections, including Johannesburg Art Gallery; ABSA Permanent Collection; Johannesburg, South Africa; Constitutional Court, Johannesburg, South Africa; Richard Borek GmbH & Co. KG, and many others.
Selected Solo and Group Exhibitions
2019
Notional, The Henry George Gallery, Johannesburg.
2018
Accessing the Encoded, Gallery 2.
Rossouw Modern Art Gallery, Hermanus. (together with St. John Fuller).
‘Adaptation’, Fried Contemporary.
2017
Adaptation’. In Toto Gallery – Johannesburg.
2016
Waka Waka, Group Show. Agog Gallery. Maboneng, Johannesburg.
2015
Pretoria Art Museum. “Stillness” and “Dark City Dreams“.
Everard Read – Johannesburg. “When Feelings Associate a Consciousness Forms” together with Ricky Burnett.
2014
Dark City Dreams: Phutaditjaba Community Centre (Alexandra Township)
Dark City Dreams: In Toto Gallery, Birdhaven, Johannesburg
Dark City Dreams: South African Jewish Museum, Cape Town
The Benediction of Shade 2: Group Show, David Krut Projects
Fried Contemporary: Group
Bayliss Gallery: Group
2013
Meyersfeld – Braunschweig ‘13. Villa von Amsberg.
Group Exhibition: In Toto Gallery
Discordance: University of Johannesburg Gallery
2012
Group Exhibition: South African Jewish Museum
Retrospective: ABSA Gallery
2011
Transience: In Toto Gallery
2007
David Brown Gallery
2004
Photo ZA Gallery
2001
Paris Photo
Photo ZA Gallery
1995
Everard Read Gallery
1986
The Photo Gallery
1982
Marker Photo Gallery
1980
Pentax Gallery
1979
Gallery Querschnitt
1978
Goodman Gallery
1977
SA Pentax Gallery
1975
Nedbank Gallery
AOP Awards London
2010 – Gold Non-Commissioned Body Single (Alex Church)
2008 – 3 Bronze (Mercedes SLK Campaign)
Pendoring Awards
2010 – Gold Award – Kalahari.net Campaign
Sony Profoto Awards, South Africa
2010 – Picture of the Year – Professional Category (Alex Church)
2010 – 2 Silver Awards – Professional Advertising Category (Ecomist Campaign)
2010 – 1 Gold Award – Professional Photo Journalism Category (Alex Church) • 2009 – 1 Gold Award – Professional Advertising Category (Yum Yum Purple)
Cannes Lions Advertising Festival
2008 – Finalist (Olay)
2005 – 2 Gold Lions, 1 Silver lion (Nugget First Campaign)
The One Show, New York
2006 – 1 Bronze Pencil (Durex Campaign)
2005 – 2 Silver Pencils, 1 Bronze (Nugget First Campaign)
The Andys, New York
2007 – Bronze Statue (Post – it)
2006 – Bronze statue (Nugget First Campaign)
Clios Advertising Awards, USA
2005 – 2 Silver Statues, 1 Bronze Statue (Nugget First Campaign)
New York Advertising Festival
2007 – 1 Gold World Medal (Post – it)
2007 – 1 Grand Prix, 1 Gold (Mercedes SLK Campaign)
2006 – 1 bronze World Medal (Durex and Nugget Second Campaign)
2005 – 2 Gold World Medals, 1 Silver World Medal (Nugget First Campaign)
London International Advertising Awards
2008 – 1 Silver (Olay)
2006 – 1 Winner Statue
2005 – 1 Winner Statue
2004 – 1 Winner Statue
The Eagle Awards
2008 – Bronze (Olay)
2006 – Bronze Eagle
Creative Circle (South Africa) & Ad of the Month
2006 – 1 Winner in February
2005 – 4 Winners in January, February, May & June
The Loerie Awards, South Africa
2010 – Bronze Certificate (Communication & Design) Isuzu Big Mother Trucker Campaign.
2010 – 1 Bronze (South African National Blood Service)
2008 – 1 Bronze (Tipp-Ex)
2008 – 1 Bronze (Olay)
2007 – 3 Bronze Loeries
2006 – 1 Silver Loerie
2005 – 2 Silver Loeries, 4 Bronze Loeries
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(1955 – )
“I am interested in a political art, that is to say an art of ambiguity, contradiction, uncompleted gestures and uncertain ending – an art (and a politics) in which optimism is kept in check, and nihilism at bay.” – William Kentridge
William Kentridge was born in 1955 in Johannesburg. Son of two anti-apartheid lawyers, he learned at an early age to question structural impositions. In 1976, he attained a degree in Politics and African Studies at the University of the Witwatersrand after which he studied art at the Johannesburg Art Foundation until 1978. There, he met Dumile Feni and was greatly influenced by his drawings. He also worked as a set designer for film productions and taught design printing until he moved to Paris in 1981 to study drama at the A’cole Jacques LeCoq.
During the 80’s, Kentridge was art director for television series and feature films. He then began making hand-drawn animated films. Although not directly referring to the segregationist era, he acquired international recognition as a South African artist whose work tracks a personal route across the aftermath of Apartheid and Colonialism. His films are set in the over-exploited, scorched industrial and mining landscape around Johannesburg, which represent the legacy of a time of abuse and injustice.
In a talk with art critic Okwui Enwezor, Kentridge expressed, ‘Drawing is not unlike the structure and evolution of the South African landscape.’ Since 1989 he has made 9 films that accompany the end of the apartheid system, the first elections and the work of Truth and Reconciliation Commission in trying to show the complex tensions in a postcolonial memory. Amongst them are “Johannesburg, 2nd Greatest City after Paris”, “Ubu tells the Truth”, and “Steroscope”.
In addition to film and drawing, an important part of his career has been devoted to theatre. From 1975-91 he was member of the Junction Avenue Theatre Company, in Johannesburg and Soweto. In 1992, he began collaborating, as set designer, actor, and director of the Handspring Puppet Company. The Company creates multi-media pieces using puppets, live actors and animation. It performs plays like Woyzeck, Faust and King Ubu to reflect on colonialism, and human struggle between the past, modernity and ethics.
