Louis Maqhubela

Louis Khehla Maqhubela (b. 1939 in Durban) is a South African artist.[1][2]

Biography

Louis Maqhubela studied at the Polly Street Art Centre in Johannesburg.[3] One of his earliest exhibitions was in 1959 in Johannesburg, within Artists of Fame and Promise. He continues to exhibit, mainly in London, though his works can be found in galleries and collections in England (London), the United States of America and South Africa. He lives in London with his wife and family. [4] His current works can also be viewed from his personal home page [5]

Works

His early work depicted township life but developed rapidly to more abstract approaches.[6] His work is characterized by his use of bold colours and clear references to his African heritage. He works in a variety of media from oil to gouache.[7] Works include:

  • Zebra (1962) [8]
  • Untitled [9]
  • Composition [10]
  • Pondo Forms (1996) [11]
  • Trellis (1997)[12]
  • Inyoka II (2002)[13]
gollark: That information has been classified by GTech™ Research Team 1298-η.
gollark: They decay pretty fast, but in normal conditions travel fast enough that time dilation offsets this.
gollark: Obviously the gay field has associated gay bosons, and [REDACTED].
gollark: SHUT UP.
gollark: The intense gaydiation (gay radiation) converted from the photons passing through the area would [REDACTED]. Also it would probably break atoms and such, since those rely on electromagnetism working as usual.

See also

References

Official website

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.