Young stars of the South African art scene exhibit at Seeds of the Fig in Tulbagh
Asemahle Ntlonti, Unathi Mkonto and Ben Orkin are in the early stages of their careers, yet they captured the attention of the curators of Krone x WHATIFTHEWORLD’s gallery’s latest exhibition, Seeds of the Fig.
On until the end of March at the gallery on the Twee Jonge Gezellen estate in the Western Cape winelands town of Tulbagh, Seeds of the Fig features the work of these three up-and-coming talents alongside 21 other African sculptors. The exhibition is curated by RESERVOIR’s Heinrich Groenewald and Shona van der Merwe.
Cape Town-based Asemahle Ntlonti and Unathi Mkonto both recently undertook residencies at the Krone x WHATIFTHEWORLD gallery. In the spirit of championing contemporary African art, and particularly that of young South African artists, the gallery has played host to several artists in its Artist Residency Programme, an incubator for creativity and productivity offering emerging talents a space of total freedom to explore their ideas.
Ntlonti graduated from the University of Cape Town’s Michaelis School of Fine Art with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in 2017, majoring in sculpture. Often investigating her familial culture and history through her work, she says, ‘I use art as a way of knowing who I am and where I come from.’ Her featured piece in Seeds of the Fig, ‘Ncekelela’ (2021), uses beading as a way to trace and connect with her isiXhosa lineage.
Ntlonti, whose work has been exhibited both locally and abroad, was awarded the 2018 Young Female Residency by The Project Space in Johannesburg and Saint Emilion in France, and in 2019 attended a residency at the South African Foundation for Contemporary Art in Knysna and Saint Emilion.
Mkonto, a multidisciplinary artist who was born in Peddie in the Eastern Cape, uses art to explore the built environment, drawing on his training in both architecture and fashion to investigate spatial conditions. He produced his featured sculpture, ‘Flat Sheet Study 1’ (2022), during his recent residency at Krone. A composition of paper, cardboard, velcro and masonite board, it is informed by the temporary architecture of informal traders operating in the East City areas of Cape Town.
Mkonto studied architecture at Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, subsequently working as an architect under recognised South African architect Kate Otten, before studying fashion at Stadio’s school of fashion. Seeds of the Fig is the most recent of his numerous exhibition features across South Africa.
Sculptor Ben Orkin graduated in 2021 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Michaelis School of Fine Art. The Cape Town-based artist held his first solo exhibition, You told me…, at the WHATIFTHEWORLD gallery in Cape Town in 2019 while he was completing his studies. Orkin’s eye-catching piece for Seeds of the Fig is ‘The more you share, the less you need’ (2021), a ceramic vessel that stands starkly on the floor of the gallery, surrounded by ceramic ‘seeds’ that have fallen from the glazed piece covered in holes and protrusions. The sculpture, described by the curators as ‘oscillating between moments of nourishment and dependency, validation and resistance, love and separation’, represents queer intimacy.
Orkin has exhibited in Johannesburg, Stellenbosch and Rotterdam in the Netherlands, and was awarded the Simon Gerson Prize in 2021 for his graduate collection at the Michaelis School of Fine Art.
An exhibition not to be missed, Seeds of the Fig proudly presents the works of these talented young artists at the rise of their careers in the unique setting of the Twee Jonge Gezellen estate. The exhibition is, in many ways, about each and every artist’s individual journey and practice — and consequently the individual journey of each visitor as they move across the historical farm to each sculpture.
Date: On until 31 March 2023
Venue: Twee Jonge Gezellen wine estate, Twee Jonge Gezellen Estate Road, Tulbagh
Viewing hours: Monday to Saturday, 10h00–16h00
Info: https://www.whatiftheworld.com/krone/ and www.kronecapclassique.co.za/pages/krone-x-witw-gallery