Adele van Heerden
Amy Ayanda Lester
Elsabe Milandri
Heidi Fourie
Motlhoki Nono
Natalie Paneng
Nthabiseng Boledi Kekana
Nina Torr
Peter Cohen
Stephen Hobbs
Stephen Langa
Wilma Cruise
William Kentridge
Adele van Heerden
In 2021 van Heerden completed a residency with David Krut Projects, which culminated in her solo exhibition, Field Trip, in 2022. She has also been featured in a number of group shows at our Johannesburg Gallery, including Alone of It’s Kind (2022), Creature Feature (2023) and Women in the Workshop (2023-2024).
With camera in hand, van Heerden sets out to discover, explore and document environments, with a particular focus on man-made and built environments that work in symbiosis or juxtaposition with the natural world. Her subject matter tends to be urban, natural landscapes and interior scenes. She paints and draws the photos she takes onto the back of translucent drafting film. She describes her work as a way of reimagining her own life experiences.
Amy Ayanda Lester
Amy Ayanda Lester, an artist and musician based in Cape Town, South Africa, finds inspiration in the local landscape, particularly in the flora, colours and people.Her art, ranging from paintings to prints, frequently features proteas, fynbos, and the iconic mountain silhouette, drawing from her family’s history on a flower farm in Constantia.
Forced removals under apartheid laws inform her exploration of land and belonging. Amy’s artistic journey, rooted in themes of connection and loss, intertwines painting and music.
In March of 2024, Amy was invited to the David Krut Workshop (DKW) to collaborate with printmaker, Roxy Kaczmarek on a new body of work ahead of her solo presentation at the Latitudes Art Fair (May 2024).
Amy worked on a series of enchanting monotype print works on paper that bloom with colour and stunning brushwork – continuing her exploration into the motifs of flora and fauna.
With camera in hand, van Heerden sets out to discover, explore and document environments, with a particular focus on man-made and built environments that work in symbiosis or juxtaposition with the natural world. Her subject matter tends to be urban, natural landscapes and interior scenes. She paints and draws the photos she takes onto the back of translucent drafting film. She describes her work as a way of reimagining her own life experiences.
Amy Ayanda Lester
All that glorious, temporary stuff, 2024
Oil based monotype with hand work in Stabilo Woody’s Caran d’ache crayons and Pencil crayon
58 x 38 cm
R 7400 Incl. VAT Unframed
Amy Ayanda Lester
Dancing Little Light, 2024
Oil based monotype with hand work in Stabilo Woody’s Caran d’ache crayons and Pencil crayon
62.3 x 48.8 cm
R 4 820 Incl. VAT Unframed
Elsabe Milandri
At the beginning of April the David Krut Workshop (DKW) had the privilege to welcome Cape Town based artist Elsabe Milandri to the workshop.
Elsabe’s time was limited to 2 days of experimentation and working with printers Roxy Kaczmarek and Kim-Lee Loggenberg-Tim she set to work using her time as productively as possible exploring different monotype ideas.
Elsabe worked in oil and water based monotypes, experimenting with the combination of the two mediums. She used Stabilo Woodies and Caran d’ache crayons as drawing medium and combined them with the painted marks. Roxy and Kim encouraged her to play with using thin papers as masks and chine collé.
Heidi Fourie
Heidi Fourie has been collaborating with the David Krut Workshop (DKW) since 2017, when she first came in to create a series of watercolour monotypes.
She has since created a number of works with DKW, and her work – both prints and paintings – has been presented at art fairs and included in group exhibitions at David Krut Projects in Johannesburg, namely, A Piece of Work (November 2018), The Cat Show (December 2018/January 2019), Kind of Blue (December 2019 / January 2020) and Alone of its Kind (January 2022).
In 2021, David Krut Projects presented a solo show of Fourie’s work Grass You Can Swim In. The exhibition included etchings and monotypes made in collaboration with David Krut Workshop, as well as paintings. In 2022, Fourie participated in a three week residency at the workshop where she explored mark-making in drawing with pastels and began a new series of etchings using soft-ground.
