July is packed with opportunities for South African creatives to engage with art, film, literature, music, theatre, and the wider cultural landscape. From major festivals and exhibitions to intimate poetry gatherings, this month’s calendar offers plenty of reasons to step away from the screen and into creative spaces.
Whether you’re looking for inspiration, networking opportunities, or simply an excuse to experience great work, here are some of the events worth adding to your calendar.
National Arts Festival
25 June – 5 July 2026 | Makhanda
The National Arts Festival remains one of South Africa’s most important cultural gatherings. Every year, artists, performers, writers, musicians, and audiences converge in Makhanda for a programme that spans theatre, visual art, dance, music, comedy, and experimental work.
For creatives, the festival offers a rare opportunity to experience multiple disciplines in one place while engaging with artists from across the country.

Innibos National Arts Festival
2 – 5 July 2026 | Nelspruit
Innibos continues to grow as one of South Africa’s largest multidisciplinary arts festivals.
Alongside its well-known music programme, the festival includes visual arts exhibitions, cultural conversations, performances, and creative showcases that celebrate South African storytelling and artistic expression.

First Thursdays Cape Town
2 July 2026 | Cape Town CBD
First Thursdays remains one of the easiest ways to engage with Cape Town’s creative community.
Galleries, museums, cultural institutions, and creative spaces open their doors late into the evening, allowing visitors to move through exhibitions, artist talks, and installations across the city.
For emerging creatives, it is also an excellent networking environment.

Santu Mofokeng: Rumours / 2026
Until 18 October 2026 | Standard Bank Art Lab, Johannesburg
This major exhibition celebrates the work and legacy of legendary photographer Santu Mofokeng.
Bringing together key bodies of work from across his career, the exhibition explores photography as a tool for memory, documentation, and self-representation.
For photographers, filmmakers, researchers, and visual storytellers, it offers valuable insight into one of South Africa’s most influential image-makers.

Unathi Mkonto: If Joburg Had a Beach, Who Would Go?
Until 8 August 2026 | Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg
Unathi Mkonto’s exhibition uses sculpture and installation to explore questions around space, belonging, movement, and urban identity.
The work reflects on Johannesburg as both a physical city and an emotional landscape, creating an experience that encourages visitors to think differently about the spaces they move through every day.

Turbine Art Fair
16 – 18 July 2026 | Turbine Hall, Johannesburg
Turbine Art Fair has become one of the most accessible entry points into South Africa’s contemporary art market.
The fair brings together galleries, emerging artists, collectors, and creative professionals while providing opportunities for new audiences to engage with contemporary art.
For artists looking to understand the commercial side of the industry, it remains one of the most valuable events on the calendar.

Between Here and Elsewhere
Until 29 August 2026 | Javett-UP Art Centre, Pretoria
This exhibition presents work from artists selected through the Tlhagella Incubation Programme.
The exhibition explores identity, memory, family, and place while showcasing some of the country’s emerging visual artists.
It also offers insight into how mentorship and incubation programmes are helping shape the next generation of South African creatives.

Durban International Film Festival
23 July – 2 August 2026 | Durban
The Durban International Film Festival remains one of Africa’s most significant film events.
The festival brings together local and international cinema, industry conversations, workshops, and screenings while providing a platform for new voices in filmmaking.
For anyone interested in film, screenwriting, directing, or visual storytelling, DIFF remains an essential annual event.

Elgin Poetry Festival
24 – 26 July 2026 | Elgin
This boutique literary gathering brings together poets, writers, publishers, and readers for a weekend of readings, workshops, discussions, and performances.
Set against the backdrop of the Elgin Valley, the festival offers a slower, more intimate alternative to larger literary events while creating space for meaningful creative exchange.

Woza Albert!
15 – 26 July 2026 | Market Theatre, Johannesburg
As part of the Market Theatre’s 50th anniversary celebrations, Woza Albert! returns to the stage.
Widely regarded as one of South Africa’s most important theatrical works, the production remains a powerful example of political satire, physical performance, and socially engaged storytelling.
For theatre-makers, performers, and writers, it is essential viewing.

Karamonk
15 – 25 July 2026 | Baxter Theatre Centre, Cape Town
Combining contemporary South African storytelling with the Japanese tradition of paper theatre, Karamonk offers a fresh and experimental theatrical experience.
The production demonstrates how traditional and contemporary forms can intersect to create something entirely new.
Samthing Soweto: Good Morning Live
25 July 2026 | Baxter Concert Hall, Cape Town
Samthing Soweto is bringing Touch Is a Move: Good Morning to the stage in a special live performance that gives audiences an opportunity to experience the project in a new setting.
Designed as a story-driven performance experience, the show combines music, memory, and personal storytelling while offering audiences a deeper connection to the artist’s creative process.

Stay Connected
Creative communities grow when people show up for one another’s work. Whether you’re attending an exhibition, watching a film screening, joining a workshop, or supporting a local performance, these events provide opportunities to engage with the people and ideas shaping South Africa’s creative landscape.
If you’re planning your month, this is a good place to start.



