Cultural experiences
South Africa's art galleries
Art gallery listings
National Gallery, regional galleries
The country's flagship institution is the South African National Gallery, found in the
scenic Company Gardens on Government Avenue in central Cape Town. The gallery
falls under the umbrella of Iziko
Museums, an agency of the Department of Arts and
Culture. It is also responsible for Cape Town's Michaelis, William Fehr and Natale
Labia collections.
The National Gallery's permanent collection spans the colonial to the contemporary,
with its first works acquired in 1871.
The gallery's lack of traditional pre-colonial work is a consequence of the apartheid
era and a subsequent lack of state and civic funding available to redress the
balance.
These are problems that afflict the majority of South Africa's national museums,
although corporate collections, such as Standard Bank's African art
collection at the University of the Witwatersrand, go some way towards filling the
gap.
In the major cities, regional galleries - the Durban Art Gallery in KwaZulu-Natal, the
Johannesburg Art Gallery in Gauteng, the King George VI Gallery in Port Elizabeth in
the Eastern Cape - showcase collections of indigenous, historical and contemporary
works from
the respective provinces.
- Iziko Museums: www.iziko.org.za
- Standard Bank African Art collection at Wits University
-
University and corporate galleries
The universities also play an important role in acquiring works of national interest,
with substantial collections housed at the Gertrude Posel Gallery at Wits University
and the University of South Africa gallery in Pretoria, for example.
There are also several corporate collections of national interest, including those of
Standard and Absa banks and insurance company Sanlam.
- Gertrude Posel Gallery
- Standard Bank African Art collection at Wits University
-
- Absa art collection
- Sanlam art collection
-
-
Commercial galleries
There is a plethora of commercial and non-commercial galleries, clustered mainly in
the major cities of Johannesburg, Cape Town and Durban. Many of these host solo
and
curated group exhibitions that change regularly, often on a monthly basis.
There are also numerous other galleries selling works at more - or less - affordable
prices by the many South African artists currently working in diverse media and
reflecting varied
concerns.
SAinfo reporter
Reviewed: January 2014
Would you like to use this article in your publication or on your website? See: Using SAinfo material
- Gertrude Posel Gallery
- Standard Bank African Art collection at Wits University
- Absa art collection
- Sanlam art collection
Commercial galleries
There is a plethora of commercial and non-commercial galleries, clustered mainly in the major cities of Johannesburg, Cape Town and Durban. Many of these host solo and curated group exhibitions that change regularly, often on a monthly basis. There are also numerous other galleries selling works at more - or less - affordable prices by the many South African artists currently working in diverse media and reflecting varied concerns. SAinfo reporter Reviewed: January 2014
Would you like to use this article in your publication or on your website? See: Using SAinfo material

Alan Alborough's 1997 installation Heathen Wet Lip (dried and salted elephants' ears and feet) at the South African National Gallery in Cape Town (Photo: Artthrob)