Thursday, January 8, 2026

KZNSA GALLERY 2025 REVIEW

News from the KZNSA Gallery:

“The KZNSA Gallery is excited to begin a new year with you as part of our community. We are honoured to be trusted by makers from many walks of life to be a space that carries and shares their stories with the world. As a gallery which has a vision of being a highly-regarded contemporary art space that engages its complex and diverse community with socially relevant concepts for the support & development of artists and culture production, we do not take this trust lightly. It carries responsibility, care, and a commitment to holding space for meaningful expression.

“We are excited for our 2026 exhibition calendar and look forward to the generosity of spirit, gesture and thought that our artists will share with us all. The year ahead promises to be breathtaking - one that invites bold experimentation, challenges the contemporary art landscape, and contributes to shaping a future-facing society that is inclusive, questioning, and engaged.

“As we look toward the future, we must also take time to reflect on the past. With this in mind, we pause to acknowledge the groundbreaking exhibitions and programmes that the KZNSA was able to host in 2025. We are proud of the artists, curators, and community members who made this work possible. We are because of them.

 

2025 at the KZNSA: A Year in Review

 

Averting the Gaze

24 Jan – 16 Feb 2025

Averting the Gaze confronted the overload of images and information that shape what we choose to see - and what we look away from. Responding to issues of child trafficking, missing women and neo-slavery, the exhibition used discarded materials, reflective surfaces and varied media to explore themes of loss, responsibility and collective accountability. The works invited viewers to examine their own gaze within global systems of consumption, exploitation and silence.

 

The Inbetween

21 Feb – 16 Mar 2025

Developed through the ArtsResearchLab, The Inbetween foregrounded practice-based research as a vital, accessible form of knowledge production beyond the university. Featuring experimental and collaborative works by multiple artists and researchers, the exhibition explored art-making as a space of enquiry, curiosity and critical thinking. The project sought to build research capacity at KZNSA while opening research processes to broader publics.

 

Transformative Journeys in Mentorship

22 Mar – 20 Apr 2025

This exhibition showcased work produced through the Unlearn to Learn mentorship programme, highlighting the transformative power of guidance, exchange and unlearning. Spanning diverse media and subject matter, the works reflected personal and artistic growth fostered through mentorship, collaboration and dialogue, challenging conventional educational models and celebrating collective learning.


New Abstractions – Austin Konchira

22 Mar – 20 Apr 2025

In New Abstractions, Austin Konchira presented a personal abstraction practice shaped by decades of artistic evolution. Centering machines and mechanical forms, the exhibition reflected on technology as both awe-inspiring and unsettling, extending human capability while evoking fear, power and imagination. The works paid tribute to human ingenuity and labour, positioning machines as modern mythic beings within Konchira’s painterly language.

  

groundWork: 25 Years of Activism for Environmental Justice

2 May – 8 Jun 2025

Curated by Vaughn Sadie, this archival exhibition traced groundWork’s 25-year legacy of environmental justice activism in South Africa. Drawing from documentary photography, banners, publications, films and artefacts, the exhibition amplified community voices and struggles against environmental harm. It stood as a testament to grassroots activism, resilience and advocacy in post-apartheid South Africa.

 

clay NOW!

10 – 22 Jun 2025

Presented by the Ceramic Association of Southern Africa, clay NOW! celebrated clay as both a tactile, therapeutic medium and a site of innovation. Featuring works by established ceramicists alongside DUT students, the exhibition highlighted experimentation, learning and intergenerational exchange, affirming clay’s enduring beauty across functional and sculptural forms.

 

Members’ Award Show: Imisinga (Currents)

27 Jun – 16 Aug 2025

Imisinga explored water as a force of life, memory, vulnerability and renewal within Durban’s social and environmental landscape. Artists responded to themes of flow, survival, climate change and identity through literal and symbolic interpretations of water. Selected through anonymous adjudication, the exhibition celebrated diverse artistic voices while recognising outstanding work through the annual awards programme.

The Prize money and the Joan Emanuel floating trophy are generously sponsored by the Key Foundation and the Joan Emmanuel Trust.