William Kentridge’s work has been seen in museums and galleries around the world since the 1990s, including Documenta in Kassel, Germany (1997, 2003, 2012), the Museum of Modern Art in New York (1998, 2010), the Albertina Museum in Vienna (2010), Jeu de Paume in Paris (2010), and the Musée du Louvre in Paris (2010), where he presented Carnets d’Egypte, a project conceived especially for the Egyptian Room. Kentridge’s production of Mozart’s The Magic Flute was presented at Theatre de la Monnaie in Brussels, Festival d’Aix, and in 2011 at La Scala in Milan, and his production of Shostakovich’s The Nose was seen at The New York Metropolitan Opera in 2010 and again in 2013, traveling to Festival d’Aix and to Lyon in 2011. The 5-channel video and sound installation The Refusal of Time was made for Documenta (13) in Kassel, Germany, in 2012; since then it has been seen atMAXXI in Rome, the Metropolitan Museum, New York, and other cities including Boston, Perth, Kyoto, Helsinki and Wellington. A substantial survey exhibition of Kentridge’s work opened in Rio de Janeiro in 2012, going on in following years to Porto Alegre, São Paulo, Bogota, Medellin, and Mexico City. In the summer of 2014 Kentridge’s production of Schubert’s Winterreiseopened at the Vienna festival, Festival d’Aix, and Holland Festival. In the fall it opened at the Lincoln Center in New York. Paper Music, a concert of projections with live music by Philip Miller, opened in Florence in September 2014, and was presented at Carnegie Hall in New York in late October 2014, and will continue to be performed in different cities. Both the installation The Refusal of Time and its companion performance piece Refuse the Hour were presented in Cape Town in February 2015.
In 2010, Kentridge received the prestigious Kyoto Prize in recognition of his contributions in the field of arts and philosophy. In 2011, he was elected as an Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and received the degree of Doctor of Literature honoris causa from the University of London. In 2012, Kentridge presented the Charles Eliot Norton Lectures at Harvard University and was elected member of the American Philosophical Society and of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Also in that year, he was awarded the Dan David Prize by Tel Aviv University, and was named as Commandeur des Arts et Lettres by the French Ministry of Culture and Communication. In 2013, William Kentridge was awarded an Honorary Doctorate in Fine Arts by Yale University and in 2014 received an Honorary Doctorate from the University of Cape Town.
In 2015, Kentridge directed Alban’s Berg’s opera Lulu in a co-production of the Dutch National Opera in Amsterdam (June 2015), the Metropolitan Opera in New York (November 2015), and the English National Opera in London, where it will be performed in October 2016 to coincide with a new exhibition at the Whitechapel Gallery.
Other continuing projects in the studio include work on two new multi-channel projection installations. Danse Macabre is conceived as an 8-channel video projection of figures in procession. It was shown first in an installation at the EYE Film Institute in Amsterdam in April 2015, and will also be part of a projection biennale in Germany in September. Notes Toward a Model Opera, a projection over three screens, was part of a large new survey exhibition which opened in Beijing in June 2015 (the exhibition went on to museums in Nanjing, Seoul, and other cities in the Far East). For the 2015 Istanbul biennale, Kentridge worked on a new site-specific installation of sound and video. Work continues on Triumphs & Laments, an approximately 500m frieze of figures to be power-washed from the accumulated pollution on the walls of the Tiber River in Rome – triumphs and laments in the history of Rome – though the project is contingent on permission from the city of Rome.
Solo Exhibitions
2021
William Kentridge: More Sweetly Play the Dance, Mudam, Luxembourg
William Kentridge: Universal Archive, University of Wyoming Art Museum, Laramie, USA
William Kentridge: Tapestries, Annandale Galleries, Sydney, Australia
William Kentridge: Making Prints, Selected Editions:b 1998 – 2021, Marian Goodman Gallery, New York, USA
2020
More Sweetly Play the Dance, Antico Arsenale di Amalfi, Amalfi, Italy
William Kentridge: Breathe, Chiesa di San Domenica, Alba, Italy
City Deep, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
Waiting for the Sibyl and Other Histories, Galleria Lia Rumma, Milan, Italy
Why Should I Hesitate: Putting Drawings to Work, Deichtorhallen, Hamberg, Germany
That Which is Not Drawn, Centre de Cultura de Contemporània de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
Un poème qui n’est pas le nôtre / A Poem that is Not Our Own, Métropole Museum of Modern, Contemporary and Outsider Art, Lille, France
2019
That Which We Do Not Remember, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia
Why Should I Hesitate: Putting Drawings to Work, Zeitz MOCAA, Cape Town, South Africa
Why Should I Hesitate: Sculpture, Norval Foundation, Cape Town, South Africa
A Poem that is Not Our Own, Kunstmuseum Basel, Basel, Switzerland
William Kentridge: Let Us Try for Once, Marian Goodman Gallery, New York, USA
William Kentridge: Ten Drawings for Projection, EYE Filmmuseum, Amsterdam, Netherlands
2018
O Sentimental Machine, Liebieghaus Skulpturesammlung, Frankfurt, Germany
Thick Time, Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester, UK
William Kentridge: Refusal of Time, Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus, Ohio, USA
William Kentridge: Universal Archive, Walsh Gallery, Fairfield University Museum, Fairfield, Connecticut, USA
William Kentridge: Universal Archive, The Arthur Ross Gallery, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA
More Sweetly Play the Dance, Milwaukee Art Museum, Wisconsin, USA
Triumphs and Laments, Emerson Urban Arts, Media Art Gallery, Boston, USA
That Which We Do Not Remember, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney Australia
KABOOM! Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
2017
Right Into Her Arms, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
Enough & More Than Enough, Reina Sofia, Madrid, Spain
Sint Janshospitaal, hosted by Musea Bruges, Bruges, Brussels
William Kentridge: Universal Archive, Trout Gallery, University of Dickinson, Carlisle, Pennsylvania, USA
Processione di Riparazionisti, Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea,Turin, Italy
Journey to the Moon, Hilliard Art Museum, University of Louisiana, Lafayette, USA
William Kentridge, Städelsche Kunstinstitut und Städtische Galerie Frankfurt am Mein
William Kentridge: Smoke, Ashes, Fable, Sint-Janshospitaal, Bruges, Belgium
