Art Student Assignment; Apt Art Questions; Rivers Beads and Baobabs; All Things Connected!

I am always intrigued, and happy to answer, the questions that art students ask me when they are using me as a reference artist for their a level exam components, and in this case I am refreshed by the choices of two of my paintings chosen be a Gateway student, which echo my ethos of #allthingsconnected

My colour choice in both paintings is reflective of the bright and often red and pink-tinged skies in our Zimbabwean landscape. Apart from this being an exquisite sunrise/sunset landscape colour, pink and red are creative and vibrant colours for me personally, to express movement and emotion…

Lin Barrie, “Dancing with my sisters, Dancing with my cellphone…”, acrylic and beadwork on stretched canvas, 3 x 4 feet, is featured in Contemporary African Art website and is on display currently at the British High Commission in Harare, Zimbabwe…

Detail from the painting, lady dancers from Mozambique who joined us in the south east lowveld of Zimbabwe to take part in a Xangana dance festival (note one lady dancing clutching her cell phone..)..

And a detail here showing my beadwork, reflecting the tradition of beading in the traditional much-gathered chibabela skirts that Xangana ladies wear…these glass seed beads have been used since the days of Indian and Arab dhow trade down the east coast of Africa into the baobab country surrounding our great river systems, (such as the Save River where I first sketched these dancers).

I hope that the shape in which I have stitched the beads, flowing over the painting is giving a sense of the dance rhythm …

The inspiration behind both these artworks that my student has picked out, is that of celebrating the connectedness of the landscapes and culture of vibrant Africa. I firmly believe that ecosystems are healthy when they include culture and community and diversity of species, all things connected.

I believe in direct observation of life, whether dancers or baobabs!

My recent photo…lady dancers of Chief Mahenye’s Village, in waiting, with their chibabela beaded skirts and cowhide drums…and sneakers. I love the combination of traditional skirts, beads and wraps and streetsmart footwear and cell phones tucked safely inside the dancing clothes… a perfect reflection of embracing culture and innovation..

Sketching from life, I can absorb emotion, form and mood, and then push the emotion of my subject into further abstraction in my studio.

I feel a hopeful passion for all life, for the connectedness and balance of people and wilderness, for tolerance and equity, all things equally entwined in the web of life…

Lin Barrie, Baobab Pink I, acrylic on brown paper, 32 x 46,5

Detail; from the baobab painting , showing the abstract, expressionist/impressionist spareness; the brevity of my brushstrokes

I would hope my work has impacted the community around me in terms of allowing a celebration of tradition in a deep sense, not just as a commercial spectacle, but as a deep rooted expression of appreciation and TOLERANCE of different cultures, different society values, conservation issues and biodiversity, including the environment all around us that nurtures us as humans.

All Things Connected, always, is my mantra, and my art strives to embrace the mutual reliance of humans and ecosystems for a balanced future on this planet earth.

Sketching a baobab in the field, in the pink, I LOVE that colour as you can see….. this sketch is of the Chishakwe baobab in the Save Valley Conservancy, and is charcoal and acrylic on paper.

Charcoal and acrylic are my preferred materials to use while sketching live subjects, as acrylic dries fast… here I am sketching a baobab in the field, (I often make my own charcoal and also I will use found sticks, twigs or palm leaves as tools to apply paint onto my paper or canvas…what better way to paint a tree than with one of its own discarded twigs?!)

The immediacy of charcoal and acrylic in the field, on the go, is perfect for my needs. Mixed media and beading/collage/draping are added ways that I create artworks once I am back in the environs of my art studio.

A single piece of art can take three hours or three months…. but whether it is a sketch or a detailed beaded layered canvas, it is a culmination of moods, emotions, remembered techniques and experimental new marks, making brave marks, making safe marks. A patchwork of paintwork experience over the many, many years that I have been painting…so one could say that whether it is a “quick” sketch or a detailed oil on a huge canvas, it is the product of YEARS!

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Floral Art takes to the air; Burnt Offerings, Re-Invention, Taking Flight….

Neels Scott floral installation at Pikicha Gallery, Emagumeni, 2023

Our group exhibition at Pikicha Gallery in Harare, titled “Burnt Offerings, Re-Invention, Taking Flight”, inspired top Zimbabwean floral designer Neels Scott to create an installation, a magnificent piece of floral art, for the exhibition.

Seen here, it is installed in the Pikicha Gallery foyer together with my painting “Abstract Fire Frass diptych, 1 and 2“, acrylic on canvas, 145 x 120 cm and 145 x 39 cm….

 My poem for Abstract Fire Frass diptych, 1 and 2“:

After a burn..

what’s left?

After flames

and pain..

what’s left?

