Casting a Shadow

 

Sibusiso Duma, Untitles, acrylic on canvas

 
 

Vibrant colours, surreal forms, and lingering shadows cast by the bright hot sun - there is more to the art of South African artist Sibusiso Duma than initially meets the eye. Not much about his work has been published but this is what I discovered so far.

Sibusiso Duma, Tradition, acrylic on canvas

Sibusiso Duma, The Power of a Woman, 2020, acrylic on canvas

Based in Durban, South Africa, Sibusiso (also spelled Sibosiso) Duma was born in 1978 in Umbumbulu, in South Africa’s KwaZulu-Natal Province. He started drawing with crayons and coloured pencils at a very young age, capturing the attention of his teachers who asked him to draw maps and other visual teaching materials for the school.

Eventually his talent came to the attention of the late Trevor Makhoba, an artist well-known for his controversial art depicting the social issues of his time through elements of satire, social realism, and surrealism. Makhoba established the Philange Art Project - a studio space behind his house in the Umlazi township south of Durban - where he gave young artists the opportunity to work and cultivate their talents.

Sibusiso Duma, Yabuya Indodana Yolahleko (translated from Zulu - Return of the Prodigal Son), 2021, acrylic on canvas

Duma painted under Makhoba’s mentorship at the Philange Art Project for almost a decade, eventually developing his own visual language and style that nonetheless retains Makhoba’s concept of bringing satire, realism and surrealism to indirectly evoke social issues.

 

COOL FACT

Look carefully at this painting. All is not as it seems. The more you look, the more surreal elements emerge, starting from the ghost casting a shadow, progressing to the independently suspended broom, and …

Image: Sibusiso Duma, The Ghost, 2002, gouache on paper