
Oil on canvas Signed 53 x 106 cm

Oil on canvas Signed 53 x 106 cm

Oil on canvas Signed 53 x 106 cm

Acrylic on canvas 30.5 x 30.5 cm

Acrylic on canvas 30.5 x 30.5 cm

Acrylic on canvas 30.5 x 30.5 cm

Acrylic on canvas 30.5 x 30.5 cm

Acrylic on canvas 30.5 x 30.5 cm

Oil on canvas Signed 53 x 106 cm

Oil on Canvas 47.6 x 48.3 cm

Oil on Canvas 47.6 x 48.3 cm

Gouache on Paper 75 x 55 cm

Gouache on Paper 75 x 55 cm

Gouache on Paper 75 x 55 cm

Gouache on Paper 75 x 55 cm

Acrylic on Canvas 91.4 cm x 61 cm Signed lower right; titled and dated verso; unframed

Acrylic on Canvas 91.4 cm x 61 cm Signed lower right; titled and dated verso; unframed

Acrylic on Canvas 91.4 cm x 61 cm Signed lower right; titled and dated verso; unframed

Acrylic on Canvas 91.4 cm x 61 cm Signed lower right; titled and dated verso; unframed

Acrylic on Canvas 91.4 cm x 61 cm Dated 1996 Signed lower right, Titled and dated verso, Unframed
Northwest Coast
Inuit Sculpture Artist Unknown

Sedna Soapstone

Sedna Soapstone

High Fired Pottery 27.5 cm x 18.7 cm x 18.7 cm

Acrylic Painted Skull 44 cm x 20 cm

Oil on canvas Signed; Numbered 12-06 76 x 58 cm

Oil on canvas Signed; Numbered 12-06 76 x 58 cm

Watercolor Signed Dated 1993 36 x 28cm

Watercolor Signed Dated 1993 36 x 28cm

Watercolor Signed Dated 1993 36 x 28cm

Watercolor Signed Dated 1993 36 x 28cm

Rosewood Tables 78 cm x 150 cm x 54.5 cm

Rosewood Tables 78 cm x 150 cm x 54.5 cm

Rosewood Tables 78 cm x 150 cm x 54.5 cm

Rosewood Tables 78 cm x 150 cm x 54.5 cm

Rosewood Tables 78 cm x 150 cm x 54.5 cm

Oil on canvas 57.2 x 85.5 cm

Oil on Board Signed Dated 1962 90 cm x 65 cm

Oil on Board Signed Dated 1962 90 cm x 65 cm

Coloured pencil on paper 24.1 x 18.4 cm 2015

Sunburst Mixed Media on Board 122.5 x 99 cm

Sunburst Mixed Media on Board 122.5 x 99 cm
Bobbie Burgers
Bobbie Burgers is a contemporary Canadian painter. Her lush and Expressionistic depictions of flowers teeter on the verge of abstraction, bursting with bright color and laden with thickly applied, textural paint. “Flowers, to me, are the opposite of still,” the artist has explained. “Changing from minute to minute, they are perfect symbols for life, death, yearning, and beauty. My brushstrokes are layered with my own internal charges, depicting anger, frustration, softness, wanting, and more.” Born in 1973 in Vancouver, Canada, she studied Art History at the University of Victoria in British Columbia. Her work has been exhibited widely at home and abroad, notably including Art Market San Francisco and Equinox Gallery. Today, her works are in the collections of the Berost Corporation in Toronto and the Royal Bank of Canada, among others. Burgers lives and works in Vancouver, Canada.
Bobbie Burgers
Bobbie Burgers is a contemporary Canadian painter. Her lush and Expressionistic depictions of flowers teeter on the verge of abstraction, bursting with bright color and laden with thickly applied, textural paint. “Flowers, to me, are the opposite of still,” the artist has explained. “Changing from minute to minute, they are perfect symbols for life, death, yearning, and beauty. My brushstrokes are layered with my own internal charges, depicting anger, frustration, softness, wanting, and more.” Born in 1973 in Vancouver, Canada, she studied Art History at the University of Victoria in British Columbia. Her work has been exhibited widely at home and abroad, notably including Art Market San Francisco and Equinox Gallery. Today, her works are in the collections of the Berost Corporation in Toronto and the Royal Bank of Canada, among others. Burgers lives and works in Vancouver, Canada.