After destruction

drug abuse

death or divorce

what’s left?

After life

sacrifice

living for others

lying to yourself

what’s left?

Nothing is left 

but you, in the present,

but you, in the presence

but you, in the knowing

but you in the belief…

so pick yourself up post apocalypse.

Feel the gentle whisper, 

see the soft fragments

as fire frass floats unfettered

to land on your skin.

Embrace yourself,

trace the sooty smudges.

It no longer burns.

Lin Barrie

And here it is with my draped canvas installation, “Bright Sky, Burnt Offering; Zimbabwe Bird“, acrylic/charcoal on stretched and draped canvas, 70 x 70 cm, plus draped canvas to 165 x 85 cm

My poem for “Bright Sky, Burnt Offering; Zimbabwe Bird“:

From fire to phoenix;

Zimbabwe bird

burnt offering

battered body

You reinvent yourself;

Beating worn wings 

into bright sky

above the burn.

Skirted by 

a tongued tail,

you trail flames

deftly, defiantly.

A Phoenix rising…

Lin Barrie

Below is a close up of dozens of pasted leaves, a leaf collage, which creates the feathers of a bird’s wing, or the scales of dragon wing… flora morphing into fauna, re-inventing itself from the flames and taking flight…

the graphic flow of the multi feathered/scaled wings is entrancing….delicately overlaid and connected by wire-threaded beads (which echo the snarewire threaded snail shells of my own installations in the exhibition!)

This lyrical floral statement by Neels is so deserving of a poem:

In my poem I have tried to encompass the concept of regeneration that Neels captures in his creation, the regeneration of plant life and animal life after a landscape burns, the reinvention of a human life after a life challenge, the inventiveness of man in the face of adversity!

Admirers at the exhibition…

Here are more views of Neel’s floral creation…

A sculpture in its own right, seen here with Nonoe, manager at Pikicha Gallery

Created from palm spathes and preserved leaves, sisal base, wire and beads…….

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Salt and Hot Springs: Culture and Snail Shells

Chisekela: Chiredzi’s hidden treasure

I am always fascinated by stories reflecting nature and culture, and especially Snail Shells!

Here is one:

Text By Tatenda Chitagu

https://thestandard.newsday.co.zw/2017/06/19/chisekela-chiredzis-hidden-treasure

A hot spring replete with a unique sprawling salt garden is going to waste in a former conservancy in Chiredzi.

The twin tourist attraction with a massive potential to draw visitors to the Lowveld is known as Chisekela (pool of salt) to a few Shangani speaking people aware of its existence.

It remains a puzzle why the pool of salt, which is in grave danger of being buried by growing shrubs around it, has not been preserved and officially recognised as a natural wonder by the government of Zimbabwe, 37 years after independence.

An explanation for that could be the fact that it has remained unknown to authorities, as it is located in Buffalo Ranch, a former white-owned conservancy, which was home to dangerous wild animals.

Entry into the conservancy without permission amounted to trespassing, and was only accessible to foreign tourists on guided tours and hunters who coughed up huge sums of money to kill the Big Five.

However, this is now history as Shangani and Shona families that benefitted from the land resettlement programme are now the new owners of the area.

Ex-Buffalo ranch workers say whites in the area knew about the natural wonder and they frequented the area.

This is confirmed by the presence of many exotic palm trees that were planted around the area, creating a lovely mini rainforest, mostly in a gully above the hot spring. 

PS by Lin, “A unique fern in the area, usually inhabiting mangrove ecosystems on the Indian ocean….its presence here could indicate the traffic of man along the old traditional trade routes from the Indian ocean deep into the interior of Zimbabwe, in days gone by”

PS by Lin, “the palm trees are not exotics, but are Phoenix reclinata, indigenous to our river systems in Zimbabwe…..”

This particular spot could have served as a picnic site, lovers’ paradise, or a sanctuary for those hiding away from the searing Lowveld sun or meditating, far from the madding crowds.

Shangani people who resided in the area long before they were pushed out of the place that was reserved for wildlife by the colonial government, knew about Chisekela and they treated it as a sacred place. 

They also harvested salt there for domestic consumption and for sale.

When the land reform exercise began in the late 90s, locals requested through the Lands ministry to be returned to their ancestral home, knowing this would bring them closer to the prized hot spring.

“Years ago, there were no shrubs here. Boiling water gushed out of the earth at Chisekela and you could see steam from a distance. 

“Now these shrubs have taken over, if nothing is done about it, this spectacle will be buried,” said Muhlava Nyumani, who was appointed the custodian of the hot spring by Chief Tshovani.

Nyumani can all but watch as the weeds and shrubs lay siege to the hot spring because the ground around it is so water-logged that treading on it to remove the thicket can be fatal. 

