Tennis Tennis Affordable Art 38159
Jackson Nkumanda - Tennis | Contemporary Art Art Painting
  Logo
USD In the USA you can call us FREE on
1-866-778-8022
 
     UI  Home  UI UI  Gallery  UI UI  My Favorites  UI UI  Power Search  UI  
    Random | By Subject | By Category | By Medium | Recent Additions | Recently Sold | Special Offers | Artists | Galleries | Send an eCard!
Search   
Currency 
Newsletter   

Jackson Nkumanda - "Tennis"

"Tennis"

Tennis
Mixed Media, US$ 1,242

Tennis

Send as an eCard!

Details

Mixed Media

W: 1200mm x H: 870mm
W: 47" x H: 34"

This work is unframed

Price

US$ 1,242

Scale

Person Thumbnail

About "Tennis"

recycled material

Jackson Nkumanda

I love this art!
Tweet I love this art!
Facebook
Share on Facebook

Share on Pinterest

View all 9 works by Jackson Nkumanda

About Jackson

Jackson Nkumanda

Biography


Lives and works in a township in Cape Town, South Africa
I was born in Cradock in 1948.
A member of 14 in the family. I am a twin with a twin sister Bonsiswa Jill Nkumanda and my name is Monani Jackson Nkumanda. I used to fight at school with some boys, the naughty boys they said Jack and Jill went up the hill and Jack fell down. We are nine brothers and five sisters, my mother was a dressmaker and she made grass mats, at the same time of Apartheid they changed my name to Jackson. My father was a tanner, I do not know why.
I left school in Standard 2 at Cradock. At school I liked handwork and making drawings for the teachers, I also liked playing the flute and penny whistle, which I learnt from my cousin brother Shadrack Nkumanda. I learnt it only a day after the departure of my cousin brother, whereas all my other brothers learnt but in vain. I liked kwela music so they called my Spokes imitating the late Spokes Mashiyane.
I left for Somerset East and stayed with my sister Nomvula only for a year. Then I went to King Williams Town and worked in construction servicing the earthworks. In 1967 I went to Kuruman in the Northern Cape to cotton mine. In 1969 I left for Stilfontein and worked on the gold mines.
I 1971 I went to Kroonstad, Free State where I sketched a portrait of Elvis Presley; one of my employers asked for the portrait and I gave it to him at gratis because I was not aware of the importance of art. I was pressurized in the mines and I would take French Leave which resulted in arrest. At the end of 1971 I went home to King Williams Town where I made a statue in clay. In 1972 I left for Port Elizabeth where I connected with a builder and took carpentry. One of my cousins who was also a twin and my equal was Jiba Mda who later was my teacher to be, he advised me to leave carpentry for art and said that art was my career. He gave me some charts and geography drawings.
In 1974 I went to night school to do Standard 5. I made a world map, 3 dimensional with fitted light bulbs connected to a battery so that when the teacher would talk about a country he could push a button and the light would shine on the country in question. By then my father used to listen to the 4am news. We had a problem of waking up in such early hours, which was very difficult for us. He made a plan with electric wires, which I connected from the clock to the radio. When 4am rings, the radio switches on. Really, it was marvelous, they all wondered. Then I joined Agricultural shows in the Ciskei where our works were exhibited. I would get first prizes. My works were woodwork, tinwork, clay, leatherwork, painting and braiding.
In 1975 I left for Uitenhage where I was converted to Christianity. My brother was a priest and they had Gospel singers with no instruments. I made a bass guitar with a plank and an amplifier with a record player unit. Eventually one of my cousins bought new instruments and they then abandoned my man made ones. My cousin Jiba Mda died in a car accident in 1975 and then I began to make art because he had said that that was my career.
In 1990 I left for Cape Town where I got carpentry work in Wynburg. After a year a neighbour asked me to make drawings around his shack; this spread to other people. In 1991 I founded my new 3D Art using crushed sand, brick, rubber, stones, tin, cardboard mixed with contact glue.
We are all talented in my family: my brother Kinki is a shoemaker, Dinise a sculptor, Alfred an artisan, Ndoyisile a blacksmith, William a steel artist, Mangalise a son of all trades, Thobile a leatherworker, Themba the last son is a bricklayer.
In 1994 I started to exhibit my work in Anthea and Michael Methvens gallery. From there my work has travelled all over the world. They have organized commissions from Old Mutual for the Soweto Marathon, as well as football artworks that are now in the board rooms of Chelsea and Manchester United Football Clubs. They now mainly supply a gallery in Italy. The South African National Gallery has the artwork I did of Nelson Mandelas Presidential inauguration.
At the moment I am busy with my artwork as well as recording CD5 with my Gospel Group where I sing my own compositions and play the piano and of course I still play the penny whistle. I still lives and work in a township in Cape Town, South Africa.

Price Range

US$ 1,150-1,426

Email

Exhibitions

Public Collections:

-South African National Gallery
-Chelsea & Manchester United Football Clubs
-Old Mutual for the Soweto Marathon

Selected Exhibitions:

2005 Recent Works, Studio d’Arte Raffaelli, Trento, Italy
2004 Arte& Moda, Mascheroni Moda, in collaboration with studio d’Arte Raffaelli, Trento; Giussano, Milan

2004 Africa Mon Amour, South African Contemporary Artists, L’Ariete Arte Contemporanea, Bologna, Italy

2003 Naj Oleari, in collaboration with Studio d’Arte Raffaelli Trento, Italy

2000 Bob Bobson & Jackson Nkumanda, Studio d’ Arte Raffaelli, Trento, Italy

2000 Bob Bobson & Jackson Nkumanda, Associazione Culturale Betta Frigieri, Sassuolo, Italy

1999 Arti Assortite, Associazione Culturale, Turin, Italy
1997 Studio d’Arte Raffaelli, Trento, Italy

1995 Studio d’Arte Raffaelli, Trento, Italy

1994 Group exhibition at The Loft with Thami Kiti, Michael Methven, Camilla Pellizolli, Cape Town, South Africa

1993 Gallery 709, Cape Town


Education

Ngangelizwe Primary school, standard 5

People who chose Jackson's work also chose work by:

Find other:

Password:
Help! I've forgotten my password!