My Enquiry (0)
No artwork has been selected.
Please choose an artwork to enquire.
Thank you for your enquiry and interest in our artists’ work. A member of the gallery team will respond shortly.
000%
Conceived as a living forum rather than a static presentation, United State is an invitation for inclusion, empathy, kinship and exchange as a counterforce to the accelerating socio-political polarisation of our time.
United State, an exhibition of over 25 African and American artists, opens at Southern Guild Los Angeles on Saturday, 13 September (on view until 1 November, 2025). Bringing sculpture, painting, textile work, photography and functional design into dynamic relation, the exhibition asserts the radical need for plurality in a moment when perceptions of freedom and diversity are narrowing. The presentation functions as a manifesto: a call to action to work together towards a shared humanity.
The exhibition deepens the trans-Atlantic reciprocities Southern Guild has sought to generate since opening its Los Angeles gallery in early 2024. Over the past two years, the gallery has engaged with a host of US-based artists, mostly in LA, who have formed vital connection points to the city. Work by six such artists – Tonia Calderon, Chloe Chiasson, Tofer Chin, Simphiwe Ndzube, Ferrari Sheppard and Chiffon Thomas – is presented alongside seminal voices from the gallery’s programme: Kamyar Bineshtarigh, Belinda Blignaut, Patrick Bongoy, Cheick Diallo, Andile Dyalvane, Jesse Ede, Jozua Gerrard, Katherine Glenday, Porky Hefer, Alexandra Karakashian, Bonolo Kavula, Terence Maluleke, Manyaku Mashilo, Chuma Maweni, Rich Mnisi, Nandipha Mntambo, Zanele Muholi, Brett Murray, Mmangaliso Nzuza, Oluseye, Zizipho Poswa, Usha Seejarim and Stanislaw Trzebinski.
In United State, Southern Guild crystallises its evolution, welcoming a breadth of practices that affirm the gallery’s position as a guardian of traditional knowledge systems and a platform for speculative, visionary futures. Amidst the vast heterogeneity of medium and perspective, there is a sense of possibility, of forging vocabularies that are disruptive and playful, urgent and necessary. The exhibition foregrounds artists whose trajectories resonate with the gallery’s values of cultural storytelling, craft as resistance, and authentic social resonance.
The exhibition platforms human-centred modes of making, non-traditional approaches to materiality, and the blurring of boundaries between subject, form and function. The featured artists look to both collective histories and personal mythologies, addressing themes of race, gender identity, class, social belonging and community.
Portraiture is a tool for visibility and liberation in Muholi’s invocations of Black Queer identity, and a declarative claiming of space in Nzuza’s painterly approach to volumetric figuration. Poswa’s totemic ceramic sculptures monumentalise symbols of African womanhood, while Kavula’s latticed abstractions, meticulously constructed from shweshwe fabric, embody the tender persistence of generational memory and the labour of cultural preservation. Ndzube’s figures lean into the mythic, populating a densely textured, surreal setting he calls the “Mine-moon”, an oblique fictionalisation of post-Apartheid South Africa. Sheppard’s paintings, incorporating loose charcoal linework and goldleaf, combine the quotidian and the archetypal, framing Black identity beyond the narratives of trauma and marginality, positioning it instead within registers of beauty, power and transcendence.
Like Ndzube, Chin’s practice blurs the lines between two- and three-dimensional media. Inspired by LA’s urban cultures, he creates minimal compositions he calls “abstracted landscapes” that play with perception and engage with their physical setting– including a site-specific mural created for United State on the gallery’s exterior wall on N Western Avenue. Thomas has developed an expressive visual language and application of materiality – including hand embroidery, collaged found material and paint – to interpret personal feelings of nostalgia, longing to belong and affirmations of self-identity.
Place as a shaper of identity features heavily in the practice of Dyalvane, whose large-scale ceramic work is titled after his home village in the rural Eastern Cape province of South Africa. Forming part of his ground-breaking iThongo series, the sculpture honours the spiritual seat of his Xhosa cosmology – close to the earth, in communion with his ancestors. Similarly concerned with the memorialisation of place, Iranian-born Bineshtarigh’s mixed-media works are enquiries into the politics and complexities of mark-making as traces of presence, labour and erasure.
