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Tastemaking South African Gallery SMAC Is Anchoring its Future in Cape Town

Maxwell Rabb
Mar 29, 2024 4:44PM

Portrait of Baylon Sandri. Courtesy of SMAC Gallery.

The day the South African gallery SMAC welcomed the sculptor Barend De Wet to its roster, its trajectory shifted. This was back in 2009, two years after Baylon Sandri founded the gallery in the picturesque wine-country town of Stellenbosch. At first, the Cape Town–born gallerist intended for SMAC—originally known as Stellenbosch Modern and Contemporary—to be a space for historically underrepresented South African artists. That changed when Sandri met De Wet. “De Wet was undoubtedly one of South Africa’s most avant-garde artists, and this sparked a change in the gallery’s focus,” Sandri told Artsy. From that point on, SMAC has been focused on uplifting contemporary artists of southern Africa.

In the 15 years since that turning point, SMAC has evolved into a cornerstone of the contemporary art scene in South Africa. In 2011, SMAC expanded its reach to Cape Town, opening a space in the City Centre before moving to the Woodstock gallery district. Soon after, in 2016, the gallery launched an outpost in Johannesburg.

Exterior view of SMAC Gallery in Cape Town. Courtesy of SMAC Gallery.

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With its keen eye for emerging talent, SMAC has helped propel the careers of young and rising artists, such as Simphiwe Buthelezi and Wallen Mapondera, the latter of whom was featured in The Artsy Vanguard 2021. And since participating in its first art fair in 2013, VOLTA9 in Basel, SMAC has become a force on the international stage—evident through its participation in more than 10 major international art fairs last year, including an impressive solo presentation of Buthelezi’s work at Paris+ par Art Basel 2023.

In November 2023, the gallery celebrated a homecoming when it returned to Cape Town’s City Centre, inaugurating a new flagship gallery with an expansive group exhibition titled “Back In Town.” This move, alongside the launch of SMAC + Projects—a project space for more intimate and experimental exhibitions located five minutes from the flagship gallery—marked a “critical refocusing” for the gallery, in Sandri’s words.

Wallen Mapondera
Kuzvitsvaga (searching for self), 2022
SMAC

After 17 years of advocating for southern African artists, SMAC is sharpening its focus on Cape Town, which has become an increasingly influential hub of the international art world. Since the gallery first moved into the city 13 years ago, Cape Town has welcomed various major art institutions and events—including the Investec Cape Town Art Fair, the Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Africa Art, and the Norval Foundation—plus a dynamic cohort of local galleries with increasing international reach, such as 99 Loop Gallery and THK Gallery.

With its freshly reinforced presence in the city, SMAC is poised to elevate its artists at the center of this hotbed.

“These new locations make it possible for us to expand our footprint within the City Centre, an area full of opportunity,” Sandri said. “We are now situated within a growing ecosystem of commercial galleries and a bustling commercial and cultural hub.”

Kate Gottgens
Her Fine Blades, 2023
SMAC
Ledelle Moe
Findings (Group 3), 2023
SMAC

Sandri is particularly excited about the next two years in the new Cape Town locations, which will host a series of solo exhibitions of its represented artists. First up was the South African painter Kate Gottgens’s “Her Fine Blades,” on view through April 6th. The painter first exhibited with SMAC in Cape Town in 2013 and is now one of the gallery’s more established artists—an example of an artist whose career grew hand-in-hand with SMAC.

Meanwhile, SMAC + Projects is a continuation of the gallery’s commitment to emerging and experimental art. The space plans to host an artist residency, which will welcome international artists to create a dialogue between Cape Town and other art communities.

In addition to its focus on emerging artists, SMAC’s program is also characterized by its emphasis on materiality, abstraction, strong representation of women artists (including Michaela Younge, Mary Sibande, and Marlene Steyn), and experimental practices—such as the South African artist Ledelle Moe, who is known for massive concrete and steel sculptures that test the boundaries of conventional commercial gallery spaces.

Mary Sibande
Clothed in the skin of righteousness, 2022
SMAC

“SMAC prides itself on its individuality and non-adherence to trends and short-term shifts in the art market,” Sandri explained. “Similarly, the gallery places artistic production above any other agenda and seeks to work with artists who make unique and high-quality work rather than fitting in a specific discourse. The gallery respects freedom of speech and expression and encourages artists to push themselves beyond what is currently à la mode.”

Above all, the gallery is committed to building recognition for artists of southern Africa. “Our main interest remains in partnering with artists whose work we believe can sustainably grow alongside the gallery,” Sandri said. This approach has positioned SMAC as a nurturing ground for artists at different stages of their careers.

In doubling down on its presence in Cape Town, SMAC reaffirms its commitment to the vibrancy of southern African art, positioning itself at the heart of a global crossroads where its artists, deeply rooted in the local art scene, are primed for international exposure.

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Maxwell Rabb
Maxwell Rabb is Artsy’s Staff Writer.