Oil on canvas Signed 32 x 39 cm

Oil on canvas Signed 32 x 39 cm

Oil on board 44 cm x 45 cm

Oil on board 44 cm x 45 cm

Oil on Canvas Dated 2012 75 cm x 57cm

Oil on Canvas Dated 2012 75 cm x 57cm

Oil Signed .Titled 88 x 120 cm

Oil Signed .Titled 88 x 120 cm

Mixed Media and Collage on canvas Signed Dated 16 163 cm x 160 cm

Mixed Media and Collage on canvas Signed Dated 16 163 cm x 160 cm

Mixed Media and Collage on canvas Signed Dated 16 163 cm x 160 cm



Oil on canvas Signed 53 x 106 cm

Acrylic on Board Signed 44 cm x 40 cm

Acrylic on Board Signed 44 cm x 40 cm

Colour Pencil on Paper Signed 16 cm x 11 cm

High Fired Pottery 27.5 cm x 18.7 cm x 18.7 cm

Signed Oil 24 cm x 35 cm
Contemporary South African Art
Ngobeni, Blessing
Blessing Ngobeni was born in Tzaneen, Limpopo. His mother left home when he was a small boy and he stayed with his uncle – who, in Ngobeni’s own words, treated him like a child slave and whipped him. This was the artist’s first experience of the chicotte. Eventually the small boy ran away from home and went to live in the bush. His mother eventually came to retrieve him and brought him to live with her and her new husband in Tzaneen, but in 1995, at the age of ten, Ngobeni ran away again – and for five years he would live on the streets of Alex township.At the age of fifteen, Ngobeni was arrested for his part in an armed robbery. The trial took two years to reach sentencing and he received a sentence of nine years. He was released in 2006 having served six years and completed his Matric. It was also in prison the Ngobeni turned to art and taught himself to paint. By the time he left, he knew he wanted to be a painter. At this point he was making naturalistic images, inspired by the style of Michelangelo.
For two years he lived in Ponte in Hillbrow and Miles Bhudu gave him a space in his offices which enabled Ngobeni to work. Ngobeni participated in an SABC 2 show about life in prison before starting work at David Krut Publishing at the Johannesburg Art Gallery and Red Paper Production as a puppeteer. In the following year, Ngobeni joined the Artist Proof Studio but he was expelled the following year for not attending all his classes – because he was still having to work to support himself.
At this time, his work was being sold by Tendai Gallery. Shortly before he was due to leave the gallery, over 200 artworks were stolen. Ngobeni continued to work at Red Paper but he was deeply disheartened after having his work stolen. It took him a year to start making art again and when he did, what emerged was the birth of a new style; much darker, using weeping dripping paint. Ngobeni had tapped into the source of his pain and was making art to heal himself.
Ngobeni rapidly developed a style of his own, using montage, paint, and distorted, contorted figures. Later his work would be compared to Picasso, Basquiat, Miro and Norman Catherine. His nightmarish imagery and sense of the absurd lent his work to that of the surrealist genre. At the time, however, Ngobeni had yet to encounter any of these artists or learn about the iconic 20s art movement. At this time Unit Art Gallery in Newtown was representing and supporting him.
In 2011 Ngobeni applied for the Reinhold Cassierer Award at the Bag Factory and won it. This would mark a big change in his reputation and for the first time the media started taking an active interest in his work. For this, he was given a three-month residency at the Bag Factory. He was given a studio space, accommodation and an allowance for food and materials. He also collaborated with the artist Emega Udemba from Nigeria. This culminated in a show called “Emergency Exit” in 2012.
It was at this time that Ngobeni caught the attention of Gallery MOMO, which started to represent him from this period.
In 2013, Ngobeni got the Impact Award from the Arts and Culture Trust and in 2014 he attended a two-month residency at the Headlands Centre for Art in San Francisco. In 2015, he was chosen for the Cleveland Foundation’s Creative Fusion Program. He was one of several international artists to travel to Cleveland for this residency and was the only candidate from Africa. In early 2016 he was invited to a residency in New York and shortly afterwards visited France to attend a graffiti workshop called Grafikama.
Exhibitions during this period include three solo shows at Gallery MOMO (2012, 2014 and 2015) as well as appearances at the Joburg Art Fair in 2013 and 2014. In 2014, he appeared at the Art Fair wearing prisoner’s clothes and a severed cow’s head that dripped blood – as a performance piece.
In early 2016, Ngobeni moved to the Everard Read and CIRCA galleries. His first show – “The Song of the Chicotte” – opened on 7 July 2016.
The Daily Maverick has described Blessing Ngobeni as “producing award-winning work … that is fiercely critical of South Africa’s political elite.” He says he tries to chase away the darkness through his work – and attributes his recent use of bolder designs and brighter colours as a strong emerging life force that is doing battle with the darkness within and around him.
Today Blessing Ngobeni has established himself as one of the leading younger figures in contemporary South African art. He is represented by the Everard Read and CIRCA galleries in Johannesburg, Cape Town and London.
EDUCATION
Artist Proof Studio in Newtown, Johannesburg, South Africa
SOLO EXHIBITIONS
2017
- Masked Reality, CIRCA, Johannesburg
2016
- CIRCA, Johannesburg, South Africa
- Cleveland, United States
2015
- Gallery MOMO, Cape Town, South Africa
- Gallery MOMO, Johannesburg, South Africa
2014
- Gallery MOMO, Johannesburg, South Africa
2013
- Joburg Art Fair, Johannesburg, South Africa
2012
- Gallery MOMO, Johannesburg, South Africa
ARTICLES:
South Africa
– Mongezeleli Joja A., “Art and politics: Blessing Ngobeni brings us back to
the reality”, August 2015, in Mail & Guardian
– Hunkin J. “Layered with Meaning: Blessing Ngobeni’s Mixed Media .
Collages”, July 2015, in Between 10 and 5
– Jolly L., “Testament of an Afro-Picasso”, July 2015, in Cape Times
– Nkuna K. “Blessing Ngobeni explores power and destruction”, April 2014, in
The Citizen
– “Blessing Ngobeni, 200 Young South Africans Archive”, 2013, in Mail &
Guardian
– “Blessing’s beasts of our nation”, November 2012, in News 24
– “Blessed by dreams”, June 2012, in News 24
– De Waal M. “No disguise in Blessing’s work”, April 2012, in Daily Maverick
– Sassen R. “Artist forged by pain”, April 2012, in Sunday Times
– “ Painting Joburt in Art”, March 2012, in Joburg.org.za
United States
– Taylor D., “Traumatic Past Fuels Work of South African Artist Blessing
Ngobeni”, September 2013, in Voice of America
FILM:
– “Blessing’s Art Fair Performance”, 2014, 11:39 minutes, Blessing Ngobeni
– “Bless Footage 2”, 2014, 5:46 minutes, Blessing Ngobeni
– “100% Youth: Blessing Ngobeni”, 2014, 6:14 minutes, Gallery MOMO, The
Bag Factory, Rena Le Lona Creative Center, for SABC 1
– “Born prepared: Blessing Ngobeni for the 2013 FNB Joburg Art Fair”, 2013, 4:44 minutes, producer: Nicola Hellmann, for FNB TV
AWARDS:
2013
- Mail & Guardian as one of the 200 Top South Africans
- Art & Culture Trust, Johannesburg, South Africa’s, ACT Lifetime
Achievement Awards and ImpACT Awards for Young Professionals: Blessing
Ngobeni for Visual Arts
2012
- Reinhold Cassirer Art Award
Ref: https://www.everard-read.co.za/artist/BLESSING_NGOBENI/biography/

