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The 2025 RMB Latitudes Art Fair showcases over 300 art works at Shepstone Gardens

Featuring the outdoor exhibition: Disturbed Currents: Art for a Warming World, the RMB Latitudes Art Fair has artwork to offer anyone looking to broaden their horizons.

The Rand Merchant Bank (RMB) Latitudes Art Fair’s third edition took place in the enchanting Shepstone Gardens in Houghton from May 23 to 25.

Read more: RMB Latitudes Art Fairs third edition comes to Shepstone Gardens

The art fair worked with over 50 galleries and over 300 artists, who showcased their talent over the course of the weekend.

Paulinah Masalane and Miss Mosh.

From major local galleries, such as Southern Guild, Stevenson, and Everard Read, to nomadic gallery FEDE Arthouse, Strauss & Co auction house, and new Nigerian space AMG projects, every aspect of the art ecosystem was represented.

Christina Fortune stands behind Kamohelo Rooi’s work.

Co-founder of Resevoir Projects Shona van der Merwe said the exhibition, which was founded in 2021 by herself and Heinrich Groenewald, is an independent partnership specialising in collaborative curation.

Also read: RMB Latitudes Art Fair returned with diverse African perspectives

Shona van der Merwe, co-founder of Resevoir Projects. Photos: Asanda Matlhare

She added that their 2025 RMB exhibition featured six of their artists: Bulumko Mbete, Cathy Abraham, Keith Henning, Luis MS Santos, Mankebe Seakgoe, and Seretse Moletsane.

Mhlonishwa Zulu stands next to Boeme Diale’s piece.

The fair’s 2025 international platform took a deliberate and engaged focus on neighbouring country Botswana, with several exhibitors, working collaboratively to create a presentation that respects the balance between contemporary art and more traditional, foundational art practices in that region.

Ndivhuho Rasengani, from Fede Arthouse, next to Kay-Leigh Fischer’s Acts of Service.

In the gardens, an outdoor exhibition: Disturbed Currents: Art for a Warming World, explored how it is we inform the climate, and how it, in turn, informs our own lived experience. While Essay sees stoneware sculptures by doyenne of South African Ceramic Sculptors Amalie von Maltitz shown alongside charcoal drawings by Sydney Kumalo.
Van der Merwe added that in 2023, Reservoir opened a space for solo exhibitions by independent artists on Bree Street in Cape Town.

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Related article: Popular RMB Turbine Art Fair goes virtual

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