ephraim ngatane at johans borman gallery august 2010

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  • 8/8/2019 Ephraim Ngatane at Johans Borman Gallery August 2010

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    Ephraim Ngatane

    Exhibition and Book launch at Johans Borman Fine Art, CT

    Thursday 26 August @ 6:30 pm

    phraim Ngatane: Kwela boys (Penny whistlers) - 1967

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    Ephraim Ngatane: Exhibition and Book launch- A Setting Apart

    resentation by co-author Natalie Knight at Johans Borman Fine Art, CT Thursday 26

    August @ 6:30 pm

    An exhibition of selected oil and watercolour paintings by the artist will be on show until

    11 September.

    Ngatane walks that tightrope from which many fall. He captures the warmth of township people, even

    with a tinge of nostalgia, yet never glosses over the hardship and degradation represented by shacks,

    dirt roads and stray dogs. He eulogises the poor but never glamorises poverty.

    David Smith, The Guardian (UK)

    'After a hard week' 74 x 54 cm

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    Coal cart' (1965) 48 x 65 cm

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    Edenvale Location, The Slums' (1967) 56,7 x 75,5 cm

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    imville Location (The Slums)' (1966) 75 x 99 cm

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    now scene, township' 59,5 x 76 cm

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    he carpenters' 49 x 67,5 cm

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    ownship scene with donkey cart' (1968) 60,5 x 76 cm

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    'Young man' (1965) 32 x 24 cm

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    Ephraim Ngatane (1938 1971)

    Ephraim Ngatane was born in Maseru, Lesotho on 22 August 1938, and moved to Orlando

    West, Soweto, Johannesburg in 1943 with his parents, where he lived and worked until his

    early death in March 1971, at age 33. Taking artistic inspiration from his daily experience of

    urban black township life on the Witwaterstrand during the 1950s and 60s, his paintings are

    today regarded as important documents of social realism, authentically depicting township

    life during this period.

    At the Mooki Memorial College in Orlando, Ngatanes artistic talent was recognised early on

    by his primary school teacher Mrs E.L. Mooki, who convinced his parents to allow him to

    pursue an artistic career. The loose, free-flowing watercolour technique taught by Cecil

    Skotnes at the Polly Street Art Centre appealed to Ngatane during his studies there between

    1952 and 1954, resulting in him developing a personal approach which stylistically differed

    from the tradition of township expressionism. In 1955, Ngatane joined the weekend artists

    group of Durant Sihlali, where in contrast to the formal art classes, more naturalistic and

    documentary subject matter were explored using watercolours. When the group, which

    included artists like Louis Maqhubela and Sydney Kumalo, broke up in 1960, Sihlali and

    Ngatane carried on until the mid 1960s.

    Ngatane documented township life in all it forms, from the overcrowded living conditions to

    the social entertainment, sport and memorable events like the two occasions it snowed in

    Johannesburg during the 1960s. As an accomplished jazz alto-saxophonist, he also painted

    lively music and dance scenes, where his individual style of abstraction managed to

    successfully capture the energy and movement. Stylistically, his masterful command of the

    watercolour medium displays a painterly sense of abstraction which distinguishes his work

    from the descriptive styles of most other township artists.

    As a frail child, Ngatane had contracted tuberculosis and was eventually submitted to the

    Charles Hurwitz South African National Tuberculosis Sanatorium in Soweto in 1964, shortly

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    after his second solo exhibition at the Adler Fielding Galleries in May that year. While

    receiving treatment at the sanatorium, Ngatane met Dumile Feni who had been admitted the

    year before. Together they completed a number of murals in the sanatorium, of which only

    one has been preserved.

    Although Ngatane experimented with different techniques, he only started working

    predominantly in oils in the mid 1960s. Many of his later oil paintings were composed in a

    much more abstracted style, where his subject matter became fragmented, often to the point

    where it disintegrated into purely abstracted shapes and colours, forming its own rhythmic

    balance. Ngatanes successful grasp of abstraction and his ability to apply it to his preferred

    subject matter in watercolour as well as oils, definitely confirms his status as one of the great

    talents in South African Modernism.

    Selected bibliography:

    Powell, Ivor and Proud, Hayden (Ed.) (2006), Revisions Expanding the Narrative of South

    African Art. Cape Town: SA History Online and UNISA Press, page 154

    Miles, Elza (2004), Polly Street

    The Story of an Art Centre. Johannesburg: The Ampersand

    Foundation, pages 42, 94 to 97

    Borman, Johans and Siebrits, Warren (2001), Aspects of South African Art 1903 - 1999.

    Johannesburg. Ref. Nos. 21 and 22

    Goodman Gallery, Michal Stevenson, Deon Viljoen (2002), South African Art 1850 2002.

    Johannesburg. Ref. No. 22