Mixed Media and Collage on canvas Signed Dated 16 163 cm x 160 cm
Oppressed and Shall Rise
Blessing Ngobeni’s Oppressed and Shall Rise is a powerful testimony to the ability of the human spirit to rise above political and social hardships, that which he experienced first-hand and that endured by the people of his country, South Africa.
Ngobeni describes how he endeavours to chase away the darkness running through his work – and attributes his more recent use of bolder designs and brighter colours as a strong emerging life force that is doing battle with the darkness within and around him.
His works are fuelled by the social injustices of post-Apartheid South Africa, and his large-scale mixed media paintings serve as scathing condemnation of the country’s political elite and the structures of power.
“Ngobeni’s work imprisons the viewer until the tipping point. From afar we assume one reality, but when confronted by the palimpsest of surfaces from cut-outs, pictures, texts or even found objects, other interesting realities unfold.”1
Ngobeni’s personal story is one of triumph over adversity. He left Limpopo for Johannesburg aged ten years old, falling in with a bad crowd and was soon involved in crime. Five years later he was arrested for robbery and spent close to six years in prison. While incarcerated Ngobeni took stock of his life and took action to alter its trajectory. He started studying his matric and was exposed to the Tsoga (Wake Up) Arts Project. With the help of warders and two particular friends who brought him art materials, he began to pursue his art seriously.
In 2011 Ngobeni won the Reinhold Cassirer Award at the Bag Factory. This would mark a big change in his art making and reputation as an artist. In 2013, he received the Impact Award from the Arts and Culture Trust and in 2014 he attended a two-month residency at the Headlands Centre for Art in San Francisco. In 2015, he was chosen for the Cleveland Foundation’s Creative Fusion Program. He was one of several international artists to travel to Cleveland for this residency and was the only candidate from Africa. In early 2016 he was invited to a residency in New York and shortly afterwards visited France to attend a graffiti workshop called Grafikama.
Ref:
1. Athi Mongezeleli Joja. (2015) Art and politics: Blessing Ngobeni brings us back to the reality, [Online], Available: https://mg.co.za/article/2015-08-05-00-blessing-ngobenis-as-if-you-care [11 January 2018].
2. Everard Read, Blessing Ngobeni, [Online] Available: https://www.everardlondon.com/artist/BLESSING_NGOBENI/biography/ [11 January 2018].

Mixed Media Signed Dated 2013 50.5 cm x 40.5 cm

Mixed Media on Canvas Laid Down on Board Signed & Dated 2014 160 cm x 69 cm

Signed & Dated 15 70.5 cm x 49.5 cm

Mixed media on canvas 157 x 105 cm