University of the Witwatersrand (WITS) Art Museum

University of the Witwatersrand (WITS) Art Museum

Wits Art Museum

Wits Art Museum is home to an extraordinary collection of African art, including contemporary and historical art from South Africa and art from West and Central Africa.

The Museum is one of Johannesburg’s premier tourist attractions, along with the Apartheid Museum and Constitution Hill. It is part of the Wits University Cultural Precinct, just three blocks from Nelson Mandela Bridge. WAM is in the hip, regenerating area of Braamfontein, which is also home to many students, interesting shops and places to eat. The WAM Cafe is a fun place to meet friends and enjoy delicious food and coffee.
WAM core gallery with Kentridge

Operating Hours:

Wednesdays to Sundays, 10h00 – 16h00.
Entrance is free and donations are welcome.
Closed on public holidays.
To join our mailing list, please click here.
Please visit our Facebook page or follow us on Twitter for updates.
For queries call 011 717 1365 or email info.wam@wits.ac.za
From the Heart with visitor

Donate to WAM

Wits Art Museum

The Museum has been the beneficiary of many generous donations to the collection.

All donations of artwork are evaluated for suitability for the collection. In the first instance they are assessed by the curators. The Museum’s Management Committee then considers acquisitions that are recommended by the curators.

For more information please contact:
Julia Charlton
+27 11 717 1363
julia.charlton@wits.ac.za

Art programmes

WAM Art programmes

Operating Hours

Open: Wednesday – Sunday, 10:00 to 16:00
Closed: For all public holidays and three weeks in late Dec and early January.

Admission: Free

Donations are encouraged
Proceeds are used towards exhibitions and educational programming

Schools and Adult Programmes

For more information and to arrange school visits, please contact:
Leigh Leyde, Education Curator
T:+27 11 717 1378
E:Leigh.Leyde@wits.ac.za

Weekend programming

Includes WAM Talkabaout, Family Talkabouts and Drop in Drawing. See our Events page for more information.

Parking

Public Parking Garages
86-92 Juta Street
This parking garage is 4 blocks from the Museum and an easy 7 minute walk

On-Street parking
On street parking is available in close proximity on Jorrisen and Berth streets.

Disabled Access

WAM is accessible for wheelchairs through the entrance on the corner of Jorissen and Bertha Streets, as well as from the University campus, on the ramp between Trinity Church and the Museum. All areas of the Museum are wheelchair accessible, through a combination of ramps, lifts and wheelchair lifts

Wheelchair accessible toilets are located in the Forecourt and on the mezzanine level. The latter can be reached via lifts in the University Corner building. Motorized wheelchairs and guide dogs are welcome.

WAM Collections

Wits Art Museum Collections

About the WAM Collection

Wits Art Museum (WAM) is home to the largest and most significant holdings of African arts in southern Africa. The collection is made up of different sub-collections which were added at various times in the Museum’s history.

Although they are isolated examples, the earliest works included probably date to the 4th century C.E. Most works date from the 20th and 21st centuries.

Currently numbering over 10 000 items, the three major collecting areas of classical, historical and contemporary artworks are unique in their breadth, geographical range and local specialisation.

The classical African collection boasts extensive holdings from southern, West and Central Africa, and smaller numbers from East Africa. There is significant depth to the collections of beadwork, drums, headrests, wooden sculpture, ceremonial and fighting sticks, masks, basketry, wirework and textiles. The objects have been assembled primarily in recognition of their aesthetic value.

Paintings by Irma Stern, Walter Battiss and Maggie Laubser and Gladys Mgudlandlu, pencil drawings by J.H. Pierneef and Gerard Sekoto, watercolours by Durant Sihlali, linocuts by Azaria Mbatha and John Muafangejo, and bronze sculptures by Sydney Kumalo and Edoardo Villa are just a few items in the large and important collections of historical South African art.

Contemporary South African art holdings include collections of paintings, drawings, watercolours, printmaking, sculpture, photography and new media. Willem Boshoff, Alan Crump, Kendell Geers, Jackson Hlungwane, Robert Hodgins, William Kentridge, David Koloane, Santu Mofokeng, Nelson Mukhuba, Sam Nhlengethwa, Karel Nel, Claudette Schreuders, Phutuma Seoka, Penny Siopis, Paul Stopforth are some of the many artists represented. A younger generation is represented by artists such as Zander Blom, Gabrielle Goliath, Gerhard Marx, Nandipha Mntambo, Anthea Moys and Sandile Zulu.

Our collections

The Standard Bank African Art Collection

 

Artist Unknown, Shona, Zimbabwe, Mutsago (Headrest), Patinated wood, Acquired 1981, Standard Bank African Art Collection (Wits Art Museum)

Artist Unknown, Shona, Zimbabwe, Mutsago (Headrest), Patinated wood, Acquired 1981, Standard Bank African Art Collection (Wits Art Museum)

In 1978 Wits and the Standard Bank established the Standard Bank African Art Collection, located at Wits and funded by an annual purchasing grant from the Standard Bank. The collection contains over 5 000 objects from across the continent – unrivaled southern African holdings and substantial and important West and Central African collections. More recently, works from East Africa have been added.