During and after this residency she created a body of work for her solo exhibition that same year titled On Soft Ground. In the beginning of 2023, Fourie once again collaborated with the David Krut Workshop to create a series of monotypes that were shown at the 2023 Latitudes Art fair. Fourie’s work were also shown in the DKP at the 2024 Latitudes art fair, she was also one of the featured artists of the fair. Her latest show with DKP, Unfurling, took place from 25 May to July of 2024.
Motlhoki Nono
Motlhoki Nono was first introduced to David Krut Projects in 2021, when she applied for and received a spot in the African Leipzig international Art Programme, which she completed in 2022.
She later returned to the David Krut Workshop in 2023, where she completed a series of experimental monotypes using lipstick and kissing to create the marks. She also experimented with softground etching and pronto lithography in the creation of this series.
Her solo show, ‘Kissing Studies’ will debut at David Krut Projects, 151 Jan Smuts Ave, Parkwood on the 14th of February 2024. The exhibition presents the recent collaborative works made by Motlhoki with the David Krut Workshop.
Natalie Paneng
In 2022 David Krut Workshop invited multimedia artist Natalie Paneng to collaborate on a series of prints with Sbongiseni Khulu. This collaboration spanned continents over the following months and yielded a vibrant body of work unlike anything else in our archive. This series of unique works was launched at Turbine Art Fair 2023.
Paneng was introduced to our operations after being selected as an artist in residence with the Leipzig International Art Programme (LIA) in association with The Centre for the Less Good Idea, who put out an open call to South African based artists from across all disciplines with a focus in digital media output, to apply for a collaborative print-making residency in Leipzig, Germany. David Krut Projects assisted LIA and the Centre with the selection process in Johannesburg and offered the artists a chance to wet their feet in the printmaking world before embarking on their 3-month residencies overseas.
Paneng spent a day at DKW exploring the possibilities of working with a professional print workshop, and the working relationship has grown from there. The prints created during the LIA residencies were exhibited in South Africa in collaboration with David Krut Projects at The Centre for the Less Good Idea Lounge at Arts on Main, just upstairs from our workshop.
Natalie Paneng
Some of these dreams feel like obstacle courses, the decisions you make to save yourself or move further within the dream feel predestined and all you can do is observe and be moved like a pawn on a chess board.
2024
Paper Lithography
45.3 x 54 cm
R 12 425 Incl. VAT Framed
Natalie Paneng
The dream about the time I was in a meadow of pink and green foliage and flowers. I was wearing that chessboard dress again and in the sky was a huge flower made of more versions of me and my dress. It was big enough to be a cloud or a spaceship. I held my hand in this position again, holding a single hand-drawn flower. I must have picked it from another meadow, in another dream.
2024
Linocut with Paper lithography and chine collage
76.5 x 55.7 cm
R 12 725 Incl. VAT Framed
Nthabiseng Boledi Kekana
Late last year David Krut, while in Mayfair, London, visited an exhibition “Dualities” at Undiscovered Canvas. Nthabiseng’s work stood out to him and he immediately made arrangements to see if she would be available to spend time in the workshop making a body of prints. Fast forward to March 2024, Nthabiseng spent a week collaborating with Printer Roxy Kaczmarek at the David Krut Workshop in Maboneng, Johannesburg.
Her first foray in printmaking has produced an accomplished body of unique painterly prints – monotypes and a pair of large etchings.
Nina Torr
In 2016, Nina Torr worked in collaboration with David Krut Workshop (DKW) to create a number of watercolour monotypes. The ensuing works were featured in the group exhibition A Piece of Work in 2017.
In 2018, she produced new etchings with the team at DKW which were subsequently shown at David Krut Project’s (DKP) booth for the RMB Turbine Art Fair 2019.
In 2020, Nina Torr had her solo Masters exhibition at the David Krut Gallery in Parkwood in 2020 titled Wayfinding.
She has also been part of various other group exhibitions at DKP.
At the end of 2022 and beginning of 2023, Torr collaborated with DKW to create a brand new series of etchings with handpainting and chine colle. The body of work which was shown at the end of February 2023 at The Blue House in Parkwood in a solo exhibition titled Marginalia.
