I ask her how much of her portraiture is based on what she sees in the people around her, versus what she would like to see in the people around her. She says, “I’ve always wanted to see, not just my family, but just normal people that I grew up with in my neighbourhood, being portrayed in this media. I want to see, like, the guy that does my hair be a main character in like a Claymation animation.”
“I always used to base my portraiture on taking pictures of live people, and then from there, illustrating them. So it’s a little bit of having their features, their style – and through having conversations with them – their story. But then I want to portray it in a new kind of voice. So it’s that kind of collaboration of the two coming together. My work’s always been based on people that I’ve encountered, people that I’ve seen through the years, but it’s always had a part of how I see them too. So how someone else with a camera would take a photo and then interpret that person’s story and style is going to be completely different to how I would do it. And I always wanted to portray that in a way that that person or anyone else has never seen before.”
“That’s why I started drawing my figures with halos behind them, to show that I think it’s the everyday South African that actually carries this beautiful aesthetic that we have. And because I see that in the everyday. The everyday is not often celebrated and I wanted to use my work to celebrate that every day because I think that’s where our aesthetic and our culture is. That’s the longevity, that’s where we’re going to see it being carried on, over and over. And I just wanted to show that in a celebratory kind of way using my style to do it.”