Biography & record

Profile

Celia de Villiers — South African artist, educator, curator and researcher. Her biography, full curriculum vitae and publications, in one place.

Portrait of Celia de Villiers

Celia de Villiers is a South African artist, educator, curator and researcher, and co-director of Ponte d’Arte, an international artists’ residency in Ponte da Mucela, Portugal.

She organically collages fibres and yarns, weaving together wire, glass and wood. She embroiders by hand and machine, and manipulates and eco-dyes fabric and paper to create works with rich surface textures. Her work spans large-scale 2D and 3D pieces incorporating textiles, glass, metal and resin, drawing on ancient myths and post-human fantasy.

Born in Johannesburg in 1946 and trained there and in Germany, she began as a batik artist — working on linen and cotton, drawing on fauna, flora and African folklore — and through early mural commissions her work came to hang in collections in some fourteen countries.

Her most recent projects address pressing ecological concerns — hydropolitics, wildfires and mycology — developed in dialogue with the Portuguese landscape she inhabits; her current research turns to the invisible intelligence and the strategies plants use to propagate and survive.

She has been awarded an art fellowship by the Sacatar Foundation of California, credited by the World Craft Council, and endorsed for curatorship by UNESCO. She holds an MA in Visual Arts (cum laude) and a BA Fine Arts from UNISA. She has exhibited extensively in South Africa and abroad, and her work is held in collections including the Museum of Arts and Design (New York), Raiffeisen Bank (Germany), the Development Bank of Southern Africa and UNISA.

Education

2008MA Visual Arts, UNISA (distinctions in Sculpture and Art Theory), cum laude.
1998BA Fine Arts, UNISA (distinction in Art Theory).
1967Higher Education Diploma, Johannesburg College of Education / Wits.

Solo Exhibitions

2006LiveWire, Fried Contemporary, Pretoria (glass, resin, vinyl, video installations).
2003Fragile, MACS Gallery, Pietermaritzburg (drawings).
1981Textile Collages and Batiks, Raiffeisen Bank Galerie, Marktoberdorf, Germany.
1980Textile Collages, Landesbank Galerie, Munich, Germany.

Selected Group Exhibitions

2024Textile Odyssey, Tina Skukan Gallery, Pretoria.
2023Woordfees, CraftArt Gallery, Stellenbosch.
2020Micro Macro Fibreworks, Tatham Art Gallery, Pietermaritzburg.
2020Places of Memory, Contextile Biennial, Guimarães, Portugal (with the Intuthuko collective).
2019Edge, KZNSA Gallery, Durban.
2018Rooftop IX: Sticky Time, St Lorient Gallery, Pretoria.
2017Ubuntutu: Tributes to Desmond & Leah Tutu, Robben Island & V&A Waterfront, Cape Town.
2016Conscience of the Human Spirit: The Life of Nelson Mandela (touring, South Africa & USA).
2015Terra, Oliewenhuis Art Museum, Bloemfontein.
2015The Three Graces 2.0, University of Johannesburg Gallery.
2013Neo Baroque, Fried Contemporary, Pretoria.
2012Terra Incognita, Fried Contemporary & Oliewenhuis Art Museum.
2012Pointure, University of Johannesburg Art Gallery.
2011Designs of Self, Fried Contemporary, Pretoria.
2010Bodies in Transition, Fried Contemporary, Pretoria.
2009–2010Dystopia, UNISA & Museum Africa (South Africa); Ghent (Belgium).
2008Innovative Threads, Cape Town & France.
2007Bondage / Fibreworks 10, Johannesburg / Durban & Cape Town.
2004Six Continents of Quilts (international touring).
2003World Council for Art & Culture, San Francisco, USA.
1991Selected among the 70 Best Art Quilts in the World, Paducah, Kentucky, USA.

Projects & Residencies

2023–presentForgotten Lands (Erasmus+): project partner and Portuguese host through Ponte d’Arte; youth, art and ecology.
2015–presentPonte d’Arte, Portugal: co-director of the artists’ residency and master-class programme.
2016–2018In Public in Particular (Creative Europe): artist and researcher; Dublin, Turku and Zagreb.
2011TRANSCODE: dialogues around intermedia practice: artist and project director; community of enquiry exhibition, South Africa.
Sacatar Foundation Fellowship — Instituto Sacatar, Itaparica, Bahia, Brazil (artist residency).
2002Resident Artist, Roots and Rhythms Ecology Festival, Plettenberg Bay (Arts in Action).
2000Resident Artist, Standard Bank National Arts Festival, Grahamstown.

Awards & Recognition

2009Curatorship endorsed by UNESCO (African Mêlée, European Patchwork Meeting, France).
2006World Craft Council Award for Fibre Art, San Francisco, USA.
2006Ekurhuleni Mayoral Achievers Award for Job Creation in the Arts & Crafts Sector.
2005Two nominations, National Excellence in Innovation & Sustainability Awards (Social Category) — the Intuthuko Embroidery Project and the WasteArt Expo.
2004FNB Vita Crafts Gold Award (Journey to Freedom).
2004Art Fellowship, Sacatar Foundation, Itaparica, Brazil / California, USA.
2004FNB Vita Crafts Silver Award (Trans-human Consumerism).
2003Honorable Mention, World Council for Arts & Culture, USA.
2002Fibre sculpture Scarlet Woman acquired by the Museum of Arts and Design, New York.
1991Best on Show, Best Innovation & International Judge’s Choice, National Quilt Festival, Johannesburg.

Public Collections & Commissions

Museum of Arts and Design, New York, USA — textile sculpture.
South African Military Health Services, Pretoria — glass sculpture (also curator).
Raiffeisen Bank, Marktoberdorf, Germany — textile collage.
Landesbank, Munich, Germany — textile mural.
Michigan State University, East Lansing, USA.
University of South Africa (UNISA), Pretoria.
Le Touessrok Sun International Hotel, Mauritius — 20 m² glass mural.
Development Bank of Southern Africa, Midrand.
St Lorient Fashion & Art Gallery, Pretoria — suspended glass sculpture.
EnviroServ Holdings, Johannesburg — hand-embroidered artworks.
Early batik mural commissions — Kruger National Park, Holiday Inns, Mt Sheba Hotel (Pilgrim’s Rest) and Ames Pharmaceuticals.

Boards & Committees

2022–2024Board Member, Forgotten Lands (EU Erasmus+).
2012–2015Advisory Board, South African Bureau of Standards (Craft).
2008–2009Advisory Board, South African Department of Arts and Culture (Craft).
2004–2010Executive Board, The WasteArt Foundation.

Publications

Selected research papers, articles & conference presentations →

 
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