About ArtxAndre
This is the personal space of Art x Andre—an invitation to look beyond the work and into the ideas, and tensions that shape it. A reflection on the artist and what drives the practice, offering insight into the motivations, influences, and questions that continue to inform the art.
BIO
(Why i'm doing it)
Coming from a small, conservative, religious, and racially divided community, my first instinct growing up was to escape—escape boredom, escape limitation, escape the simplicity of existence.
Yet once I found that “freedom,” distance reshaped my understanding. What I had once perceived as a cage began to feel, in retrospect, like a form of freedom. I found myself reaching back toward it—not necessarily to return, but to understand it, or perhaps to reconstruct an idea of it.
After moving to Italy, I became increasingly aware that my thoughts were anchored in my relationship to South Africa. With the perspective that distance provides, I began, hesitantly, to investigate my past—what my life was, what it meant, and how it continues to shape where I am and where I might go. This process was uncomfortable and confrontational, prompting a reaction. The only language I had to navigate it was art.
This forms the basis of my practice: an attempt to contextualize myself within a place I undeniably belong to, yet which no longer belongs to me in the ways I once believed.
Art was not a quality widely valued in the community I came from, and this created an internal conflict. To protect that part of myself, I chose to hide it. What I did not anticipate was that while the ability remained, critical thought became buried even deeper.
My practice now seeks to dismantle those internal barriers—to uncover, release, and give form to thought. Although still in its infancy, I feel I have begun to identify the essential elements needed to express something far greater than the sum of its parts.
Process & Practice
(A Unique Approach to Storytelling)
My work is primarily defined by a puzzle-like collage technique. What began as a practical solution—working within the constraints of fatherhood, a full-time job, and limited resources—evolved into a central language within my practice. In the Time series, each fragment was painted individually and only later assembled, forming a layered and often unexpected interpretation of the source material.
Over time, I came to understand this method as a metaphor for life itself: we construct meaning through fragments—moments, memories, and phases—only fully perceiving their coherence in retrospect. The work, therefore, is not driven by the pursuit of immediate beauty, but by a commitment to making each individual part resolved, trusting that the whole—once revealed—will carry its own quiet integrity.
This approach has since expanded into the Porcelain Baby, Ghost Stories, and Flora series. Working with paper in particular has allowed for greater flexibility, where arrangement and reconfiguration become integral to the process. It opens space for both control and accident, where meaning can emerge unexpectedly—often shaped as much by circumstance as by intention
From "Necessity" to creative solutions
This process is not only a continuous source of creative possibility, but also introduces a practical sensitivity to how the work moves through the world. By existing in parts, the artworks can be shipped and packaged with greater ease, reducing the burden and cost often associated with transporting large-scale pieces—for both artist and collector.
It also opens the potential for expansive works that are assembled by the collector themselves. In doing so, the boundary between artwork and audience shifts. The act of installation becomes a moment of engagement, breaking down the distance that often renders contemporary art precious and inaccessible.
Through this interaction, the work gains a more intimate presence—no longer fixed and untouchable, but lived with, handled, and completed in collaboration with its final space.
Process & Practice
(A Unique Approach to Storytelling)
My work is primarily defined by a puzzle-like collage technique. What began as a practical solution—working within the constraints of fatherhood, a full-time job, and limited resources—evolved into a central language within my practice. In the Time series, each fragment was painted individually and only later assembled, forming a layered and often unexpected interpretation of the source material.
Over time, I came to understand this method as a metaphor for life itself: we construct meaning through fragments—moments, memories, and phases—only fully perceiving their coherence in retrospect. The work, therefore, is not driven by the pursuit of immediate beauty, but by a commitment to making each individual part resolved, trusting that the whole—once revealed—will carry its own quiet integrity.
This approach has since expanded into the Porcelain Baby, Ghost Stories, and Flora series. Working with paper in particular has allowed for greater flexibility, where arrangement and reconfiguration become integral to the process. It opens space for both control and accident, where meaning can emerge unexpectedly—often shaped as much by circumstance as by intention
From "Necessity" to creative solutions
This process is not only a continuous source of creative possibility, but also introduces a practical sensitivity to how the work moves through the world. By existing in parts, the artworks can be shipped and packaged with greater ease, reducing the burden and cost often associated with transporting large-scale pieces—for both artist and collector.
It also opens the potential for expansive works that are assembled by the collector themselves. In doing so, the boundary between artwork and audience shifts. The act of installation becomes a moment of engagement, breaking down the distance that often renders contemporary art precious and inaccessible.
Through this interaction, the work gains a more intimate presence—no longer fixed and untouchable, but lived with, handled, and completed in collaboration with its final space.