The Homestead Online Charity Art Auction 2011

Marlene Dumas - Portrait of a young Nelson Mandela To view the works on auction click here

The Homestead Sponsorship Programme, established for the educational expenses of boys at The Homestead’s Children’s Home in Khayelitsha, has been supported by Johans Borman Fine Art since its inception in 2007.

The artworks offered on this online auction have been donated by the artists and Johans Borman Fine Art, and the framing has been donated by FRAMED Master Gilders and Framers. All payments will be made directly to the Sponsorship Programme.

The 7 artworks illustrated here will be open to bids by E-mail: art@johansborman.co.za, or telephone: 021 683 6863 or cell: 082 566 4631, from Thursday 1 December until their respective deadlines on Friday 9 December 2011.


Conditions of sale
1. Reserve prices for the artworks are indicated on the website. The current highest bids will be displayed on the website as soon as we have received them.
2. Buyers are welcome to leave commission bids, with instructions regarding bidding increments, with Johans Borman Fine Art. Such bidders will be notified every time a higher bid has been registered.
3. Should there be more than one active bidder during the last 15 minutes before a deadline, all the active bidders will be phoned to conclude the bidding process for that lot.
4. No additional buyer’s premium is charged, which means that there are no extra sales charges added to the amount that is bid.
5. There will be no charge for the shipping of the artworks to the successful bidders.
6. Johans Borman Fine Art undertakes to conduct this auction process in a fair and transparent manner to the full benefit of The Homestead Sponsorship Programme.

Please contact us should you require better images or any further information.


The Homestead Projects For Street Children

Homestead Logo The Homestead is a registered Non-Profit Organization based in Cape Town, which was established in 1982. The Organization’s main objective is to assist boys living on the streets of Cape Town.

Street Outreach is the first and one of the most important services The Homestead provides to children living and working on the street. The Street Outreach workers spend much of their time building strong and trustful relationships with these boys. This is very important to the process of either getting the child back to his home, or into a shelter, as soon as possible.

The Homestead Intake Shelter covers the first phase of residential care. The centre is situated in District Six, and is open 24 hours a day. Upon entering the Intake Shelter a child must learn to abide by a set of rules. This will often cause resistance and uncertainty at first, because it means the child must give up his independence. These boys are usually unsettled, so the social workers have developed an ‘open-door’ policy: meaning that the door is never closed on a child - he will be welcomed back, time and again, until he is ready to become involved in the programme. The underlying principle is that each child must take responsibility for the decision to change his own life, otherwise nothing will be accomplished. This process, of easing a child into a more structured life with rules, is usually very slow and requires much patience. During the child’s stay at the Shelter, staff members try to involve him in activities like soccer, boxing, art classes, and developmental workshops. The main objective during this phase is to reunite the child with his family, which requires the social workers to do home visits and family counselling.

Should it not be in the best interests of the child to return home, or to other family members, the Children’s Court will place the child in the permanent care of The Homestead. The Bridge at Elukhuselweni Children’s Home is The Homestead’s second phase residential care centre, offering care for about 65 boys. The Home is based in Khayelitsha - a community from where many of these children originate. By this stage the boys are generally more settled, and most of them return to formal schooling.

Most boys living at the Children’s Home have fallen behind with their education and need to attend better resourced schools to give them a chance to ‘catch up’. The Homestead Sponsorship Programme was established in 2007 to address these needs. The Programme pays for educational psychological assessments, to ensure that every child is placed in the most suitable school environment, and thereafter also covers the school fees and transport costs. Two computers were installed to help the children to become more computer literate. This sponsorship programme has been growing every year, with very positive results.

Sponsorship for the educational expenses of a child amounts to R1800 per year or R150 per month. A sponsor is initially given background information about the sponsored child, which is supplemented by two newsletters a year, in order to keep the sponsor informed of the child’s progress. A tax receipt, which allows the sponsor to deduct any donation from his or her taxable income, is issued on an annual basis for all donations received.

For an update on the Sponsorship Programme’s current activities click here.

To sponsor a child or make a donation, please phone Amori on +27 (0)82 464-2135 or +27 (0)21 683-5329 or E-mail her at bormanfamily@telkomsa.net

To view the works on auction click here

To view the details and results of the 2009 Homestead Annual Online Charity Art Auction click here
To view the details and results of the 2010 Homestead Annual Online Charity Art Auction click here
To view the details and results of the 2012 Homestead Annual Online Charity Art Auction click here

© Johans Borman Fine Art