This internationally significant classical African art collection was initiated against the background of the exclusion of black artists from most histories of South African art and the initiation of research into this field by academics in different humanities departments at Wits in 1977. The Art History Department at Wits was the first of its kind in South Africa to introduce courses in African Art into the curriculum.

Wits Museum of Ethnology Collection

 

Artist Unknown, South Sotho, South Africa, Nguana Modula, Wood, beads textile, hide , Acquired 1994, Wits Arts Museum Collection

Artist Unknown, South Sotho, South Africa, Nguana Modula, Wood, beads textile, hide , Acquired 1994, Wits Arts Museum Collection

An extensive archive of over 400 historical African photographs by Burton as well as anthropologists such as Eileen Jensen Krige and Jacob Daniel Krige, Edmund Hugh Ashton, Percival Kirby, Hilda Kuper and Audrey Richards also forms part of this collection.

The Wits Museum of Ethnology Collection was established by Winifred Hoernle, lecturer in Ethnology and developed further by Audrey Richards, senior lecturer in the Department of Social Anthropology. Since 2001, these collections have been housed at and administered by WAM.

Objects collected as specimens of African material culture by famous South African anthropologists such as Isaac Schapera, and Monica Wilson (Hunter) were added before World War II.

A collection of beadwork assembled by H. S. Schoeman in the 1960’s corresponds to beadwork worn by Zulu speakers in KwaZulu Natal in the late 1950’s, and documented by acclaimed photographer Alice Mertens. The collection also includes a substantial number of Ovambo (Kwanyama) objects which were obtained from C. Hahn, which was purchased in 1935 in Windhoek.

The Barnard Collection of objects from the Pedi in Sekhukuneland is notable for its size and for the fact that it provided some of the earliest examples of southern African figurative sculpture in the collection.

Other famous contributors were anthropologist Max Gluckman (material from Zulu-speakers), Percival Kirby, first Professor of Music at Wits and John Blacking one-time Wits Professor of Anthropology. Both Kirby and Blacking were interested in indigenous African music and their collections reflect this.

The Sekoto Collection

 

Gerard Sekoto, South Africa, Black Hair, Charcoal on paper, 1949, The Sekoto Collection

Gerard Sekoto, South Africa, Black Hair, Charcoal on paper, 1949, The Sekoto Collection

Gerard Sekoto, considered to be one of the pioneers of modern South African art, left South Africa in the 1947. He spent the rest of his life in self-imposed exile, mostly in Paris, where he died in 1993. This major collection of over 300 drawings and sketches was produced by the artist between the 1940s and 1980s. The collection includes drawings from South Africa, Senegal and Paris, and encompasses preparatory studies for artworks, portraiture, genre and figure studies and street scenes.

It was purchased and repatriated from France by the Sowetan Newspaper and has been housed at Wits University since 1989. In 2010 the collection was formally donated to WAM.

Robert Hodgins Print Archive

 

Robert Hodgins, South Africa, My C.E.O., Lithograph on paper, 2007, Robert Hodgins Print Archive

Robert Hodgins, South Africa, My C.E.O., Lithograph on paper, 2007, Robert Hodgins Print Archive

Prior to his death in 2010, acclaimed South African artist Robert Hodgins gave his entire personal collection of over 400 original prints to WAM.

The collection offers an extensive record of the artist’s print-making oeuvre with examples from many editions produced during his lengthy artistic career. Additional print states offer insights into his creative process. Etchings, lithographs and screen-prints form part of this exceptional resource.

Hodgins was a long-time lecturer in the Department of Fine Arts at Wits and mentor to generations of artists, many of whom have achieved international recognition. The artist was awarded an Honorary Doctorate by Wits University in 2006.

 

Contact Information

Physical address
University Corner, Corner Bertha (extension of Jan Smuts Avenue) and Jorissen Streets, Braamfontein, Johannesburg.
T:+27 11 717 1365
F:+27 86 734 1814
E:info.wam@wits.ac.za

Postal address
Wits Art Museum, University of the Witwatersrand, Private Bag 3, P O Wits, 2050

Directions

By car
From M1 S and M1 N, take Jan Smuts Avenue off-ramp. Travel south on Jan Smuts Ave towards the Nelson Mandela Bridge. The Museum is located 3 blocks before the bridge, on the corner of Jorissen Street. It is diagonally across the road from artist Clive van Berg’s Eland sculpture and adjacent to Trinity Church.

By Rea Vaya
WAM is on the turquoise Chancellor House to Johannesburg Art Gallery route. The closest stop is on the corner of Jorissen and Station Streets. The stop is the same block as the Museum.

By Metrobus
The Metrobus stop is in front of Pick ‘n Pay in Jorissen Street. The stop is in the block across the road from WAM.
For information on Metrobus and Rea Vaya routes call:
011 375 5555, option 6.

By Gautrain
The Park Station stop is now open. From Park Station take the turquoise route Rea Vaya bus (see above).