Nina Torr
Placeholder #7 Climbing, 2024
Hardground and softground etching with chine collé and gouache handpainted chine collé
34.9 x 39.8 cm
R 4 600 Incl. VAT Unframed
Peter Cohen
Peter Cohen is a Johannesburg-based architect and artist with his own architectural practice, with a particular affinity for designing modern dwellings that imagine the fine artworks that would fill these domestic spaces.
In 2020, in the midst of the global pandemic, Cohen felt the need to create art outside of the realm of architecture. He began exploring both abstract and figurative imagery in different mediums, in the hours after continuing his architectural business by day.
With his early works Cohen was industrious with what tools he could find, painting delicate, precise landscapes on spare pieces of floorboards and rolls of heavy brown paper. Cohen’s typically monochromatic work explores imagery related to the built and natural landscape, classical antiquity and other art historical periods, with a mark that is precise, sometimes eliciting a pixel-like surface.
Peter Cohen
End (of the) Street, 2024
Watercolour with ink and charcoal
99.7 x 70.5 cm
R 35 000 Incl. VAT Framed
Stephen Hobbs
Stephen Hobbs, born in Johannesburg in 1972, draws on the city’s post-apartheid transformation for his art and curatorial work, focusing on defensive urban planning and its effects on society. A studio artist, printmaker, and public arts advocate, Hobbs uses etching, linocut, and monotype to explore the layered visual language of urban defense. “Dazzle camouflage,” an early 20th-century military pattern, is a recurring theme, reflecting his interest in urban dystopias.
Hobbs, who earned a BAFA from Wits University in 1994, served as curator at Market Theatre Galleries and co-directed Gallery Premises. Since 2001, he has co-led The Trinity Session, a public art consultancy, and collaborates with Marcus Neustetter on urban projects as Hobbs/Neustetter. From 2017-2019, he was a resident critic at the University of Johannesburg’s Graduate School of Architecture.
Stephen Langa
Stephen Langa is a Johannesburg-based South African artist from the Limpopo province, growing up in the small town of Makopane. He specialises in a number of different media, including charcoal drawing, watercolour and oil painting. In 2018 he achieved his Diploma in Art & Design from Tshwane North College in Pretoria.
Langa’s intimate imagery explores stories of the people, experiences and environment around him. Harkening back to artists like George Pemba, Claude Monet, Gerard Sekoto, Jo Maseko and more, his work presents visions of new economic narratives and reality.
Langa’s work seeks to galvanize and has intimacy of black cultural experiences, composition’s that have questions for the viewer and highlights of his own experiences of his hometown and the city as visually detailed in his journey, experiencing life in both worlds from moving to one place to another.
Stephen Langa
Mr. Crockett and Jones, 2024
Soft pastel drawing
47.7 x 39.7 cm
R 23 120 Incl. VAT Framed
Wilma Cruise
Wilma Cruise first started working with David Krut Workshop (DKW) in 2007, resulting in her solo exhibition at David Krut Projects (DKP) SPLIT LON.NY.JHB in 2008. She has worked collaboratively with the DKW printers over the following years, as in 2010 and 2015. This collaboration led to her solo show Advice From A Caterpillar at DKP.
In 2020 we hosted her solo exhibition Cruise x Krut 2020 – an exhibition of unique paper collages and sculptures from the artist’s studio, shown alongside editions published by DKW. She also has written texts such as Reading Ceramics, published by David Krut Publishing in 2006 in Messages and meaning in the MTN Art Collection. Cruise has also been part of various group exhibitions at DKP.
William Kentridge
The relationship between William Kentridge and David Krut began in 1992, when the pair met casually at the opening of an exhibition at The Market Theatre Gallery in Johannesburg. Kentridge was due to visit London for his first exhibition of drawings and prints at the Vanessa Devereaux Gallery in the Portobello Road area of London. Krut, who was based in London at the time, had developed a working relationship with master printer Jack Shirreff dating back to 1981 and he invited Kentridge to visit Shirreff at his 107 Workshop in Wiltshire to explore making very large copper plates, which would allow the artist to create editioned work on a scale that was not available to him in South Africa.