Villagers say an elephant that strayed to the hot spring sunk as soon as it landed its feet on the ground and was never seen again.

This reporter, determined to get a closer look at the natural wonder masked by the vegetation growing wildly around it had a frightful experience akin to a scene from a horror movie when he sunk knee deep, about five metres from the spring. 

Extricating himself from the mud was nothing short of a heroic act.

Like many other natural wonders, there are several myths and legends associated with Chisekela which is revered by the Shangani people. 

Not so long ago, a young man took his girlfriend (names supplied) and tried to fornicate in the vicinity of the hot spring. Bees emerged from nowhere and feasted on the delinquent couple before anything untoward happened.

A young girl urinated on the site and her urine is said to have followed her. 

Another man who tried to answer the call of nature, sprinted from the scene with his trousers precariously hanging onto his knees when he saw a huge tree appearing to fall on him.

These are just a few of the narratives told by grey-haired Shangani men who warn visitors against trying to engage in activities that desecrate the place.

Admittedly, in urban areas such as Harare, tales like this would appear like cock and bull stories, but there is something eerie about a place where shrubs thrive on salty boiling water and where a stream from the spring disappears into the ground a few metres from the source and then emerges as a salt garden about 100m on the banks of the crocodile infested Chiredzi river.

It could not be established if the Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Authority or the Meseums and Monuments were aware of the existence of Chisekela as efforts to contact them were futile by the time of going to print.

Nyumani concurred that the hot spring was a sacred place and any activities that defiled the place were forbidden.

She expressed serious concern about the activities of some members of a religious sect that don red garments that tried to build a shrine, just a few metres from the boiling water that gushes out of the annals of the earth.

“They came uninvited and started clearing the area. I told them never to do such a thing,” she said, pacing up and down at the site where the invaders left a heap of stones that resembles an unmarked grave.

“I was so disappointed by their behaviour,” she said.

The Chisekela keeper said these were not the first people who tried to make Chisekela their playground.

“Some white people who stayed at Buffalo Ranch at one time built a concrete basin about 15 metres away from the spring, but their joy was short-lived as it mysteriously cracked into pieces, prompting them to abandon it,” she claimed.

The elderly woman who drinks water from the hot spring and uses it to bathe said Chisekela was a special place and she would do all it takes to protect it. However, she could not disclose whether the water had medicinal properties.

“We used to derive our livelihood here,” said Nyumani.

“Now salt is too cheap and very few bother to buy this salt anymore.”

What sets Chisekela apart from other hot springs is that the water here is high in potassium chloride, a key ingredient in the production of salt.

No wonder the soils around the spring, distinct by their whitish colour, are laden with salt. 

June is the ideal time to harvest salt from the rich loam soils. 

Nyumani and few Shangani women who are experts in salt panning collect this soil using a snail’s shell, an object that has been used since time immemorial but which may be frowned upon by people of the 21st century.

They load the black soil in sacks and carry it to their homes where they mix it with water. 

Brownish water then drips from the sacks into buckets and it is this substance that is boiled in large pots until all the water evaporates leaving salt granules.

The salt is brownish in colour and could generate income for Nyumani and other women, if it is packed and sold in shops and supermarkets.

PS by Lin, “I find this collection of salty soil in empty snail shells fascinating, entranced as I am by the use of giant african snail shells, and storytelling that abounds around the giant african land snail…. revered by the Chauke clan of Chief Mahenye’s village….”

PS by Lin “My art installation at our group exhibition “Burnt Offerings” at Pikicha Gallery in Harare exhibits one of my art installations, aptly titled ‘Caged Culture’…”

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Lin Barrie Art; Miniature Portraits; Flights of Fancy

Burnt Offerings, Re-Invention, Taking Flight

Lin Barrie, Fine Artist, Artist Statement: 

Fire has terrible beauty, a dual nature, destructive and creative at the same time…alluring and frightening, real and metaphorical.

We have suffered two domestic fires in our lives. I have been driven to collect burnt memorabilia; creating a ‘burnt offering’ of artworks…..Burnt Offerings.

Lin Barrie, Portrait burnt offerings, mixed media on stretched canvas, 84,5 x 60 cm… snare wire twined hata/hairstyle!!

The power of entrapment is yours to use
or resist.
Bow your head

give of yourself, submit.

Feel the tension…

Freedom is a state of mind constrained not only
by physical boundaries but by your mind.

Lin Barrie

Nature is an inspiration; the seeds of many plants need the passage of flames to fully regenerate themselves…..Re-Invention.  