William Kentridge: Thick Time, Louisiana, Copenhagen, Denmark; Museum der Moderne and Rupertinum, Salzburg
Centre for the Less Good Idea Festival, Johannesburg, South Africa
O Sentimental Machine, Galerie Marian Goodman, Paris, France
Lulu, Teatro Dell’Opera, Rome
Thick Time, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebaek, Denmark
Bata y Sobra, Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid, Spain
Thick Time: Installations and Stagings, Museum der Moderne, Salzburg, Austria
That Which We Do Not Remember, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
2016
Peripheral Thinking, National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Seoul, South Korea
William Kentridge: Thick time, Whitechapel Gallery, London, UK
William Kentridge: More Sweetly Play the Dance, Marian Goodman Gallery, New York, USA
Triumphs and Laments, MACRO, Rome, Italy
William Kentridge: Notes Towards a Model Opera, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
NO IT IS!, Martin-Gropius-Bau, Berlin, Germany
2015
Fortuna, Museo Universitario de Arte Contemporánio, Mexico City, Mexico
Fortuna, Museo Amparo, Puebla, Mexico
William Kentridge: If We Ever Get To Heavan, EYE Film Institute, Amsterdam, Netherlands
William Kentridge: The Nose, Haus Konstruktiv, Zurich, Switzerland
Notes Towards a Model Opera, Ullens Centre for Contemporary Art, Beijing, China
William Kentridge: The Refual of Time, Johannesburg Art Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
William Kentridge: The Refusal of Time, Iziko National Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
William Kentridge: More Sweetly Play the Dance, Marian Goodman Gallery, London, UK
William Kentridge: Lulu, Marian Goodman Gallery, New York, USA
All the World’s Futures, 56th Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy
Double Vision: Albrecht Dürer / William Kentridge, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin Kupferstichkabinett, Berlin, Germany
14th Istanbul Biennial, SALTWATER: A Theory of Thought Forms, Istanbul, Turkey
Notes Towards a Model Opera, National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art in Seoul, Seoul, South Korea
I Am Not Me, Museum Haus Konstruktiv Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
2014
Drawings: East Rand Proprietary Mines Cash Book, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
A cineconcert of projections by William Kentridge and music by Philip Miller, Florence Contemporary Sounds, National Museum of the Bargello, Italy
Fortuna, Instituto Moreira Salles, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
The Refusal of Time and Other Faces, Philip Miller (composer), Catherine Meyburgh (video editor) and Peter Galison (dramaturg), Espoo Museum of Modern Art, The Weegee Exhibition Centre, Ahertajantie, Tapiola, Finland
The Refusal of Time, Philip Miller (composer), Catherine Meyburgh (video editor) and Peter Galison (dramaturg), Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City, USA
Fortuna, Museo de Arte del Banco de la Republica, Bogota, Colombia
Fortuna, Museo de Arte Moderno de Medellin, Colombia
William Kentridge: The Refusal of Time, The Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, USA
William Kentridge: The Refusal of Time, Parasophia, Kyoto Art Centre, Kyoto, Japan
William Kentridge: The Refusal of Time, Perth International Arts Festival, Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts, Australia
William Kentridge: The Refusal of Time, Espoo Museum of Modern Art, Espoo, Finland
William Kentridge: Tapestries, Wits Art Museum, Johannesburg, South Africa
2013
No, It Is, Goodman Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
William Kentridge: Fortuna, Pinacoteca do Estado de Sao Paolo, Brazil
William Kentridge: Fortuna, Fundação Iberê Camargo, Porto Alegre, Brazil
William Kentridge as Printmaker, QUAD, Derby, UK
William Kentridge as Printmaker, University of Northumbria Gallery, Newcastle, UK
William Kentridge: Poems I Used to Know, Volte Gallery, Mumbai, India
William Kentridge: The Refusal of Time, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA
William Kentridge: Second-hand Reading, Marian Goodman Gallery, New York, USA
2012
The Refusal of Time, Documenta 13, Kassel, Germany
William Kentridge: No se unirá usted al baile, Centro De Arte Contempráneo de Málaga, Malaga, Spain
William Kentridge: Universal Archive (parts 7–23) , Annandale Galleries, Sydney, Australia
MCA DNA: William Kentridge , Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, USA
William Kentridge: Fortuna , Instituto Moreira Salles, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
William Kentridge: I am not me, the horse is not mine, Tate Modern, London, UK
William Kentridge: Vertical Thinking , MAXXI – Museo Nazionale delle Arti del XXI Secolo, Rome, Italy
William Kentridge as Printmaker, The Blue Coat, Liverpool, UK
Rise and Fall of Apartheid: Photography and the Bureaucracy of Everyday Life, International Centre of Photography, New York, USA
William Kentridge: No, It Is, Goodman Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
2011
William Kentridge, Seagull Editions, Calcutta, India (exhibition of prints and films)
William Kentridge: Five Themes, Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel
William Kentridge: Five Themes, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, Netherlands
William Kentridge , Galleria Lia Rumma, Milan, Italy
La Negation du Temps – Prologue, Le Laboratoire, Paris, France
William Kentridge: Other Faces, Marian Goodman Gallery, New York, USA
I am not me, the horse is not mine, Cité du Livre, Aix-en-Provence, France
Chostakovitch, Atelier Cézanne, Aix-en-Provence, France
William Kentridge: Other Faces, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
2010
William Kentridge: Five Themes, Albertina, Vienna, Austria
William Kentridge: Five Themes, Museum of Modern Art, New York, USA
William Kentridge: Five Themes, Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach, USA
William Kentridge: What We See & What We Know, Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art
William Kentridge: What We See & What We Know, National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, Japan
William Kentridge: The World is Process, Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center, Colorado, USA
William Kentridge, Annandale Galleries, Sydney, Australia
I am not me, the horse is not mine, Johannesburg Art Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
William Kentridge: Ambivalent Affinities, Kannert Art Museum, University of Illinois, Champaign, Illinois, USA
William Kentridge: Carnets d’Egypte, Museé du Louvre, Paris, France
William Kentridge: Breathe, Dissolve, Return, Galerie Marian Goodman, Paris, France
2009-2012
Five Themes, curated by Mark Rosenthal, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, USA.
