News

Mkhize finds his voice through contemporary portrait art

Information Technology student Cebolenkosi Mkhize is proving that creativity and technology go hand in hand.

At the Vanderbijlpark Campus of the North-West University (NWU), Cebolenkosi Mkhize moves between two worlds that rarely sit in the same sentence – information technology and contemporary portraiture. Yet for him, they are not opposites. They are extensions of the same language: creation.

“I am studying Information Technology at the Vanderbijlpark Campus,” he says simply, but behind that statement is a life unfolding in two directions simultaneously: structured logic on one side, and expressive abstraction on the other.

His relationship with art began early on, in the quiet curiosity of primary school sketchbooks. Then, like many unfinished stories, it paused. High school pulled him away from drawing – not permanently, just long enough for silence to build. And then, in 2024, the pencil returned to his hand.

“I discovered it in primary school and quit drawing around high school, and then I rediscovered it in 2024,” he reflects – a return not of learning, but of remembering.

Today, his work lives in interpretive portraiture – faces shaped not only by likeness, but by emotion, distortion, and feeling. Mixed media became his vocabulary, allowing texture, tone, and imperfection to speak where words cannot.For Mkhize, art is not a routine. It is instinct.

Cebo
The NWU Vanderbijlpark student balances his IT studies with a growing passion for contemporary portraiture. Photo: Supplied

“I do not do art all the time; I do it when I feel like doing it. It is just like drinking water for me.”

There is no forced rhythm in his creativity – only flow. Art arrives when it chooses to, and he follows.
Yet even in this freedom, structure still exists. Studying IT demands discipline, deadlines and precision. Sometimes, those worlds collide – especially when commissions overlap with academic tests.

“Commission deadlines clashing with my academic tests,” he says, naming the tension without exaggeration, as if it is simply part of the process of becoming.

Still, he does not see the two paths as separate. In fact, he sees them touching constantly.
“I do think there is a connection between technology and art … websites and apps … game development and animation. Art is everywhere – we see it daily, but people do not realise that.”

At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading!

Support local journalism

Add The Citizen as a preferred source to see more from Sedibeng Ster in Google News and Top Stories.

Lebohang Chaha

Lebo Chaha is a journalist for Sedibeng Ster and Ster North. She is mostly passionate about stories that bring positive change in her community. Email: lebo@mooivaal.co.za

Related Articles

Back to top button