Lin Barrie, Portrait re-invention, mixed media on stretched canvas, 84,5 x 60 cm, jacaranda flowers raining down, inspired by Kelli Barkers make up with real flowers…

The power of flowers nature sublime
is yours.
Close your eyes

still your mind inhale.

Smell the scent…

Purple pods of pleasure drift a re-imagined landscape, Jacaranda haze

Lin Barrie

As a Phoenix rises from the flames and ashes, so we lift ourselves from the travails of life, physical or emotional…..Taking Flight.

Lin Barrie, Portrait taking flight, mixed media on stretched canvas, 84,5 x 60 cm…

The power of birds, wings and things, is yours.
Close your eyes

tilt your head, just breathe.

Feel the lift….

Soft feathers tickle tear-tracked cheeks; kind claws without scratching
scrape hurt from bruised skin;
birdsong without singing

fills your anxious ears.

Lin Barrie

Lin Barrie, Portraits/ burnt offerings, re-invention and taking flight, mixed media on stretched canvas, each 84,5 x 60 cm, on Dulux Wild Wonder

Kelli’s wonderful fresh flower Jacaranda make up .. her body art and make ups are inspirational in my paintings ..

My art and accompanying poetry, is cathartic for me. Art is one of my lifelines, my personal response in poetry, installations drawings and paintings, (representational or abstract), to life’s challenges, sadnesses and joys.

Lin Barrie, Portraits 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5, charcoal mixed media on canvas, each 20 x 20 cm, tiny offerings at my toes!!!……

Lin Barrie, Portrait 1, charcoal mixed media on canvas, 20 x 20 cm…

Lin Barrie, Portrait 2, charcoal mixed media on canvas, 20 x 20 cm…

Lin Barrie, Portrait 3, charcoal mixed media on canvas, 20 x 20 cm…

Lin Barrie, Portrait 4, charcoal mixed media on canvas, 20 x 20 cm…

Lin Barrie, Portrait 5, charcoal mixed media on canvas, 20 x 20 cm…

Dulux colours are an inspiration for interiors, to complement my art

Posted in abstract art, Abstract female exoressionist art, Africa, African child, African flora, african trees, african wildlife, anti poaching, art, art collaboration, art exhibition, Art exhibition zimbabwe, art gallery, bio diversity, birdart, birding, birds, Body art,, body artist, Colour of the YearYear, culture, dance, drawing, flight, Floral art, flowers, Harare, landscape, Life Drawing, Lin Barrie Art, make up art, make up artist, oral history, painting, paintings, phoenix, poetry, Portraits | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Snare Wire and Snail Shells; Conservation and Culture meets Art….

“Burnt Offerings;

Re-Invention;

Taking Flight.”

Lin Barrie

Johnson Zuze

Kelli Barker

Our art exhibition opened very well supported and is on view at Pikicha Gallery every weekday till the end of July- then will be ongoing on line. A powerful art film is running at the gallery in conjunction with my paintings and Johnson Zuze’s snare wire sculptures.  The art film will go onto YouTube – it’s very important to keep this art collaboration out in the public space as it addresses issues we all face – trial by fire, real and metaphorical- whether death and calamity, depression, drugs or socio-economic pressures such as  joblessness or poaching …

Johnson Kelli and I have all suffered destructive house fires and have long planned this cleansing “Burnt Offerings” exhibition …

Kelli Barker, talented Make up and body artist, has turned also to film production in this art exhibition, together with her collaborators Sebastien Lallemand, Faz Pixels, Hope Masike- along with a large and fabulous all-local crew of creatives – the film is set to turn many heads and minds ….

Heads up: featured in the film are my found objects – giant land snail shells – which hold a strong place in my heart and in the culture of the Mahenye people … read my link for more stories about snail shells and fire !

https://wildlifeandwilddogs.wordpress.com/2016/05/13/of-giant-snails-and-tradition-fire-and-totems/

One of the set characters in the art film is Johnson’s Blue Man -a winged Njuzu type being, who, In Johnson’s n’a narrative, aliases as an Egyptian god resurrected. Very powerful and made from snare wire and waste plastic bottles…see my previous blog for more on this character…https://wineandwilddogs.art/2023/06/11/njuzu-winged-waterman/

Johnson Zuze creates incredible wire and found objects sculpture from snare wire that I collect in the field at Senuko in the Save Valley Conservancy. Much like life, we can use negativity to create positivity- creating beauty out of brutality.

