Hage Mukwendje (b. 1990, Namibia) is a visual artist based in Windhoek, working primarily with painting and mixed media. His practice combines acrylic, collage, and found materials to explore the complexity of human experience, memory, and identity. Raised in northern Namibia, his art is deeply rooted in the storytelling traditions of his hometown, Okalongo. His colour blindness led him early on to focus on contrast, texture, and depth, elements that have become central to his artistic language.
Hage studied at the College of the Arts in Windhoek and has exhibited widely across Africa and Europe. His most recent solo exhibition is Common Sense Is Not Common (Young Blood Art Gallery, Cape Town, 2025). His work is included in international collections, including those of the World Health Organization (Switzerland) and the Ministry of Science, Research and the Arts Baden-Württemberg (Stuttgart, Germany). He has also participated in several international artist residencies, notably at Akademie Schloss Solitude (Germany).
Mukwendje’s art is a continuous exploration of memory, land, and history. In Faces That Refuse to Fade, he tries to challenge dominant narratives by using beauty as an invitation: a way to open dialogue while preserving complexity and resisting erasure.
For the artist beauty is never superficial, it is something deeply embedded in us that manifests in many different forms: it is political, relational, and active, a force that arises from collective memory, ethical commitment, and the act of making space for others, it is an act of resistance.
In an era when images circulate frenetically and lose their symbolic weight, Mukwendje proposes a form of beauty that resists oblivion, rooted in memory and carrying non-negotiable stories, where tenderness becomes resistance.
His colour-blindness, which sets his gaze apart from the norm, has given rise to an aesthetic beyond the ordinary. What could have been a limitation has instead become the tool through which he subverts dominant visual codes, compelling the viewer to look again, with different eyes. It is a beauty that creates slowed-down spaces of empathy, urging us to pause, notice the details, and experience the image rather than consume it.
Faces That Refuse to Fade is a meditation on presence. Mukwendje pays tribute to those who, despite attempts to erase them, continue to exist: ancestors, workers, mothers, and children. The faces one encounters look at the viewer not as passive images, but as witnesses; they possess a beauty that does not reside in perfection, but lives in the eyes of those who have seen too much and continue to meet our gaze.