William Kentrdige
Studio Life Variations (Quartet Version 1), 2023-2024
Photogravure
Edition Variation of 20
74 x 102 cm
POR
Stephen Hobbs
Stephen Hobbs
Air Raid Measures (Dark Blue) (2019)
Various adhesive tape on paper
36 x 26 cm
R 4 200 Each Incl. VAT Framed
Stephen Hobbs
Air Raid Measures (Red) (2019)
Various adhesive tape on paper
36 x 26 cm
R 4 200 Each Incl. VAT Framed
Stephen Hobbs
Air Raid Measures (Blue) (2019)
Various adhesive tape on paper
36 x 26 cm
R 4 200 Each Incl. VAT Framed
Stephen Hobbs
Air Raid Measures (Black) (2019)
Various adhesive tape on paper
36 x 26 cm
R 4 200 Each Incl. VAT Framed
Motlhoki Nono
Nina Torr
Nina Torr
Codex marginalia 3 (2023)
Hardground Etching with chine colle
Edition Variation of 13
45 x 31 cm
R 7 500 Incl. VAT Framed
Nina Torr
Codex marginalia 5 (2023)
Hardground Etching with chine colle
Edition Variation of 13
45 x 31 cm
R 7 500 Incl. VAT Framed
Nina Torr
Codex marginalia 9 (2023)
Hardground Etching with chine colle
Edition Variation of 13
45 x 31 cm
R 7 500 Incl. VAT Framed
Nina Torr
The little dog laughed (2021)
Softground etching on silkscreened monotype
Edition of 20
14 x 28.3 cm
R 2 000 Incl. VAT Unframed
Claire Zinn
Claire Zinn was born in Johannesburg where she still lives and practices fine art while also working in a gallery. She has a Fine Art Honours Degree from Rhodes University, majoring in Art History and Printmaking. After concentrating on painting, Zinn returned to printmaking by way of experimental monotypes. In these monotypes, after printing an image, the artist would use a linocut tool to carve directly into the paper and layer hard-hitting but beautifully executed imagery, merging war scenes in Syria with x-rays of human body parts, for example.
Her work is interested in the entanglement of images, ideas and events, which is formally reflected in the layering of images, inviting the viewer to find subjective connections. Zinn’s recent work includes oil paintings, mixed media monotypes and impressive reduction linocuts. Her subject matter is variable but always seems to return to imagery from the natural world and intricate objects or materials, rendered with painstaking detail.
Claire Zinn
Night bloom I
4 colour reduction linocut
30 x 26 cm
R 1 700 Unframed
Heidi Fourie
Anna van der Ploeg
In January 2021 during her visit to Johannesburg, Van der Ploeg collaborated with the David Krut Workshop team on new editions in a short-term residency. The editions were showcased alongside paintings and carvings in her first solo exhibition with David Krut Projects entitled VISITOR. This is also showcased online on the David Krut Portal.
Anna also featured on an episode of the David Krut Podcast – Anna van der Ploeg – Artistic process as a ‘dance or a fight’ – Listening time 23 minutes
In December of 2022 and early 2023, Van Der Ploeg returned to the David Krut Workshop where she completed a body of work known as Omens in hot bacon contradiction. This body of work consists of a series of monotype prints in various sizes, as well as oil paintings and etchings.
Phumulani Ntuli
Phumulani Ntuli is a multi – disciplinary artist who shifts between the processes of sculpture, video, performance, painting and collage. His research-led practice gathers various archive materials which are both theoretically and practically collaged together to explore historical gaps and how these inform our narratives. The way in which Ntuli constructs his imagery out of collage, transfers and layering of different mediums is what initiated the interest in having him spend some time at the David Krut Workshop. In 2023, Ntuli was invited to work collaboratively with DKW printer, Kim-Lee Loggenberg on a new body of work.
The pair began experimenting with the printmaking processes of monotypes and pronto lithography. The result of this collaboration is a body of work titled, Kunanela iphuzu emafini/ Echoes of the Point Cloud, which includes large scale paintings alongside the unique print works created at DKW. The works from Kunanela iphuzu emafini/ Echoes of the Point Cloud debut at FNB Art Joburg 2023, presented by David Krut Projects.
Ntuli was one of the three artists featured at the South African Pavilion at the 2022 Venice Bienniale which was curated by our very own DKP director, Ame Bell.