I find deadly fascination in the twisted shapes of my found snare wire- layers of stories, graphic twists…

Narratives unravel as my Snare wire undergoes re-genesis in Johnson’s capable hands – living in Chitungwiza, here he works on a life size winged ram … a burnt offering of snare wire

I am entranced by the culture of storytelling, tradition. The Ngano (stories) told around the campfire and the hearth. The baboon and the hare are classic protagonists in Shona and Xangana storytelling and this snare wire sculpture reflects an oral traditional story called “The Party”

Johnson and I see eye to eye in the joy of storytelling, in the use of re-cycled trash and snare wire to create art! …

Art and stories merge as Johnson’s “Shell wasps” hatch from snare wire and my giant land snail shells…with a shell sting in their tails (tales)!

Some of my paintings and installations are of snare wire, re-purposed-

My statement that we can all make a difference in our environment by re-inventing the trash, the waste and found objects around us….

Snail shells are an important theme for me, being a strong thread in the Mahenye clan story- (read my blog for more on that story as per previous link in this article)

I have cast some snail shells with Simpli Simbi, using re- cycled aluminum … which combine with clay pots and snare wire ‘ hatas’ to make a powerful art/conservation statement…

this is my hearthside story – our human story, open to memories of grandmothers coiling and creating clay pots from earth and fire, fire embers collected in snail shells, snare wire used to harvest bushmeat reinvented as a strange hata to support and carry clay pots on the head….

Celebrating honouring and re-inventing dynamic culture, from snare wire to hata to hairstyle….

My art interview with Farai of StoryUntold in Zimbabwe gives a bit of my history as an artist working in the wild areas of Zimbabwe, art conservation and snare wire!!!

youtu.be/WwwHVQcx-GQ

Taking flight- myself, my daughter Kelli Barker and my life partner Clive Stockil with my huge painting called  “Winged Things’, mixed media on canvas, at the ‘Burnt Offerings, Re-Invention, Taking Flight” exhibition…..

Pikicha Gallery at Emagumeni Helensvale is a multi-cultural creative space; well worth a visit – and is open weekday for viewing the artworks and the art film. At weekends great local food and music are to be had.

Tourists, Visitors and residents in Harare will find much of interest to view …

Posted in abstract art, Abstract female exoressionist art, Africa, African wild dogs, anti poaching, arid areas, art, art collaboration, art exhibition, Art exhibition zimbabwe, art gallery, art interview, art video, Assemblage art, beauty, bio diversity, birdart, birding, birds, Body Art, body artist, Body Painting, bush camps, Changana people, citizen science, community conservation, conservation, conservation news, crafts, cultural beliefs, culture, Cycle of Life, disaster, drawing, eco-tourism, ecosystem, endangered species, environment, Environment Africa, fairytale, family, film, fire, Fire regimes, flight, food, food culture, giant African snail, great limpopo transfrontier conservation Area, Harare, Hunter gatherers, hunting, interior decor, Johnson Zuze, landscapes, lifestyle, Lin Barrie Art, Lin Barrie publication, lowveld, Machangana culture, make up, make up art, make up artist, media, movies, oral history, owls, painting, paintings, Poaching, poetry, pottery, re-cycled art, re-cycled products, recycled art, Save Valley Conservancy, sculpture, Senuko, Shangaana people, Social Customs, spoken tradition, tradition, Trash, Trashart, travel, Uncategorized, video, virtual art exhibition, Xangana, zimbabwe, Zimbabwe Artist, Zimbabwe artists, Zimbabwe Parks, Zimbabwean Art, Zimbabwean Artist | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Njuzu; a Blue Man, a Winged Waterman, takes flight at our Art Exhibition

An Njuzu, a winged merman, alternatively an Egyptian god figure, our fondly named “Blue Man”, created by master Found Objects and wire artist Johnson Zuze, holds a a key role in Kelli Barker’s artfilm for the Burnt Offerings; Re-Invention; Taking Flight exhibition ongoing at Pikicha Gallery, Emagumeni, in Helensvale, Harare.

In the background are prints/stills from the artfilm, featuring Julie Kennedy, talented dancer-(with amazing wings created by Ivhu Tribe-and more collaboration with Jasper is due in 2024), Farai Chigudu and Carmen Ribeiro.

The Blue Man -Njuzu

I have long been a fascinated scholar and reader of myths and legends worldwide- the stories that link peoples of diverse natures and nationalities in their common beliefs, hopes and fears- such as the universally recurring mermaid/merman legend. And my dear friend Johnson is a learned mythologist and reader himself- a match made in heaven for our collaborative art exhibition ! I collect SNARE WIRE in the wilderness areas of Senuko Ranch, Save Valley Conservancy (south East lowveld of Zimbabwe) and Johnson reinvents it into ART…

The Njuzu holds a real and revered role in the oral, musical and written traditions of Southern African peoples… interpreted in so many ways in various writings and images-

and here Johnson’s winged Blue Man/njuzu captured our imaginations from the beginning – his looped snare wire wings enclosing a torso of embryonic plastic bottles gleaned by Johnson as waste from a factory.
Here in my garden are composer/mbira musician Hope Masike, cinematographer Sebastien Lallemand and make up/ body artist Kelli Barker taking inspiration for their art film ….

