art is not placed here, it is integrated
At Elephant Point River Suites, the art collection has been conceived as a site-responsive ecosystem, one that explores the invisible forces that define this stretch of the Lowveld: water, light, soil, time, and memory. Rather than decorating the experience, it deepens it.
Curated by Hogarth Art in close dialogue with the architecture and interiors, each work has been positioned to enhance the guest journey marking arrivals, anchoring spaces, and drawing attention to particular views or moments. The collection reveals itself slowly. Through a full stay, not a single glance.
anton smit
Suspended copper installation · Reception
Anton Smit is one of South Africa's most respected sculptors — known for monumental works that explore suffering, transcendence, and the resilience of the human form. At Elephant Point, his presence is felt from the first moment of arrival.
Suspended above the reception, a copper installation depicts a troop of elephants in motion — carved from trees shaped and felled through natural elephant foraging. The piece captures both movement and stillness. It is an evocative introduction to the reserve: dramatic in scale, rooted in the land it came from.
mbongeni buthelezi
Plastic collage · SAN Restaurant
Mbongeni Buthelezi is renowned for his innovative use of discarded plastic — melting, moulding, and assembling it into vivid, large-scale works that carry an urgent conversation about conservation, consumption, and the relationship between human activity and the natural world.
In the SAN Restaurant, his bold elephant collage commands the social energy of the space. A second piece — a single elephant rendered in his signature technique — continues the dialogue, prompting reflection with every meal. Both works feel alive in the room, shifting in mood with the light and the hour.
gail caitlin
Liquid crystal artwork · TILO Bar & Lounge
Gail Caitlin's work anchors the TILO Bar and Lounge with a sense of deep, enduring continuity. Her liquid crystal baobab — titled Time Immemorial — is inspired by the baobab's presence as one of Africa's oldest living organisms, a tree that outlasts almost everything around it.
The piece shifts in tone throughout the day, mirroring the colours of the river at different hours — pale at midday, deepening to amber and copper as sunset approaches. It is a work that rewards patience and repeated observation. Much like the landscape it honours.
philip tyers
Works throughout Elephant Point River Suites
Philip Tyers' works are woven through the property — in transitional spaces, corridors, and quieter corners where art is encountered unexpectedly rather than announced. His subjects are drawn from the Lowveld landscape: its wildlife, its light, its particular quality of stillness.
These are not works designed to dominate. They reward the unhurried guest — the one who pauses, looks again, and finds something they missed the first time. In that sense, they embody the philosophy of Elephant Point itself.
the collection reveals itself in layers
sentinels of time
Carved from trees shaped by natural elephant foraging, these sculptural forms stand at the entrance to the central building ,abstract, ancestral, and deeply symbolic. They mark the threshold between the outside world and the experience beyond.
regeneration light
Woven copper cocoons suspended above the restaurant that glow softly, the lighting installation doubles as sculpture, symbolising transformation before emergence. Look up. The effect shifts with the time of day and the quality of the Lowveld light outside.
the threshold
A mural stretches the full length of the tunnel connecting spaces within the reserve. Layered in tones of exposed earth and ancient strata, it traces the movement of animals and river systems a quiet reminder that wildlife continues its journey above while guests pass below.
art as landscape, not decoration
a site-responsive ecosystem
this is art for the unhurried guest
a collection worth
taking time to find
The art at Elephant Point is part of the stay, not an add-on. It is there from the moment you arrive, and reveals itself further with every hour you spend in the reserve.