 

Young Artists’ Project (YAP)

22 Aug – 21 Sep 2025

Revived with support from Rand Mutual Assurance, the Young Artists’ Project provided mentorship and professional development for emerging artists and writers. Featuring solo exhibitions by N’lamwai Chithambo (Seeking) and Zama Mwandla (Disgust, Fear and Hell), YAP foregrounded storytelling, identity, trauma and resistance, while nurturing the next generation of creative voices in Durban.

WRITERS – Sneziwe Mahlalela, Ladia Kasimu, Mbusi Nhlakanipho Mzolo, Thobekile Nontando Kweyama

 

Seeking – N’lamwai Luntha Chithambo

Young Artists’ Project

22 Aug – 21 Sep 2025

Seeking presented a reflective overview of N’lamwai Chithambo’s recent artistic journey, bringing together works unified by recurring motifs such as hands, wings, light, figures and star-filled skies. Rooted in storytelling, allegory and personal mythology, the exhibition explored themes of faith, identity and inner contemplation. Each work functioned as a self-contained narrative, inviting viewers into the artist’s imaginative and emotional world.

 

Disgust, Fear and Hell – Zama Mwandla

Young Artists’ Project

22 Aug – 21 Sep 2025

In Disgust, Fear and Hell, Zama Mwandla confronted the psychological and spiritual toll of gender-based violence and systemic harm against women. Through painting, fabric and experimental materials, the exhibition created a visceral visual language of dread, survival and resistance. Hybrid figures and dreamlike symbolism immersed viewers in unresolved states of trauma, asking what art can hold when healing is not yet possible.

 

Sizobika, Sicele Indawo – Selloane Moeti

10 Oct – 2 Nov 2025

Selloane Moeti’s debut solo exhibition offered an intimate exploration of displacement, marriage and ancestral belonging. Through symbolic oil paintings and ritual materials, the work reflected on intercultural unions, the erasures faced by women, and the emotional negotiations of lineage and love. The exhibition asked what is surrendered, inherited and remade in the search for belonging.

 

SOLASTALGIA & Disordering – Jo Rogge & Jeanette Gilks

10 Oct – 2 Nov 2025

This collaborative exhibition reimagined The Lady and the Unicorn tapestries through a decolonised, African and queer lens. Addressing climate crisis, sensory experience and disorder, Rogge and Gilks combined tapestry, drawing, multimedia and archival material. The exhibition explored interconnected systems of belief, ecology and perception, weaving personal and collective histories into contemporary forms.

 

Izihlahla Ziyokhuluma (The Trees Shall Speak) – Amasosha Collective

11 Nov – 2 Dec 2025

Izihlahla Ziyokhuluma centred trees as living witnesses of memory, resilience and ancestral knowledge. Through material-driven works, Amasosha Collective amplified often-silenced African narratives, reflecting on survival, history and continuity. The exhibition marked a decade of the collective’s practice, inviting audiences into a contemplative space of presence and reflection.

 

BUZZART25

5 Dec 2025 – 18 Jan 2026

BUZZART returned as KZNSA’s annual festive art and design fair, showcasing locally made art, craft, homeware, fashion and gifts. Partnering with independent makers from KZN and Southern Africa, the fair supports the local creative economy by offering a free retail platform and celebrating innovation, craftsmanship and community.

 

Members’ Group Show 2025: Sizwakala Ngezandla (We Are Heard Through Our Hands)

5 Dec 2025 – 18 Jan 2026

This annual Members’ Group Show celebrates making as a language carried through the hands. Bringing together artists, artisans and craftspeople, the exhibition honours patience, skill, heritage and care. The works highlighted creativity as something felt as much as seen - shaped through the intimate relationship between maker and material. Over 45 member-artists submitted close to 250 pieces this year!

 

Okwethu Okwezandla

5 Dec 2025 – 18 Jan 2026

Developed with ifa crafted Makers & Designers and the ArtsResearchLab, Okwethu Okwezandla explored heritage as living, evolving practice. Rooted in isiZulu concepts of inheritance and custodianship, the exhibition dissolved binaries between traditional and contemporary craft. Spanning art, design, documentation and film, the project celebrates thinking, speaking and creating through the hands.

 

The KZNSA Gallery is situated at 166 Bulwer Road, Glenwood, in Durban. More information on 031 277 1705 or cell 082 220 0368 or visit www.kznsagallery.co.za