Photographer FazPixels was a co-creator on the artfilm- his stunning images will be available as high quality photographic prints …watch this space

Blue Man, merman myth or god reality- in our home area of the South Eastern lowveld of Zimbabwe the stories remain powerful and forceful …

And so, I am intrigued by friend Danayi Madondo’s showroom- Haus of Stone -and her personal brand of storytelling – especially the enigmatic Njuzu – can’t wait to see how she encompasses the myth and the reality in her superlative art/fashion creations !!!

Here I am wearing the meshed Njuzu top that I have happily acquired from Danayi- seen here with Kelli, myself , Danayi, her dear Mum and Hope Masike

Danayi collaborated with Kelli and Obscura Films in a previous film/photoshoot at the powerful heritage site of Domboshava- and I can’t wait for further art collaborations- we are stronger together in the spirit of Art: Ubuntu, Unhu, Umami!!!!

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Art Interview Lin Barrie; art, landscape, environment and the natural world

My art interview with Farai of StoryUntold in Zimbabwe

youtu.be/WwwHVQcx-GQ

#allthingsconnected

Lin Barrie, Kelli Barker and Clive Stockil with “Winged Things’, mixed media on canvas, at the ‘Burnt Offerings, Re-Invention, Taking Flight” exhibition.Pikicha Gallery 2023

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Wild Wings,Wild Wonder; Zimbabwe Bird Rises…

My passion for painting on walls, for graffiti and wings and things… has inspired this set of wings painted at Pikicha Gallery, Emagumeni Cultural Centre, Helensvale – (with kind donation of paints by my friends at Dulux Zimbabwe)

Nonoe takes flight

I didn’t want ordinary pretty wings – I wanted a feeling of “Burnt Offerings”, power, re-invention, a dragon or a Phoenix rising from the ashes, a true Zimbabwe bird, vibrant hornbill colour, eagle strength!!

So- starting with white, painting on the Heineken logo wall at Pikicha…


Then layering Wild Wonder Dulux Colour of the year- with our dear friend and Kelli’s fellow film/composer/music collaborator Hope Masike – we celebrate the soft beginnings of these wings

Hooe Masike spreading her wild wings with wild wonder !

Taking Flight… inspired by Zimbabwe Flag colours…

Zimbabwe flag colour wings- here comes the green, with wild wonder as base colour showing through in many places – perfect with the Heineken logo as well-

I didn’t want ordinary, pretty wings – fire red comes next ..!!

I wanted a feeling of “Burnt Offerings”, to reflect our 2023 group exhibition of same name- a feeling of power, re-invention, Phoenix rising from the ashes, zimbabwe bird, eagle strength, Taking Flight…

Similar to my large Hornbill and Diamond painting on our art show-

Hornbill and Diamond, mixed media on canvas by Lin Barrie
Detail from the wall painting
Ranger from Reggae Flavas, taking flight …

The Wild Wings are also real reggae colours plus of course the Zimbabwe Flag colours! And of course the red white and green are excellent Heineken colours as well – let’s fly together!!!! Heineken is available at Emagumeni Complex in Helensvale- come for a combined feast of traditional food, barbecue food, wings, and of course art -paintings, wire sculpture and art film! The Haus of Stone (Danayi Madondo) and MINEStitched fashion houses are open there as well- a feast of enticing, responsibly created and mindful fashionwear..

Danayi, Kelli and myself have collaborated at a Finnisage/Vernissage event of our respective art disciplines in 2023 and more art happenings are planned for 2024!

Lin and Nonoe

Personally I loved the wings as seen here with the simplicity of white and Dulux wild wonder – elemental..(and reminded me of the incredible real white wings that multi talented Jasper of Ivhu Tribe crafted for Kelli to use in the Burnt Offerings art movie that was revealed at the opening of our Burnt offerings exhibition)

Our group art exhibition 2023- Burnt Offerings; Re-invention; Taking Flight was extended for two months before it finally closed – and is on going in spirit -a theme I will always personally embrace

BURNT OFFERINGS:

Burnt Offerings 2023: A collection of paintings and installations by Lin Barrie; wire and found objects art by Johnson Zuze; an art film and photographic installation incorporating body painting, dance, fashion, music by Kelli Barker and her colleagues Faz Pixels and Sebastien Lallemand, (plus Hope Masike and Ivhu Tribe, to name just a few of the wonderful Zimbabwean creatives who have assisted with this film).

