Ndabuko Ntuli South African, b. 1975
“The spirit of the Zulu nation, my ancestors and our Kings and Queens, our history, and age old customs and traditions, the beauty of my homeland, our cattle, my dreams and visions and the captivating sounds of Zulu rhythm and harmonies they tell their stories through my hands and my voice"
Ndabuko Ntuli, or 'the master of trash' as he has been affectionately dubbed, is a creative polymath.
Ndabuko is a painter and a sculptor, he is also a musician with numerous recorded albums to his name, an actor and a spiritual healer.
All of these talents manifest themselves in his powerful artworks which are created from trash, found objects, paint and other mixed media.
His extraordinary understanding of 3 dimensional form allow him to create artworks that when viewed from close look abstract in nature but from which realistic figures emerge when seen from a distance.
Ndabuko works from Alexandra Township in Johannesburg, one of the poorest areas in South Africa, and yet he says that the energy of life in this urban sprall and the community are a fertile breading ground for his creativity.
“The spirit of the Zulu nation, my ancestors and our Kings and Queens, our history, and age old customs and traditions, the beauty of my homeland, our cattle, my dreams and visions and the captivating sounds of Zulu rhythm and harmonies they tell their stories through my hands and my voice"
Multidisciplinary artist, producer, sangoma, musician and spiritualist Ndabuko Ntuli is an artistic and spiritual polymath. His proud Zulu heritage informs his art, each piece never quite being the same as the last whether it is painted, sculpted, made from discarded materials or drawn. However, despite his media being different from one project to the next, the theme of Zulu storytelling can be absorbed throughout his works.
Born and raised in the Zulu heartland of Kwa-Zulu Natal and moving to Johannesburg at a young age, Ndabuko Ntuli has already enjoyed a storied and diverse career. Not only a professional painter and sculptor, Ntuli was also a professional musician, a sangoma to his community and a spiritualist.
One of his main influences was his grandfather, a famed sculptor in his own right, who Ntuli has lovingly created a tribute for in his most recent solo exhibition called ‘Umlayezo Kamkuhulu Wami/My Grandfather’s Message’.
In his diverse portfolio of works, one can see a certain theme of traditionalism mixed with the everyday. Haunting, eyeless portraits of elders are created from discarded cans, plastic bottles and adorned with bold, Zulu colouring and geometric patterns.
His work is a mosaic of modern South African life: beauty in the darkness, utility in the rejected, simplicity in the convoluted.
-
Melrose Gallery pan-African group exhibition at Sandton City's Diamond Walk extended
21 Jan 2021The Melrose Gallery is currently showcasing the Introspection - Art Of Contemporary Africa group exhibition, which features established and emerging artists from Africa, at Sandton...Read more -
Meet Artist Ndabuko Ntuli, Making Art Out Of Gomora Trash
Ndabuko Ntuli 26 Mar 2020The streets of Gomora might be littered with trash but Ndabuko Ntuli is turning it all into works of art. If this is not the...Read more


