CAPE TOWN ART FAIR 2026
TOMORROWS/TODAY BOOTH 4
Between Two Sessions, presents a newly created body of work unfolding around the concept of the interval: the pause between one action and the next, the air held between one breath and another, the silence that settles between words. To the artist, this “in-between” is not a space of emptiness but of density.
Comprising a series of large-scale monotype works on paper alongside two interactive digital-video works, a performative intervention and a sound piece, the project reflects Mkhari’s trans-disciplinary practice and refusal of fixed disciplinary frameworks. While the artist demonstrates a confident command of diverse media, from experimental monotype printing to complex digital systems, their work is rather driven by a rhizomatic conceptual inquiry. Mkhari’s thinking materialises through abstraction, where form holds complexity without resolving it into legible narratives: whether produced through manual or digital processes, these configurations operate beyond representation, rather engaging the viewer’s perception and cognition. They do not ask to be decoded, but to be encountered in moments of suspension, pause, intervallo.
Rich in chromatic intensity and textural density, the monotypes were developed in collaboration with Roxy Kaczmarek at the David Krut Workshop, a collective studio environment in which multiple artists work simultaneously. Colour and texture function as atmosphere: indigo, red, yellow, and blue grounds, layered with organic and geometric forms, generate shifting visual choreographies.
The eight monotypes operate as a chromatic ecosystem—each work maintains its autonomy while contributing to a larger network of material and conceptual resonances. Their pairings are shaped by three organising principles: relationships of chromatic temperature, affinities in material technique, and a formal rhythm that unfolds across the installation sequence.
If suspension forms the conceptual ground of the project, it is also a gesture of kindness: a space and moment for listening as a relational act, an opening to other subjectivities, the breaking of the Narcissus mirror into a thousand pieces, a pause from the overwhelming contemporary “me” economy, proposing a way of being-with that places the other before the self.
I know that hope is the hardest love we carry, 2025
Oil-based monotype
107 x 76 cm
SOLD
Khoi Fish, 2025
Oil-based monotype
109 x 76 cm
SOLD
Ganymede, 2025
Oil-based monotype with hand work and chine colle (3 layers)
107 x 76 cm
R 40 000.00 VAT Incl. Framed
Persiphone, 2025
Oil-based monotype with collage
107 x 78 cm
R 40 000.00 VAT Incl. Framed
My mother knows all about the Underdark, 2025
Oil-based monotype with chine collé and collage
107 x 78 cm
SOLD
But my nature is nature, 2025
Oil-based monotype with chine collé and collage (3 layers)
107 x 78 cm
R 40 000.00 VAT Incl. Framed
Make your life the first life you save, 2025
Oil-based monotype with chine collé and collage
107 x 76 cm
SOLD
Familiarity is the kingdom of the lost, 2025
Oil-based monotype with chine collé and collage
107 x 76 cm
R 40 000.00 VAT Incl. Framed
Nkhensani Mkhari (b. 1994) multidisciplinary artist and polymath working across Johannesburg, Cape Town, Hamburg, and Magoebaskloof. Their practice navigates the intersections of identity, subjectivity, and the entangled nature of existence, drawing deeply from Bantu cosmology and a triadic understanding of being. Working without a traditional studio, Mkhari engages in a fragmentary and recompositional process that resists fixed categories. Their practice incorporates 3D scanning, sculpture, monotype printing, and repurposed studio waste—material strategies that transform cultural and historical traces into new visual languages. This layered approach invites viewers into a dialogue with memory, perception, and the multiplicity of self.
Rooted in both cultural and intellectual heritage—growing up in a horticultural environment with a botanist father and a linguist mother—Mkhari’s work bridges the academic and emotional. Their mobility is not only geographic but conceptual, functioning as both medium and metaphor. Imagery drawn from Tshonga and Setswana traditions, water, and language reflect on themes of rootlessness, belonging, and return. Mkhari’s art is a quiet resistance to demands for legibility, particularly those often imposed on Black artists in South Africa. By embracing multiplicity, vulnerability, and alternative modes of knowing, they challenge dominant Western frameworks. Their work—rich in colour, storytelling, and poetic gesture—offers emotional weight without spectacle, foregrounding fragments, memory, and the labour of sense-making.
Mkhari’s work has been exhibited at institutions such as the Oregon Contemporary Center for the Arts, the Fellbach Kleinplastik Triennale, and the Goethe-Institut Johannesburg, and is held in both private and public collections. The artist has become a respected practitioner and thinker in the arts and cultural arena in the global South. His work experience includes being the assistant director with Azu Nyabonga at the African Art Foundation at Lagos.
In 2024, David came across Nkhensani Mkhari’s work being shown at the Johannesburg Art Fair with Church Gallery. Mkhari’s intimate works reminded David of the work of Agnes Martin. After an introduction to Mkhari, David invited him to visit our workshop at Arts on Main. In December 2024, he took up that offer and came in to work on monotypes, working alongside printers Roxy Kaczmarek and Kim-Lee Loggenberg-Tim. He continued his collaboration in 2025, resulting in a body of work that was shown at the David Krut Gallery, Johannesburg, in March of the same year, his first exhibition with David Krut Projects.
Explore more of his work here