Phumulani ntuli
Prompt search from a generative console (2023)
Watercolour Monotype with Pronto on Chine Collé and Handwork
90.2 x 72.2 cm
NFS
Matty Monethi
Matty Monethi was born in Maseru, Lesotho in 1996, and grew up in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Monethi completed her Diploma in Fine Art at the Ruth Prowse School of Art in Cape Town in 2016, and in 2017 embarked on a semester abroad at the University of Hertfordshire, in the United Kingdom, where she specialised in printmaking. In 2020 Monethi completed a BA in Fine Arts at the Wits School of Arts in Johannesburg, where she is currently based. Monethi uses painting, printmaking and text to explore the personal dimensions of migration and memory. With a keen sense of her own place in broader historical contexts in Africa, she scrutinises her connections with her adopted countries, cultures and close relationships. Monethi draws on memories of her own experiences, as well as family photographs from her childhood, to create emblematic pictorial scenes punctuated by empty space and text. Her evocative representational works address evolving selfhood, the depiction of the past, and the relationship between personal archives and nostalgia.
Matty Monethi
2nd Stop (2022)
Oil on Canvas
80 x 60 cm
R 14 875 Incl. VAT Framed
Senzo Shabangu
Senzo Shabangu began working on monotypes at the David Krut Workshop (DKW) with master printer Jillian Ross in 2010. His monotypes explored themes of urban living and human nature. Shabangu moved on to making linocuts in 2011 at DKW as an artist in residence in preparation for his solo exhibition, Naked Pressure, which was shown at the workshop gallery space.
He continued to print at DKW creating new works for his 2012 exhibition Amandla!. This was followed in 2013 by Obsession, his first show in the main David Krut Projects (DKP) gallery space on Jan Smuts Avenue, as well as a concurrent exhibition in Cape Town, titled Recollection: Works on Paper.
In 2014, he continued working with DKW, creating multiple prints with various techniques, working during that time with visiting master printer Phil Sanders. He exhibited two works at the 2014 Johannesburg Art Fair and was part of the group exhibition The Benediction of Shade II at DKP.
2015’s My World was the artist’s 5th solo exhibition with the gallery, for which he printed extensively at DKW Parkwood.
His works have also been shown at various art fairs and group exhibitions.
Senzo Shabangu
A morning prayer (2011)
Linocut with hand painting
Edition Variation of 15
64.8 x 74.1 cm
R 13 200 Incl. VAT Unframed
Mary Sibande
Mary Sibande
Leisurely reading: Sophie with her newspaper (2024)
Woodcut & Monotype
Edition of 20
105 x 76.5 cm
$ 4000 Excl. VAT
Hoek Swaratlhe
At the request of Mary Sibande who was working on a collaborative initiative for a group of young Joburg artists that she had taken on a mentoring role, we accepted Lusanda Ndita and Hoek Swaratlhe to come into the David Krut Workshop (DKW) at Arts On Main. Our printer Sbongiseni Khulu took over the mentoring process with these artists in gaining an understanding of the collaborative activities which are practiced at DKW.
In February and March 2024, Swaratlhe came in to start working with Sbongiseni. He came in for concentrated mentoring sessions to learn about working on paper and the various mediums of printmaking. Sbongiseni took him through new mediums in the combination of monotype and pronto lithography, which they had gained insights from other workshops where they had been working.
Lusanda Ndita
At the request of Mary Sibande who was working on a collaborative initiative for a group of young Joburg artists that she had taken on a mentoring role, we accepted Lusanda Ndita and Hoek Swaratlhe to come into the David Krut Workshop (DKW) at Arts On Main. Our printer Sbongiseni Khulu took over the mentoring process with these artists in gaining an understanding of the collaborative activities which are practiced at DKW.
In November 2023, Ndita came in for 5 days, for a concentrated mentoring session to learn about working on paper and the various mediums of printmaking. Sbongiseni took him through new mediums in the combination of monotype and pronto lithography, which they had gained insights from other workshops where they had been working.