Plus the vernissage/finissage art fashion event by Danayi Madondo, Lin Barrie, Kelli Barker and with numerous other Zimbabwean creatives was a great hit!

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Around the Campfire; Giant Snails,Tradition, Fire and Totems…

Around the Campfire: Of Giant Snails and Tradition; Fire and Totems…

Winter is coming. Living as we do on the edge of the Save River, in Chief Mahenye’s village, we often sit around our newly lit campfire on the banks of the great Save River, mostly sand at this dry time of year, but still flowing through a few deep channels and over shallow sandbars, even at the end of a long dry season. This is a river worthy of the name – shelter and sustenance to all, home to many fish crab and mollusk species, frequented by a myriad of waterbirds, dinosaur-sized crocodiles, wallowing elephants and numerous floats of hippo families – a watery boundary where fishermen cast their bendy reed rods into the waters, women come at midday to do their brightly coloured washing, herders come late in the day to water their tri-coloured Nguni cattle and elephant cow herds tiptoe down to drink in the dusk, clustered protectively around their new-borns. We sit facing Gonarezhou National Park with our backs to the lands of Chief Mahenye, our local changana (xangana, Hlengwe) community. A cloudless lowveld winter day means relief as at last the burning sun sinks before us into the dark wilderness, silhouetting the filagree baobab horizon and lighting up the river. The river reflects the setting sun and warmth rises from the white sand under our bare feet wafting evocative scents – traces of the departed nguni cattle and the incoming Gonarezhou elephants, beasts who have passed over these sands for generations…

We must have a fire, not just for warmth, but for the ambience, the comfort and the rightness of it. The scent of it. A primeval need for the glow of coals against a backdrop of a darkening wild horizon. An African skimmer scoops past us in the shallows, trawling the water with its strange long lower mandible, and leaving a wake of molten gold ripples behind it to mark its passing in the shadows. I know it has a shallow nest on a large sand bank in the centre of the river- during daylight hours I have watched it chasing Spurwing Geese and Hadeda Ibises away from the area…

Jupiter shines bright above us and the constellation of Scorpio takes shape alongside, growing out of the darkening sky with it’s first visible star being Antares, a red heart in the centre of Scorpio’s thorax.

A hyena yodels in the dark and much as I love the sound, it is a comforting feeling to have a fire burning….

Why our elemental need for fire? Beyond the obvious need to cook on it and use its warmth and protection, fire draws us all, speaks to us all, much as water does, sophisticated city dweller and rural dweller alike. Around a campfire, a cooking fire, all the best stories are told; worldwide and no less so in Mahenye!

In the verbal history of the Mahenye and Gaza Chauke Clan, (from Zimbabwe through to Mozambique and Limpopo Province South Africa), there is a fascinating story told by the elders of how the Giant African Snail (Humba) and Fire came to be their totem….

The empty giant snail shells fascinate me, and form a series of artworks on show at the National Gallery of Zimbabwe Miniatures exhibition in 2025…and on show with the National Gallery at the Cultural Month Launch Chikombedzi..

What is the giant african snail you might ask… it’s a gorgeous beast of a snail! The Giant African Land Snail… Achatina fulica comes out of hiding, with the onset of the lowveld rains…

What a gorgeous beast of a snail! Achatina fulica

Regarding that snail story, we visit and talk with Phineas Mutsatsa Chauke, 89 years old, and one of the elders in the village – a sub chief. Plus his wife and sister in law, his son Victor Chauke and grandson George Chauke. (His other son Liberty Chauke, the Mahenye ward councillor) says that the Mahenye chieftainship can be back dated to late 1600 century. The snail shell is integral to the history of the Chauke clan, and we present Malume Chauke and his wife with a simpli simbi aluminium silver snail shell in recognition of the revered history…

The snail shell is integral to the history of the Chauke clan, Lin Barrie photograph

More insight into this story that captures my artistic, poetic, story loving soul, are gleaned from Thomas Mutombeni, chief tourism officer at Chilo Gorge Safari Lodge, Peter Chauke, head of kitchens at Chilo Gorge Safari Lodge, (whose brother is a Village Head, Guvhela), and also my further chats with Victor Chauke.