William Kentridge: Five Themes, Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach, Museum of Modern Art, New York, USA
Five Themes, Jeu de Paume, Paris, France
Five Themes, Albertina Museum, Vienna, Austria
Five Themes, Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel
Five Themes, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Five Themes, The Garage, Moscow
Five Themes, Australian Centre for the Moving Image, Melbourne, Australia
Strade della città (ed altri arazzi), Museo di Capodimonte, Naples, Italy
2009
Five Tapestries (with Marguerite Stephens), Goodman Gallery project space, Arts on Main, Johannesburg, South Africa
William Kentridge, Henry Art Gallery, Seattle, USA
William Kentridge: What We See & What We Know – Thinking About History Whilst Walking, and Thus the Drawings Began to Move, curated by Shinji Kohmoto, Museum of Modern Art Kyoto (MoMAK), toured to National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art, Japan
William Kentridge: Tapestries, Museo di Capodimonte, Naples, Italy
William Kentridge: Five Themes, Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Fort Worth, USA
William Kentridge: Five Themes, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, USA
William Kentridge: What We See & What We Know, National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto, Japan
2008
(REPEAT) from the beginning / Da Capo, Fondazione Bevilacqua la Masa, Venice, Italy
(REPEAT) from the beginning, Goodman Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
William Kentridge: Seeing Double, Marian Goodman Gallery, New York, USA
Pages from Everyone Their Own Projector Marian Goodman Gallery, New York, USA, Marian Goodman Gallery, Paris, France
William Kentridge, Galerie Marian Goodman, Paris, France
La Fenice, Venice, Italy; Fondazione Spinola Banna per l’Arte, Turin, Italy
I am not me, the horse is not mine, Lecture and installation of 8 Film fragments, The South African National Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
William Kentridge, Annnandale Galleries, Sydney, Australia
2007
William Kentridge: 7 Fragments for Georges Méliès and Black Box / Chambre Noire, Moderna Museet, Stockholm, Sweden William Kentridge: 7 Fragments for Georges Méliès, Journey to the Moon and Day for Night, Hamburger Bahnhof Museum fur Gegenwart, Berlin, Germany
What Will Come (has already come), Städel Museum, Frankfurt, Germany
Il Sole 24 Ore , Domenica, Milan, Italy
William Kentridge: 7 Fragments for Georges Méliès and Black Box/Chambre Noire, Malmö Konsthall, Malmö, Sweden
William Kentridge: Doppelt Sehen – Neue Zeichnungen und Projectionen, Kunsthalle Bremen, Germany
William Kentridge’s Prints , Edinburgh Festival, Edinburgh, UK
William Kentridge’s Prints, Smith College Art Museum, Northampton, Massachusetts, USA
William Kentridge: Fragile Identities, University of Brighton, Brighton, England
What Will Come, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
William Kentridge: Tapestries, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, USA
2006
William Kentridge / The Magic Flute: Drawings and Projections, Marian Goodman Gallery, New York, USA
William Kentridge, Royal Hibernian Academy, Dublin, Ireland
William Kentridge, San Francisco Art Institute, San Francisco, USA
William Kentridge: 9 Drawings for Projection, Museum of Modern Art, New York, USA
William Kentridge: 7 Fragments for George Méliès, National Gallery of Victoria,
Melbourne, Australia
William Kentridge: Preparing the Flute, Art for the World, Isola Madre, Borromeo Islands, Lake Maggiore, Italy
William Kentridge, Galerie Marian Goodman, Paris, France
William Kentridge: Black Box / Chambre Noire, Museum der Moderne Salzburg,
Salzburg, Austria
William Kentridge: Black Box / Chambre Noire, Johannesburg Art Gallery,
Johannesburg, South Africa
William Kentridge: Black Box / Chambre Noire, Museum Höxter-Corvey, Höxter,
Germany
2005
William Kentridge: prints, College of Wooster, Wooster, Ohio, USA
William Kentridge, Musée d’Art Contemporain de Montreal, Montreal, Canada
William Kentridge, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
William Kentridge, Johannesburg Art Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
William Kentridge Model Arts and Niland Gallery, Sligo, Ireland
William Kentridge Limerick City Gallery of Art, Limerick, Ireland.
William Kentridge: Black Box/Chambre Noire, Deutsche Guggenheim Museum, Berlin, Germany
William Kentridge, Galeria Lia Rumma, Naples, Italy
William Kentridge, Miami Art Central, Miami, South Africa
William Kentridge: 7 Fragments for Georges Méliès, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, USA
The Experience of Art, 51st Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy
2004
William Kentridge, Castello di Rivoli, Museo d’Arte, Turin, Italy
William Kentridge, Castello di Rivoli, Museo d’Arte Contemporanea, Rivoli, Italy
William Kentridge, K20 K21 Kunstsammlung Nordrhein, Düsseldorf, Germany
William Kentridge, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney Australia
William Kentridge, Castello di Rivoli, Musée d’Art Contemporain de Montréal, Canada
William Kentridge, Castello di Rivoli, Johannesburg Art Gallery, South Africa
William Kentridge, Art 3 and la CRAC, Valence, France
William Kentridge, Museé Chateau d’Annecy, Annecy, France
William Kentridge, Marian Goodman Gallery, New York, USA
William Kentridge, Annandale Galleries, Sydney, Australia
William Kentridge, Exhibition of Prints, Grinell College Faulconer Gallery, Grinell, Iowa; College of Wooster, Wooster, Ohio, USA
William Kentridge, Marian Goodman Gallery, Paris, France
William Kentridge, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA
Africa Remix: Contemporary Art of a Continent, Museum Kunst Palast, Düsseldorf, Germany
William Kentridge, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
2003
William Kentridge: Journey to the Moon and 7 Fragments for Georges Méliès, Baltic Art Centre, Visby, Sweden
William Kentridge, Mönchehaus Museum für Moderne Kunst, Goslar, Germany William Kentridge, Exhibition for award of Goslar Kaiserring to William Kentridge, Möenchehaus Museum Goslar, Goslar, Germany
William Kentridge, Lia Rumma Gallery, Milan, Italy
William Kentridge, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
William Kentridge, Iziko South African National Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
2002
William Kentridge, Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston, USA
William Kentridge, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, USA
William Kentridge, Annandale Galleries, Sydney, Australia
William Kentridge: Zeno Writing, Marian Goodman Gallery, New York, USA
William Kentridge, Lia Rumma Gallery, Milan, Italy
2001
William Kentridge Das Gedachtnis der Kunst, Historisches Museum, Frankfurt, Germany
William Kentridge, Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC, USA, toured to New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York; Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; Contemporary Art Museum, Houston; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles; South African National Gallery, Cape Town