Several artists– including Hefer, Calderon, Blignaut and Trzebinski– work in intimate dialogue with the natural world, appealing for the recovery of environmental and cultural practices destabilised by industrialisation and climate change. Blignaut’s ceramic forms, hand-built from foraged ‘wild clay’, contain organic remnants of animal bone and plant matter, becoming vessels of site and story. Similarly, Calderon’s abstract paintings made from flower pigments, natural materials and chemical compounds are layered reflections on the beauty and fragility of existence, informed by her Mexican, Dutch, Indonesian and Chinese heritage. Hefer’s inhabitable ‘animal architecture’ is rooted in the subversive power of play as a means to ignite more creative, connected and humane modes of relating to our environment and each other. Kenyan-born Trzebinski’s surreal bronze sculptures reckon with climate devastation, inspired by nature’s resilience and adaptive capacity.
Who are ‘we’? What do we stand for in times of rupture and unrest? Where do we place our energy amidst change, towards fragmentation or connectivity? How do we cultivate reimagined understandings of place, meaning and futurity? United State does not simply respond to a fractured global present - it insists on new passages for collective becoming.
For any press queries, please email [email protected]
Belinda Blignaut
Tonia Calderon
Chloe Chiasson
Tofer Chin
Katherine Glenday
Alexandra Karakashian
Bonolo Kavula
Brett Murray
Simphiwe Ndzube
Usha Seejarim
Ferrari Sheppard
Chiffon Thomas
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Studio Wall, 2022Wall paint, ink, pencil, cartridge paper, incense stick, masking tape, nails, bleach, cold glue on hessian backing
110.3 x 157.5 in. | 280 x 400 cm
Ferrari Sheppard
Blackstreet Harmony, 2021Acrylic, charcoal, 24k gold on canvas
104 x 86 in. | 264.2 x 218.4 cm
Sold
Usha Seejarim
The Nesting Body, 2025Reclaimed iron sole plates, timber
59.1 x 29.5 x 5.9 in. | 150 x 75 x 15 cm
Manyaku Mashilo
The story of another place II, 2025Acrylic, ink, red ochre on canvas
39.4 x 39.4 in. | 100 x 100 cm
Tonia Calderon
And we live as we can. Moving forward in the traces of others., 2025Acrylic, floral pigment, ink, fuel, sand, glass and resin on birch panel
96 x 96 x 2.5 in. | 243.8 x 243.8 x 6.4 cm
Bonolo Kavula
abstract expression, 2025Punched Shweshwe, thread
55.9 x 45.1 x 0.4 in. | 142 x 114.5 x 1 cm
Bonolo Kavula
redemption, 2025Punched Shweshwe, thread, timber
41.3 x 29.9 x 0.4 in. | 105 x 76 x 1 cm
Zizipho Poswa
iNkomo yeSondlo (Inkomo yeSondlo somntwana), 2024Glazed earthenware, bronze
55.9 x 26.4 x 18.3 in. | 142 x 67 x 46.5 cm
Alexandra Karakashian
final hour II, 2024Used engine oil, charcoal, black pigment on canvas
70.9 x 108.3 in. | 180 x 275 cm
Tofer Chin
Tilt, 2023Burned cedarwood fence pickets, polyurethane, folded and stretched acrylic on canvas
82.5 x 38.3 x 2.3 in. | 209.6 x 97.2 x 5.7 cm
Zanele Muholi
Kodwa II, Amsterdam, 2017Wallpaper
Variable: max. height 400 cm | 13.1 ft.