Peter Cohen
Peter Cohen
The Dreams of Men I (2023)
Charcoal and hand drawn Pronto lithography
59.2 x 41 cm
R 16 000 Incl. VAT Framed
Maja Maljević
Maja Maljević was born in Belgrade, Serbia, in 1973. Having completed her schooling, she spent seven years obtaining her Masters in Fine Arts at the University of Belgrade, graduating in 1999. In 2000 she moved to South Africa, in order to escape the political turmoil in her own country. She has been living and working in Johannesburg since then.
Maljević’s particular style begins with “dirtying” the canvas with a layer of bright paint that breaks the baldness of the white surface and opens up the space for Maljević’s intuitive jigsaw endeavour. Onto this ground, Maljević builds up surfaces with drips, blocks, bands and waves of colour, searching for harmony between colour and form, line and shape, expansive surface and small detail. For Maljević, physical movement is an important part of the process – never can she be found sitting at an easel. Through her own version of gestural abstraction, Maljević prevents the composition from becoming staid and self-indulgent, as she has put it, and allows action and conflict to occur between the different elements with which she is engaged. Reworking the formal mechanisms of Modernism to suit her contemporary needs – as a painter, a printmaker and also most recently as a sculptor – Maljević’s primary objective is coherence between all the individual elements within a composition, whether they are in conflict or co-existing harmoniously, and therefore its integral logic.
Zhi Zulu
Zinhle Zulu who goes by the artist name ‘Zhi Zulu’ is a 20-something-year-old illustrator, lecturer and cultural visual story-teller based in Johannesburg. Zulu obtained a Bachelor of Arts (Honours) in Visual Communication at the Open Window Institute as well as a Masters of Art in Design at the University of Johannesburg. In 2017, she won the Gold-craft Loerie award for illustration and was part of Design Indaba’s creative class of 2019. Zulu has participated in various notable exhibitions, including the Turbine Art Fair (2019-2022) represented by David Krut Projects. She represented South Africa at the Semerang International Illustration festival. Additionally, she runs an illustration studio called Zuluvisual, through which collaborates with various clients such as Absolut Vodka, Levis, Constitution Hill, Wanderland Collective, E-coffee cup and FlySafair. Most recently, Zulu designed the new South African 20c coin.
Zulu is particularly interested in representation in our newly democratic South Africa and how that can be interpreted through illustration. As a visual communicator, she thinks it’s important for young South African creatives to spearhead the exploration of newness in how Africa is portrayed.
Zhi Zulu
Jozi-pocalypse (2023)
12 colour silkscreen on tea stained paper
Edition of 15
54 x 76 cm
R 9 200 Incl. VAT Unframed
Mongezi Ncaphayi
Mongezi Ncaphayi first collaborated with David Krut Workshop (DKW) in 2013 when he created a number of prints combining monotype and drypoint on perspex (acrylic glass) which were exhibited at Turbine Art Fair later that same year.
In the following years, Ncaphayi continued his collaboration with DKW on various print projects, including in 2016, when he produced a series of monotypes and a print in an edition of 12 titled Wonder Vessels for the Joburg Art Fair of the same year.
In 2017, he produced four predominantly water colour monotype prints together with DKW.
In 2018, he started work on three series of monotype prints together with Master Printer Jillian Ross and the team from DKW, resulting in 26 total prints. These series were the central part of his 2018 exhibition with David Krut Projects (DKP) Johannesburg, titled Anecdotes of the Sound, showing the inspiration Ncaphayi got from famous Jazz musicians.
Ncaphayi has also been part of various group exhibitions at DKP.
Mongezi Ncaphayi
Wonder Vessels (2015)
Spitbite & aquatint etching with chine colle
102.2 x 74.2 cm
R 20 700 Incl. VAT Unframed
Fanie Buys
Fanie Buys was born in Gansbaai in 1993. He attended the Michaelis School of Fine Art, graduating with a distinction in Studiowork in 2016. Buys was a co-recipient of the Judy Steinberg Award for Painting and the Simon Gerson Award for an exceptional body of work.
Buys received training in printmaking, but now works primarily with oil painting. His paintings explore how the human body gets represented in various types of media, such as paparazzi photos, lost family picture albums, screenshots, etc. By depicting these types of images in oil paintings, Buys attempts to capture personal experiences and provide the viewer with a glance into the subject’s experience.