William Kentridge, New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York, USA
William Kentridge, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, USA
William Kentridge, Contemporary Art Museum, Houston, USA
William Kentridge, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles,USA
William Kentridge, South African National Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
William Kentridge, Galerie Marian Goodman, Paris, France
William Kentridge: Recent Editions, Robert Brown Gallery, Washington DC, USA
William Kentridge, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington DC, USA
The Short Century: Independence and Liberation Movements in Africa 1945 – 1994, Museum Villa Stuck, Munich, Germany
2000
William Kentridge: Procession, Annandale Galleries, Sydney, Australia
William Kentridge, Stephen Friedman Gallery, London, UK
William Kentridge: New Work, Marian Goodman Gallery, New York, USA
Procession: Sculpture by William Kentridge, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
William Kentridge: Vertical Painting, Stair Procession long-term installation, P.S.1, New York, USA,
1999
William Kentridge: Ulisse: Echo, Netherlands Architectural Institute, Rotterdam, Netherlands
William Kentridge, Lia Rumma Gallery, Naples, Italy
William Kentridge: recent editions, Robert Brown Gallery, Washington DC, USA
William Kentridge: Projects 68, Museum of Modern Art, New York, USA
William Kentridge: Sleeping on Glass, Marian Goodman Gallery, Paris, France
William Kentridge: Stereoscope, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
1998
William Kentridge: Drawing for Projection, The Drawing Center, New York, USA Weighing… and Wanting, The Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego, USA
William Kentridge, Stephen Friedman Gallery and A22 Gallery, London, UK
William Kentridge, Kunstverein Munchen, Munich, Germany
William Kentridge, Museum of Contemporary Art, New York, USA
William Kentridge, Palais des Beaux-Arts / Paleis voor Schone Kunsten, Brussels, Belgium
William Kentridge, Neue Galerie Graz am Landesmuseum Joanneum, Graz, Austria
William Kentridge, Palais des Beaux-Arts, Brussels, Belgium
1997
Applied Drawings, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
Trade Routes: History and Geography, 2nd Johannesburg Biennale, South Africa
Documenta X, Museum Fridericianum, Kassel, Germany
1996
William Kentridge: Eidophusikon, Annandale Galleries, Sydney, Australia
William Kentridge: Faultlines: Inquiries into Truth and Reconciliation, The Castle, Cape Town, South Africa
William Kentridge: Jurassic Technologies Revenant , 10th Sydney Biennale, Sydney, Australia
William Kentridge: Ici et Ailleurs , film section within Inklusion-Exklusion: Versuch einer neuen Kartografie der Kunst im Zeitalter von Poskolonialismus und Globaler Migration, Graz, Germany
William Kentridge:Don’t Mess with Mr Inbetween: 15 artistas da Africa do Sul , Culturgest, Lisbon, Portugal
William Kentridge: Campo 6: The Spiral Village , Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Turin, Italy
William Kentridge: Campo 6: The Spiral Village, Bonnefanten Museum, Maastricht, Holland
Simunye: We Are One. Ten South African Artists, Adelson Galleries, New York
Colours: Contemporary Art from South Africa, Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin, Germany
1995
Eidophusikon, 4th Instanbul Biennale, Turkey
Africus: Johannesburg Biennale, 1st Johannesburg Biennale, South Africa
1994
William Kentridge: Felix in Exile, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
1993
William Kentridge, Ruth Bloom Gallery, Los Angeles, USA
1992
Drawings for Projection, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
Drawings for Projection, Vanessa Devereux Gallery, London, UK
1991
William Kentridge: Five Gouache Collage Heads, Newtown Galleries, Johannesburg, South Africa
1990
William Kentridge: Drawings and Graphics, Hugo Cassirer Fine Art and Gallery on the Market, Johannesburg, South Africa
William Kentridge: Drawings, Gallery International, Cape Town, South Africa
1989
Responsible Hedonism, Vanessa Devereux Gallery, London, UK
1988
William Kentridge, Hugo Cassirer Fine Art, Johannesburg, South Africa
1987
In the Heart of the Beast, Vanessa Devereux Gallery, London, UK
William Kentridge, Standard Bank Young Artist Award Exhibition, toured to Tatham Art Gallery, Pietermaritzburg; University Art Galleries, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg; University Art Gallery UNISA, Pretoria; Durban Art Gallery, Durban, South Africa
1986
William Kentridge, Hugo Cassirer Fine Art, Johannesburg, South Africa
1985
William Kentridge, Hugo Cassirer Fine Art, Johannesburg, South Africa
1981
Domestic Scenes, The Market Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
1979
William Kentridge, The Market Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
Selected Group Exhibitions
2018
Nomadic Murals: Contemporary Tapestries and Carpets, Boca Raton Museum of Art, Florida, USA
2017
21, 39, Jeddah Arts, Saudi Arabia
Versus Rodin: bodies across space and time. Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide
Zeitz MOCAA, Capetown, South Africa and Wendy Fisher’s Foundation
Afriques Capitales, La Villette, Paris, France
Auto Vision: Media Art from Nam June Paik to Pipilotti Rist, Kunsthalle, Bremen, Germany
Frans Masereel and contemporary art: images of resistance, Mu.ZEE-Kunstmuseum aan Zee, Belgium
Art/Afrique, Le nouvel atelier, Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris, France
2016
Moving Tales: Video from the La Gaia Collection, Chiesa di San Francesco, Cuneo, Italy
New Revolutions: Goodman Gallery at 50, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
New Revolutions: Goodman Gallery at 50, Goodman Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
NO IT IS!, Martin-Gropius-Bau Berlin, Berlin, Germany
Refuse The Hour at Perth International Arts Festival, Perth, Australia
2015
Edge of Silence, Goodman Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
Other People’s Memories, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
The Poetry In Between: South-South, Goodman Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa Double Vision, Kulturforum, Potsdamer Platz, Germany
Saltwater: a Theory of Thought Forms, 14th Istanbul Biennial, Istanbul, Turkey
TWENTY: Art in the Time of Democracy, Beijing Biennial, China
2014
From Sitting to Selfie, Standard Bank Gallery, South Africa
Contemporary Art / South Africa, Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, Connecticut, USA
Rise and Fall of Apartheid, Museum Africa, Johannesburg, South Africa
Surfacing, Goodman Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
2013
My Joburg, La Maison Rouge, Paris, France
Editions/Artists’ Book Fair, New York, USA
Rise and Fall of Apartheid: Photography and the Bureaucracy of Everyday Life , Haus der Kunst, Munich, Germany
Rise and Fall of Apartheid: Photography and the Bureaucracy of Everyday Life, Padiglione d’Arte Contemporanea, Milan, Italy
2012
dOCUMENTA (13), Kassel, Germany
Rise and Fall of Apartheid: Photography and the Bureaucracy of Everyday Life , International Centre of Photography, New York, USA