Edition of 2, 1 AP
Zanele Muholi
Bakhaya, 2305 Marine Parade Hotel, Durban, 2019Lightbox
43.3 x 35.4 in. | 110 x 90 cm
Edition of 5, 2 AP
Zanele Muholi
Umemezi (State of Emergency), 2023Bronze, resin, leather, nylon cord
28.4 x 14.1 x 11.8 in. | 72 x 36 x 30 cm
Edition of 3, 2AP
Nandipha Mntambo
Quiet Acts of Affection XIX, Part 2, 2014Cow hair on cotton paper
24.8 x 66.9 in. | 63 x 170 cm
Nandipha Mntambo
Quiet Acts of Affection XIX, Part 3, 2014Cow hair on cotton paper
24.8 x 66.9 in. | 63 x 170 cm
Patrick Bongoy
Plumage, 2022Recycled rubber inner tube, found metal parts on board
76.75 x 53.13 x 8.63 in. | 195 x 135 x 22 cm
Chloe Chiasson
Lonesome Lonestar, 2024Oil, acrylic, canvas on shaped panel
36.5 x 26 x 2.5 in. | 92.7 x 66 x 6.3 cm
Oluseye
Eminado Series, Reunion 12, 2018 - OngoingFound objects, rubber, synthetic hair, cowry shells
36 x 27.13 x 2.13 in. | 91.5 x 69 x 5.5 cm
Oluseye
Eminado Series, Reunion 13, 2018 - OngoingFound objects, rubber, synthetic hair, cowry shells
28.38 x 28 x 3.75 in. | 72 x 71 x 9.5 cm
Oluseye
Eminado Series, Reunion 14, 2018 - OngoingFound objects, rubber, synthetic hair, cowry shells
28.75 x 26.38 x 2.13 in. | 73 x 67 x 5.3 cm
Oluseye
Eminado Series, Reunion 17, 2018 - OngoingFound objects, rubber, synthetic hair, cowrie shells
30.13 x 27.5 x 3.13 in. | 76.5 x 70 x 8 cm
Oluseye
Eminado Series, Reunion 18, 2018 - OngoingFound objects, rubber, synthetic hair, cowrie shells
33.25 x 27.25 x 3.13 in. | 84.5 x 69.2 x 8 cm
Oluseye
Eminado Series, Reunion 21, 2018 - OngoingFound objects, rubber, synthetic hair, cowrie shells
28.13 x 27.5 x 3 in. | 71.5 x 70 x 7.5 cm
Belinda Blignaut
Learning An Earth Language, 2024Wild clay, stones, medicinal plants
29.5 x 14.6 x 13 in. | 75 x 37 x 33 cm
Belinda Blignaut
Learning From the Tortoise, 2024Wild clay, tortoise bones, wire, stones
30.7 x 11.8 x 11.8 in. | 78 x 30 x 30 cm
Katherine Glenday
Untitled Vessel II, 2024Porcelain, lustre
29.4 x 7.9 x 7.9 in. | 74.5 x 20 x 20 cm
Katherine Glenday
Untitled Vessel III, 2024Porcelain, lustre
26.8 x 6.7 x 6.7 in. | 68 x 17 x 17 cm
Jesse Ede
Contemplation Point, 2023Aluminium, sandstone
45.7 x 42.5 x 33 in. | 116 x 108 x 84 cm
Edition of 7
Chuma Maweni
iBhunga Table II (Council of Members), 2021Hand-carved walnut
29.88 x 122 x 43. in. | 76 x 310 x 110 cm
Cheick Diallo
Sigui (To Sit), 2018Leather, timber
31.75 x 28.38 x 17.38 in. | 80.5 x 72 x 44 cm
Variable edition
Porky Hefer
Robert Nesta, 2024Felt, sheepskin, steel, timber
66.1 x 79.1 x 42.9 in. | 168 x 201 x 109 cm
Edition of 3
Rich Mnisi
Nwa-Mulamula’s Chaise - Black Sheepskin, 2024Sheepskin, foam, fibreglass
26.8 x 105.5 x 51.2 in. | 68 x 268 x 130 cm
Stanislaw Trzebinski
Humongous Fungus, 2022Bronze, hand-blown glass, electrical components
65 x 23.6 x 22.5 in. | 165 x 60 x 57 cm
Edition of 4














































