Karabo Poppy is redefining the African story of creativity with colorful imagery.
The style of the renowned illustrator which is a blend of urban culture and traditional motives is stunning the worldwide audiences.
In New York galleries or London exhibitions, Poppy brings the South African heritage to the modern stage.
Her most recent work, Izinto Eziyinkimbinkimbi (The Complicated Things), is a collection that dwells on the life of townships and the use of bold geometric patterns.

“I want viewers to feel the heartbeat of SA streets,” Poppy explains.
She deliberately adds local slang, kwaito music allusions and minibus taxi culture in her art.
The career of the Pretoria-born creative has been astronomical.
Following the viral success of her 2023 Nike collaboration, world brands started knocking at her doors. But she is nevertheless faithful to indigenous tales.
The studio of Poppy in Johannesburg is full of young apprentices.
“Mentorship is how we sustain our visual language,” she says, while sketching new designs inspired by Soweto street vendors.

Critics hail her work as “the visual equivalent of amapiano” – distinctly South African yet universally appealing.
In recent Paris and Tokyo shows her reworkings of Basotho blanket designs with contemporary typography were shown.
On top of galleries, Poppy has an impact on townships via murals.
Her Alexandra project painted drab walls into colorful storytelling canvases that told stories of local heroes.

Poppy has a mission, which expands as a series of children books is launched next month. “Every stroke carries our history and future,” she reflects, mixing paints in colors inspired by African sunsets.
With foreigners rushing to buy her originals, there is only one thing that is becoming clear, Karabo Poppy is not only an artist, she is a South African soul archivist.