2011
The Underground, the Surface and the Edges , Michaelis Galleries, Cape Town, South Africa
Three Artists from The Caversham Press: Deborah Bell, Robert Hodgins, William Kentridge, Boston University Art Gallery at the Stone Gallery, Boston, USA
South Africa: Artists, Prints, Community, Twenty Five Years at The Caversham Press , The 808 Gallery, Boston University, Boston USA, (toured to Standard Bank Gallery, Johannesburg, October–November)
Sending Signals with Pictures: Each Line is a World Axis , Dresden Academy of Fine Arts, Dresden, Germany
Blink! Light, Sound and the Moving Image, Denver Art Museum, Denver, Colorado, USA
construções: Arte Contemporanea Da Africa do Sul , Museu de Arte Contemporanea, Niteroi , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil curated by Daniella Geo
Space. About a Dream (Weltraum. Die Kunst und eid Traum) , Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna curated by Catherine Hug
Aschemunder (Sammlung Goetz at Haus der Kunst, Munich), Munich, Germany
The Luminous Interval: The D. Daskalopoulis Collection , Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, Bilbao, Spain
MACO Oaxaca, part of a program of presentations curated by Jorge Contreras
Alias , Contemporary Art Museum, Krakow, Poland curated by Oliver Chanarin and Adam Broomberg
Time and Place, Kunsthalle Detroit MI, USA
Watch Me Move: the Animation Show , Barbican Gallery, London, UK
The Question of Drawing , Ogunquit Museum of American Art, Maine,USA
2010
Peekaboo: Current South Africa, Helsinki Art Museum, Helsinki, Finland
Darkroom: Photography and New Media in South Africa since 1950 , Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, USA
Walker/Marx/Kentridge, Apartheid Museum, Johannesburg, South Africa
In Context , Arts on Main, Johannesburg, South Africa
In Context , ‘World on Its Hind Legs’ (in cooperation with Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg) , Apartheid Museum, Johannesburg, South Africa
Production Site: The Artist’s Studio Inside Out , 7 Fragments for Georges Méliès (installation of 9 projections) , Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, USA
Experimentopia , Melbourne Arts Centre, Melbourne
Jewish Museum, New York, presents four films from Drawings for Projectionseries, alongside David Goldblatt exhibition
9 Drawings for Projection , Stuttgart Festival of Animated Film, Germany
Simply Video (Felix in Exile) , Kunstmuseum Stuttgart, Germany
Tide Table and Zeno Writing , Munich, Oecumenic church congress in cooperation with Goetz Collection
Felix in Exile, Longing for Sea Change , Serial group exhibition, Cantor Arts Center, Stanford CA, USA
I am not me, the horse is not mine , Athens Festival, Greece
Divisions: Aspects of South African Art 1948 – 2010 , SMAC Gallery, Stellenbosch, South Africa
Twenty at Nirox: Sculpture of the last two Decades , NIROX Art Foundation, Gauteng, in cooperation with the Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg curated by Andrew Lamprecht
Journey to the Moon , Marchen Kunst / Fairy Tale Art , Kunsthalle Darmstadt, Germany
History of the Main Complaint , Rien ne Sert de Courier , Cotonou , Benin
Dystopia , Oliewenhuis Art Museum, Manguang, South Africa
Big 5 inTown Festival , The Hague, Netherlands
SITE , Santa Fe Eighth International Biennial , USA
Hats Off! 25 years: Linocuts from Caversham , Julia Meintjes Fine Art @ Tokara, Stellenbosch, South Africa
Anima Mundi, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Anima Mundi, Mint Museum, Charlotteville NC, Inaugural exhibition for New Museum facility
Courier , University at Albany Art Museum, Albany NY, USA
The Night Pleases Us (51st October Salon) , Belgrade, Serbia
People, Prints, Process: Twenty Five Years at Caversham , Standard Bank Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
moving Images, Clarion University Art Gallery, Clarion, Pennsylvania,USA
2009
The Puppet Show, Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston, Texas, USA
In Praise of Shadows , Istanbul, Turkey Animated Painting, Faulconer Gallery, Grinell, Iowa, USA
Confronting History: Contemporary Artists Envision the Past, Middlebury College
Not Alone, an international project of Make Art / Stop Aids, Durban Art Gallery, Durban, South Africa
Contemporary Sculpture in the Landscape, Goodman Gallery in association with Nirox Foundation, Johannesburg, South Africa
The Moving Image: Scan to Screen, Pixel to Projection, Part I , Orange County Museum of Art, Newport Beach, USA Processions and Parades: Here Comes Medals of Dishonour , The British Museum, London, UK
Encounters Film Festival , Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
The Landscape Experience in Contemporary and Modern Art, Roger Raveel Museum, Machelen-Zulte, Belgium
Diabolique, Dunlop Art Gallery, Regina, Canada
Intimate Geographies, Villa Iris, Santander, Spain
Goteborg Biennale: What A Wonderful World , Goteborg, Sweden, Moscow Biennale: Against Exclusion , The Garage, Moscow, Russia
Niet Normaal, Beurs van Berlage, Amsterdam, Holland, Netherlands
Sources: Contemporary Sculpture in the Landscape , Nirox Foundation, Johannesburg, South Africa
Intimate Geographies , Villa Iris, Santander, Spain
Intimate Geographies, Lia Rumma Gallery, Milan, Italy
2008-2009
The Puppet Show,Vera List Center for Art and Politics, New York,USA
The Puppet Show, Institute for Contemporary Art, Philadelphia,USA
The Puppet Show, Santa Monica Museum of Art, California, USA
The Puppet Show, The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu, USA
The Puppet Show, Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston, USA
The Puppet Show, The Frye Art Museum, Seattle, USA
In Praise of Shadows, IMMA, Dublin, Ireland
In Praise of Shadows, Istanbul Museum of Modern Art Istanbul, Turkey
In Praise of Shadows, Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston, Texas, USA
In Praise of Shadows, Benaki Museum, Athens
2008
Africa On with Vanessa Beecroft, Alfredo Jaar, Lia Rumma Gallery, Milan, Italy
Africa On with Vanessa Beecroft, Alfredo Jaar, Orange County Museum of Art, California, USA
Multiple Choice: contemporary art from South Africa, Nomad Gallery, Brussels, Belgium
Peripheral Look and Collective Body, Museion, Bolzano, Italy
What Will Come (Will Come), Sydney Biennale, Sydney, Australia
Yester Year, Now and Beyond, Polokwane Art Museum, Polokwane, South Africa
Turn and Widen, 5th Seoul International Media Art Biennale, Seoul, South Korea
Prospect.1 , 1st New Orleans Biennale, USA
Blickmaschinen, Museum fur Gegenwartskunst Siegen, Germany
Home Lands – Land Marks: Contemporary South African Art , Haunch of Venison 4 anamorphic landscape drawings, Tide Table curated by Tamar Garb
A group exhibition relating to theme of smoke, Pump House Gallery, Battersea Park, London, UK
2007
Dibujos animados , Fundacion ICO, Madrid, Spain
Lift Off Part I , Goodman Gallery Cape, Cape Town, South Africa
Not Afraid of the Dark , Hangar Bicocca, Milan, Italy
Pain , Nationalgalerie im Hamburger Bahnhof – Museum für Gegenwart and the Berlin Medical Historical Museum, Berlin, Germany
Paper Cuts , Hove Museum and Art Gallery, Hove, England
