City forest and other landscapes

Johannesburg is not famous for its beauty. It’s better known for its extremes – violence, inequality, and the kind of grit that doesn’t make it into travel brochures. But it’s also the largest man-made forest in the world, or so we fondly insist.

This series is shaped by the city I grew up in and still live in. Old Johannesburg, with its improbably English gardens and century-old trees planted by settlers who came not just for gold, but to stay. Jacarandas, plane trees, date palms, roses. A forest stitched into rocky bushveld, behind high walls and electric fences.

I especially love Jacaranda time in my city – Joburg puts her spring frock on in October, and the city streets become purple tunnels, resplendent in lilac, periwinkle blue and violet.

But I’ve been other places too – just one or two other landscapes made the grade, and more to come . . .

The Hillbrow tower in winter

35x50cm
Acrylic on canvas


Belinda’s tree

70x70cm
Oil on canvas


Tina’s Joburg skyline

70x40cm
Acrylic on canvas


War memorial under a highveld thunderstorm

30x25cm
Acrylic on canvas


Grassy hilltop

90x60cm
Acrylic on canvas


Joburg spring

40x40cm
Acrylic on canvas


Hillbrow tower from Langermankop

20x20cm
Acrylic on canvas


The benediction of rain

30x30cm
Acrylic on canvas


Jacarandas

90x60cm
Acrylic on canvas


Joburg Autumn

90x70cm
Acrylic on canvas


Joburg skyline with summer flowers

70x40cm
Acrylic on canvas


Cammy in Kirstenbosch gardens

35x50cm
Acrylic on canvas


Springbok vlakte

100x70cm
Acrylic on canvas


Hilltop

90x60cm
Acrylic on canvas


Hillbrow from Troyeville

20x20cm
Acrylic on canvas