Here then is the Chauke Chahumba ( Chauke of the snail) story:

Back in the far-off days of the Chauke clan history, their hunter/gatherer existence, their Uncles, (the Hlungwani family), had the knowledge and use of fire. The Chauke clan did not. Fire was supposed to be their totem- and yet they were deprived of it. A young girl was tasked to bring back fire to Chauke village from the distant Hlungwani Family by any means she could. She attempted to carry burning embers as a glowing bundle of bark and merely burnt her fingers. Iyachisa!!! By luck she discovered an empty giant land snail shell and cleverly used it as a receptacle for the glowing treasure. Packing the empty shell with a base of earth and sand, she collected some glowing embers from the Hlungwani hearth and covered her treasure with cow dung to protect the spark. Safely carrying it back to her clan, they were able to light their own hearth for the first time and to celebrate the fact that they at last had fire in their clan. They could now keep warm and cook their meat, and most importantly they could fire and harden the full-bellied clay pots that the women crafted to carry life-giving water, cook food and brew sorghum beer. They were generous in sharing their new knowledge of fire with everyone, and were recognized as true leaders. They adopted the Giant snail as their totem – a creature which “withstood” the fire and also a creature which, even after a strong bush fire has passed, will eventually creep out of its underground hiding place to emerge victorious over the fire… Since it is their totem, the Chauke family are not allowed to eat a snail. (It is believed that if you eat your totem you will loose your teeth!).

The giant land snail …

I celebrate the snail shell story in my art installation using my local mahenye clay pot, a hata made of snare wire collected on anti poaching initiatives, and a simpli simbi aluminium snail shell, cast from my own snail shells, “Woeful Wire, Clay Poto and Simpli a Snail”. Last seen on our Burnt Offerings exhibition in 2023

Lin Barrie, “Woeful Wire, Clay Poto and Simpli a Snail”

The Chauke clan use the fire as their slogan when they chant “iyachisa,… mulilo” (“Fire…it Burns”) This is accompanied by the traditional “Hand on Heart” greeting called ‘sheweta’, and happens at the beginning and end of every important meeting and with every greeting to their chief.

Perhaps trial by fire is a necessary part of our lives, our growth and resilience, our inventiveness, animal and human alike.

What does not kill us, makes us stronger……

The snail is a treasured logo in many respects ..

The snail is a treasured logo in many respects .. read on for a cultural community initiative , the Budula festival!

And here are wonderfully weathered  images that I have photographed at the entrance of the Jamanda community conservancy, Mahenye – featuring of course the revered Snail (Humba) and the Fire.

Jamanda Community Conservancy, Mahenye

So potent…. the snail and the fire are a powerful image in our lives-  

Humba and Fire

In conjunction with the Chauke Chahumba story (ngano), my art embraces the use of a svielo, a mutsvairo, (a sweeping broom), as a paintbrush, as well as a broom for sweeping my hearth.. a metaphorical and a physical ‘sweeping’……

and here is an example of its use in my Burnt Offerings abstract painting…

Lin Barrie, Burnt Offerings, Mutsvairo, acrylic on stretched canvas, 4 x 3 feet, sweeping the hearth with my broom

Post script:

After displaying our work at the miniatures exhibition 2025, and as Burnt Offerings Collective, Celebrating Indigenous Voices, with the National Gallery of Zimbabwe, 2025, Johnson Zuze, Kelli Barker and I will display our Snail/Fire artworks at the National Arts Council of Zimbabwe Cultural Month Launch at Rusununguko Clinic, Zimbabwe, 17th May 2025….. my paintings and installations, Johnsons snail theme snare wire sculptures and Kelli’s fine art photographic Fire prints from her short art film titled “Burnt Offerings”…

Johnson Zuze, Kelli Barker and I will display our Snail/fire artworks Celebrating Indigenous Voices, NGZ 2025

See my other blogs for more stories about Totems, Art and Snails….

https://wildlifeandwilddogs.wordpress.com/2016/05/13/of-giant-snails-and-tra- dition-fire-and-totems/

https://wildlifeandwilddogs.wordpress.com/2016/03/13/an-amazing-mollusk- the-giant-african-land-snail-revered-totem-of-the-chauke-clan/

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Art Interview Kelli Barker; Bodies, Make Up, Art Fitness Health and Ethics in Zimbabwe

youtube.com/watch

Listen to Proudly Zimbabwean make up artist Kelli Barker in a thoughtful and well informed interview, with Farai of  Story Untold Zimbabwe, ahead of our art exhibition “Burnt Offerings, Re-Invention, Taking Flight”

Kelli’s relationship with her fellow creatives and her body art, film or make up models is resonant with warmth and compassion- putting people at ease and creating firm friendships is her guiding strength, allowing her to then freely create her magic !

Brilliant interview on #art #bodypainting #collaboration #beautyethics #lifestyle #healthandwellness #compassion #brides #models #filmindustry #fashion #bodyart #artexhibitions #zimbabweancreatives #makeupartist #personaltrainer #kellibarker with storyuntoldzw

Kelli re created her own body-crusted in glowing red beads and mosaic, for the opening of our ‘Burbt Offerings’ exhibition at Pikicha gallery, Harare, Zimbabwe

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