Video Killed the Painting Star , DA2, Salamanca, Spain
Posi+ive Pulse , Sun City, Gauteng, South Africa
Im Untergrund / Below Ground , Haus fur Kunst Uri, Altdor, Switzerland
Bienal do Mercosul, Porto Alegre, Brazil
Local Racism, Global Apartheid, Centre for Contemporary Culture, Barcelona, Spain
Passage du Temps, Tri Postal, Lille, France
Caution! Blasting Operations! NGBK, Berlin, Germany
GOING STAYING: Movement, Body, Place in Contemporary Art Procession, Kunstmuseum Bonn, Bonn, Germany
Venice-Istanbul Istanbul Museum of Modern Art, Istanbul, Turkey
New Media Projects , Nelson Atkins Museum, USA
The Starry Messenger: Visions of the Universe , Compton Verney, UK
Africa Remix , Moderna Museet, Stockholm, Sweden
Il Ritorno d’Ulisse (revival) , La Monnaie, Brussels
Zona Franca/Free Zone , Bienal do Mercosul, Porto Alegre
2006
Istanbul Museum of Modern Art, Venice-Istanbul
New Media Projects, Nelson Atkins Museum, USA
7 Fragments for George Méliès, Wexner Center for the Arts, The Ohio State University Columbus, Ohio, USA
The Starry Messenger: Visions of the Universe, Compton Verney, United Kingdom
Gavi (XVII century fortress, between Turin and Milan), Polemos, Italy
Africa Remix, Art of a Continent, Mori Art Museum, Tokyo
Africa Remix, Art of a Continent, Moderna Museet, Stockholm, Sweden
2005
Dreaming Now, The Rose Art Museum of Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts, USA
The Experience of Art, 51st Venice Biennale 2005, Italian Pavilion, Italy
Modern Times, Mönchehaus Museum for Modern Art, Goslar, Germany
Modern Times, Chabot Museum, Rotterdam
Faces in the Crowd / Volti nella Folla, Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contremporanea, Rivoli, Torino in association with Whitechapel Art Gallery, London, UK
2004
The Divine Comedy, Vancouver Art Gallery, Canada
Monument to Now, Deste Foundation, Athens, Greece
Africa Remix, Museum Kunst Palast, Dusseldorf, Germany; Hayward Gallery, London, UK
Africa Remix, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, France
Africa Remix, Mori Art Museum, Tokyo
Africa Remix, Moderna Museet, Stockholm, Sweden
New Identities: Contemporary South African Art , Museum Bochum, Germany + Positive, MeranoArte, Meran 2nd Biennale, Italy
In Bed, Toyota Museum of Art, Tokyo, Japan
Trouble, Le Grand Café, Centre d’Art Contemporain, Saint-Nazaire, France
Faces in the Crowd / Volti nella Folla , Whitechapel Art Gallery, London, England organised in association with Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea, Rivoli, Turin, Italy
2003
Apparition: the action of appearing, Kettle’s Yard, Cambridge, England
Thinking In Water, Gallery at Dieu Donné Papermill, New York, USA
Der Verlust des Anderen: Trauer und Traurigkeit in der zeitgenoessischen Kunst, Zentrum für zeitgenössische Kunst der Österreichischen Galerie Belvedere, Vienna, Germany
Universes in Universe: Caravan, Sharjah International Biennal, Sharjah Art Museum and Expo Centre Sharjah, United Arab Emirates
Banquet: Metabolism and Communication, ZKM Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe, Germany
Coexistence: Contemporary Cultural Production in South Africa, Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts, USA
Coexistence: Contemporary Cultural Production in South Africa, South African National Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
Transferts, Palais des Beaux-Arts, Brussels, France
For the Record: Drawing Contemporary Life , Vancouver Art Gallery, Vancouver, Canada
2002
Documenta XI , Museum Fridericianum, Kassel, Germany
Melbourne Art Fair , Melbourne, Australia
Apparition: the action of appearing , Arnolfini, Bristol; Kettle’s Yard, Cambridge, UK
The Divine Comedy: Francisco Goya, Buster Keaton, William Kentridge , Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth, Australia
Passport to South Africa: arte contemporanea sudafricana , Trevi Cultural Center, Bolzano, Italy
Stories , Haus der Kunst Munchen, Munich, Germany
Moving Pictures , Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, USA
Screen Memories: Imitation of Life , Art Tower Mito, nr. Tokyo, Japan
Refuge Henie Onstad Kunstsenter, Oslo, Norway
Grafinnova 2002: International Exhibition of Prints and Drawings , Pohjanmaan Museo, Vaasa, Finland
Imagining the Book: international contemporary art encounter , Bibliotheca Alexandrina, Alexandria Egypt
African Marketplace , Ivan Dougherty Gallery UNSW, Sydney, Australia
A Place of Your Own , RASA, Sint Niklaas, Belgium
Comer o no Comer (To Eat or Not to Eat) , Spain
Global Priority , Jamaica Center for Arts and Learning, New York, Travelling Exhibition, USA
Tech/No/Zone: contemporary media art , Museum of Contemporary Art, Taipei
2001
MEGA WAVE-Towards a New Synthesis”, Yokohama Triennale , Yokohama Exhibition Hall, Tokyo, Japan
Animations , P.S. 1, New York, USA; Kunst-Werke, Berlin, Germany
Rotterdsam is Many Cities (Heironymus Bosch / Kentridge) , Museum Boijmans van Beuningen, Rotterdam, Germany
In FUMO (Art, Comics, Communication) , Modern and Contemporary Art Gallery, Bergamo, Italy
ARS 01: Unfolding Perspectives , Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma, Helsinki, Finland
Arbeit Essen Angst , Kokerei Zollverein (Zeitgenossische Kunst und Kritik), Cologne, Germany
Lines of Connection , Gallery Mam, Douala, Cameroon
The Short Century , Museum Villa Stuck, Munich, toured to Haus der Kulturen der Welt,Martin-Gropius-Bau, Berlin; Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center and The Museum of Modern Art, New York
Lateral Thinking: Art of the 1990s , Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego, La Jolla, USA
2000
William Kentridge and Kara Walker , Centre d’Art Contemporain, Geneva, Switzerland
Third Kwangju Biennale Korea 2000: Man + Space , Biennale Exhibition Hall, Kwangju, Korea
Third Shanghai Biennale , New Shanghai Art Museum, Shanghai
Around 1984: A Look at Art in the Eighties , P.S.1, New York, USA
The Self is Something Else: Art at the end of 20th Centurym , Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Düsseldorf, Germany
Insistent Memory: The Architecture of Time in Video , Harn Museum of Art, University of Florida, Gainesville, USA
Outbound: passages from the ‘90’s , Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston, USA
Beyond Borders , Coninx Museum, Zurich, Switzerland
Umedalen Skulptur 2000, Umedalen Skulptur / Bildmuseet, Umea
Das Lied von der Erde , Museum Fridericianum Kassel, Kassel, Switzerland La beauté in fabula , Palais de Papes, Avignon, France
Seventh Havana Biennale: Closer to One Another , Havana, Cuba
Works on Paper from Acconci to Zittel , Victoria Miro Gallery, London, UK
1999
<>FAST FORWARD.ZA, Van Reekum Museum, Apeldoorn, Netherlands
48th Venice Biennale: d’APERTutto , Giardini di Castello, Venice, Italy
VI Istanbul Biennale: The Passion and the Wave , Istanbul, Turkey
A Sangre y Fuego , Espai d’Art Contemporani de Castelló, Valencia, Spain La Ville, le Jardin, la Mémoire , Villa Medici, Rome, Italy
AKT 1: Scenekunst og Billedkunst, Kunstforeningen, Copenhagen, Germany
Drawing, Thinking, RHA Gallagher Gallery, Dublin, Ireland
Life Cycles, Galerie fur Zeitgenössische Kunst, Leipzig, Germany
