Latest News Archive

Please select Category, Year, and then Month to display items
Previous Archive
23 August 2021 | Story Ruan Bruwer | Photo Netball South Africa
Refiloe Nketsa, one of the latest Kovsie Protea players in action for the South African U21 team earlier this year.

No less than five players out of the 16 chosen for the Protea netball team hail from the University of the Free State (UFS).

They will travel to Jamaica for a tri-nations series in October. This is the first time since 2007 that the UFS have five members in a team or touring squad.

In 2007, seven Kovsies (Annari Store, Anchen du Plessis, Karin Venter, Adéle Niemand, Elzet Engelbrecht, Maryka Holtzhausen, and Doretha Joubert) were in action for the Proteas.

The five 2021 Proteas – Karla Pretorius (first-year student in 2009), Khanyisa Chawane (2015), Lefébre Rademan (2015), Boitumelo Mahloko (2019), and Refiloe Nketsa (2020) – all started their senior netball careers at the UFS. 

This is a first call-up for Mahloko and Nketsa. Mahloko left the Free State at the end of last year. Chawane is still enrolled at the UFS, Rademan is doing her master’s, and Pretorius is an alumna. 

Rademan was recently named the Members’ Player of the Season at London Pulse where she played in the European Super League. Karla Pretorius, with 94 caps, could possibly become only the fourth Protea ever to reach 100 test caps.

Nketsa was a member of the South African U21 team in 2020 and 2021. She said it was her dream since she was a child to be in the Protea team. “To be called up and given a chance to showcase my talent is a blessing. It still feels surreal. I’m really thankful.” She changed position from goalkeeper to wing defence/centre last year.

Burta de Kock, UFS coach, describes herself as a blessed coach.
“I’m blessed with an amazing calibre of players who are willing to change positions (such as Nketsa) and who are eager to grab every opportunity.
“It is a fortunate position to be in. We work hard to help players reach their maximum potential.”


News Archive

Paying homage to a music maestro
2013-10-08

 

08 October 2013
Photo: Supplied

American singer, songwriter, composer and actor, Thomas Alan Waits (1949–), has been a major inspiration to artists, musicians, poets, writers and thinkers for almost 40 years. He is considered as one of the godfathers of grunge and poetic rock and is a master of contemporary narrative –able to weave emotion and intrigue into his stories of urban grit and rural abandonment. His sometimes jaundiced view of the underbelly of society serves as a rich source of visual imagery.

The Johannes Stegmann Art Gallery is celebrating this vanguard with the exhibition Tom Waits for No Man.

Gordon Froud, artist and senior lecturer at the Department of Visual Arts at the University of Johannesburg (UJ), curated and toured with the Leonard Cohen exhibition entitled Altered Piecesin 2011 and 2012. Due to the success of that exhibition, Froud decided to extend his curative activities in the direction of Tom Waits.

This exhibition is based on a roughly LP-sized circular format (30cm in diameter). Most works hang on the wall, but some artists that preferredto work in 3D, made use of the disc as a base or platform on which to build. There was no restriction on materials or approach. There was no process in selection of songs and each artist was free to use whichever lyric or section of lyrics that they choose (even if someone else had selected this too – artists seldom come up with the same solutions).

The exhibition was launched at the ABSA KKNK in April 2013 and has travelled to the UJ Art Gallery and Grande Provence Wine Estate for the Literary Festival.

The exhibition is on display at the Johannes Stegmann Art Gallery until 25 October 2013.

Gallery hours: 08:30 – 16:30, Monday – Friday

Enquiries: +27(0)51 401 2706 | dejesusav@ufs.ac.za

We use cookies to make interactions with our websites and services easy and meaningful. To better understand how they are used, read more about the UFS cookie policy. By continuing to use this site you are giving us your consent to do this.

Accept