Kunstwelten im Dialog , Museum Ludwig, Cologne, Germany
Pittsburgh Carnegie International 1999/2000 CI 99:00, Carnegie Museum of American Art, USA
International Art Festival, Tachikawa, Japan
Artery, (various venues), Cape Town, South Africa
1998
Vertical Time , Barbara Gladstone Gallery, New York, USA
Hugo Boss Prize Exhibition, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Soho, New York, USA
New Acquisitions, Carnegie Museum of American Art, Pittsburgh, USA XXIV Bienal Internacional De São Paulo, Parque do Ibirapuera, São Paulo
Unfinished History, Art Center, Minneapolis; Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, Chicago, USA
Age of Electronic Image: Shoot at the Chaos, Spiral Garden, Tokyo, Japan
Cinco Continentes y una Ciudad, Museo de la Ciudad, Mexico City
Contemporary Art from South Africa, Riksutstillinger, Oslo at Stenersenmuseet, Oslo, Norway
FNB Vita Award Exhibition Sandton, Civic Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
1997
Città/Nattura: Mostra Internazionale di Arte Contemporanea, Villa Mazzante, Rome, Italy
El Individuo y su Memoria, Sexta Bienal de la Habana, Havana, Cuba
Documenta X, Museum Fredericianum, Kassel, Germany
UBU ±101, with Deborah Bell and Robert Hodgins, Observatory Museum, Standard Bank National Festival of the Arts, Grahamstown, South Africa
Truce: Echoes of Art in an Age of Endless Conclusions, Site Santa Fé, New Mexico
Trade Routes: History and Geography. Transversions, 2nd Johannesburg Biennale, Johannesburg, South Africa
Les Arts de la Résistance (as part of festival Fin de Siécle, Johannesburg, Galerie Michel Luneau, Nantes, France
Delta, ARC Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville Paris, Paris, France
1996
Colours: Art from South Africa, Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin, Germany
Simunye: We Are One. Ten South African Artists , Adelson Galleries, New York, USA
Faultlines: Inquiries into Truth and Reconciliation , The Castle, Cape Town, South Africa
Jurassic Technologies Revenant , 10th Sydney Biennial, Sydney, Australia
Ici et Ailleurs, film section within Inklusion-Exklusion: Versuch einer neuen Kartografie der Kunst im Zeitalter von Poskolonialismus und Globaler Migration, Graz, Austria
Don’t Mess with Mr. Inbetween: 15Artistas da Africa do Sul , Culturgest, Lisbon, Portugal
Campo 6: The Spiral Village , Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Turin; Bonnefanten Museum, Maastricht, Germany
1995
Africus 1st Johannesburg Biennale , Johannesburg, South Africa
Memory and Geography , Stefania Miscetti Gallery, Rome, Italy, in collaboration with Doris Bloom
Panoramas of Passage: Changing Landscapes of South Africa , Albany Museum Grahamstown, South Africa
Panoramas of Passage: Changing Landscapes of South Africa , Standard Bank National Festival of the Arts, South Africa
Panoramas of Passage: Changing Landscapes of South Africa, Washington DC, USA
Panoramas of Passage: Changing Landscapes of South Africa, Dallas, USA
Panoramas of Passage: Changing Landscapes of South Africa, Atlanta, USA
Panoramas of Passage: Changing Landscapes of South Africa, Los Angeles, USA
Panoramas of Passage: Changing Landscapes of South Africa, Dallas, USA
Panoramas of Passage: Changing Landscapes of South Africa, Atlanta, USA
Mayibuye iAfrika: 8 South African artists , Bernard Jacobson Gallery, London, UK
On the Road: works by 10 southern African artists, Delfina Studio Trust, London, UK
Eidophusikon, 4th Istanbul Biennale, Istanbul, Turkey
1994
Trackings: History as Memory, Document and Object: new work by four South African artists, Art First, London, UK
Displacements, Block Gallery, North Western University, Chicago, USA
Displacements, Spacex Gallery, University of Exeter, UK
1993
Robert Hodgins, William Kentridge, Deborah Bell, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
Incroci Del Sud: Affinities – contemporary South African Art , 45th Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy
1991
Little Morals, with Deborah Bell and Robert Hodgins, Taking Liberties Gallery, Durban, South Africa
1990
Art from South Africa, Museum of Modern Art, Oxford, UK
Art from South Africa, Warwick, UK
Art from South Africa, London, UK
1989
African Encounters, Dome Gallery, New York, toured to Washington DC.
1987
Three Hogarth Satires, with Deborah Bell and Robert Hodgins, University Art Galleries, Johannesburg, South Africa
1986
Claes Eklundh, William Kentridge, Thomas Lawson, Simon/Neuman Galleries, New York, USA
But this is the Reality, The Market Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
1985
Cape Town Triennal ’85, South African National Gallery, Cape Town
Eleven Figurative Artists, The Market Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
Tributaries, Market Theatre cultural precinct, Johannesburg, South Africa
1981
National Graphic Show, Awarded First Prize for selected Domestic Scenes prints,
South African Association of Arts, Bellville, Cape Town, South Africa
1980
University of the Witwatersrand, L’École Internationale de Théâtre Jacques Lecoq
2012
Member of the American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia
Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Cambridge
Member of the Académie Royale des Sciences, des Lettres, et des Beaux-arts de Belgique, Brussels
Commandeur dans l’ordre des Arts et des Lettres au titre de la promotiondes personnalités étrangères, France
Laureate of the Dan David Prize (for the Present Time Dimension in the Field of Plastic Arts), Tel Aviv University
2011
Elected as an Honorary Member in the American Academy of Arts and Letters
MASSART President’s Award for Creative Achievement, Boston MA
Southern Graphics Council International Award for Lifetime Achievement in Printing, St Louis MO
International Art Critics Association Award (for performance of I am not me, the horse is not mine, curated by RoseLee Goldberg for Perfoma)
Doctor of Literature Honoris Causa, London University, London
2010
6th Annual Kyoto Prize for Lifetime Achievement in Arts and Philosophy, Inamori Foundation , Kyoto
Honorary Doctorate of the Royal College of Art, Royal College of Art, London
2008
Honorary doctorate, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, Graduation Ceremony
Oskar Kokoschka Award, Vienna
2007
National Orders, Pretoria, South Africa awarded Order of Ikhamanga (Silver)
2006
Jesse L. Rosenberger Medal, University of Chicago and Kovler Fellowship, Chicago, USA
2004
Honorary Degree of Doctor of Literature, University of the Witwatersrand,
Johannesburg, South Africa
2003
6th Sharjah Biennial Prize, United Arab Emirates Kaisserring Prize, Mönchehaus Museum für Moderne Kunst, Goslar
1992
Quarterly Vita Award
1991
Rembrandt Gold Medal at Cape Town Triennial
Mine wins Weekly Mail Short Film Competition (Fiction)
1987
Standard Bank Young Artist Award, Grahamstown Festival, Grahamstown
1985
American Film Festival Blue Ribbon Award for Salestalk (1984), New York; the film is shown at the London Film Festival.
1982
American Film Festival Red Ribbon Award for Short Fiction for Howl at the Moon, New York, September
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