Tag Archives: pottery

National Culture Month, Zimbabwe 2025, “Celebrating Indigenous Voices”; a turning point for me into a wider Dance, Art, Rhythm, Music and Craft celebration in my art practice…

Zimbabwe’s 2025 National Culture Month, May 2025, under the theme “Celebrating Indigenous Voices” celebrated the country’s diverse cultural and linguistic heritage. Culture Month Launch at Rusununguko Clinic, Chiredzi, Zimbabwe, was the lowveld component of the nationwide events – particularly celebrating … Continue reading

Posted in abstract art, abstract female expressionist, adventure travel, Africa, africa, African art, African child, art, art collaboration, Art collectors, art community, art exhibition, Art exhibition zimbabwe, art fair, art festival, Art for impact, art gallery, art interview, art museum, art on clothes, Art pigment, art travel, art video, artprints, Assemblage art, beading, beads, Body Art, Body art,, body artist, Body Painting, broom, Burnt Offerings Collective, Changana people, clive stockil, community, community conservation, craft, crafts, Craftwork, cultural beliefs, Cultural festival, culture, dance, draped canvas, drawing, dreams, Dressmaking, drums, earth, earth pigment, eco-tourism, ecosystem, expressionist art, Fabric, fabric design, fashion, FashionArt, female expressionist, fibre art, Fish, fishing, giant African snail, Hairstyle, Handmade art, Harare, Heritage site, hip hop, hunting, initiation rites, jewellery, Johnson Zuze, Life Drawing, lifestyle, lin barrie, Lin Barrie Art, Lin Barrie publication, lowveld, Machangana culture, Michael Jackson, Miniature paintings, music, musical instruments, national arts council zimbabwe, National Gallery of Zimbabwe, Natural History, Nguni cattle, oral history, painting, paintings, palms, Politicians, printed fabric, printmaking, re-cycled products, recycled art, sculpture, Social Customs, spoken tradition, storytelling, street art, Textile art, tradition, traditional craft, traditional dance, traditional dyes, Traditional fabric, video, Video art, weaving, wilderness, Woman’s work, Xangana, zimbabwe, Zimbabwe Artist, Zimbabwe artists, Zimbabwe National Art Gallery, Zimbabwean Art, Zimbabwean Artist | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Dancing with my Shadow; An Elephant in the Room and the Budula Festival…

When I am not at my Harare art studio, I live with my partner Clive Stockil, in the south East of Zimbabwe at Mahenye Village, adjacent to Gonarezhou National Park, (near Chilo Gorge Safari Lodge and Jamanda Community Wilderness Area) … Continue reading

Posted in abstract art, Africa, africa, Africa Parks, African child, African Safari, African wild dogs, african wildlife, animal rights, anti poaching, arid areas, art, art collaboration, art exhibition, Art exhibition zimbabwe, art fair, artprints, baobabs, beading, bio diversity, Campfire, cattle, Changana people, Chilo Gorge Safari Lodge, citizen science, clay, clay pots, climate change, clive stockil, community, community conservation, community wildlife challenge, community wildlife challenges, community wildlife conflict, conservation, conservation education, conservation news, conservation publication, crafts, cultural beliefs, Cultural festival, culture, Cycle of Life, dance, dogs, drawing, drums, eco-tourism, ecosystem, elephants, endangered, endangered species, environment, family, gonarezhou, Gonarezhou Conservation Trust, gonarezhou national park, great limpopo transfrontier conservation Area, Greater Limpopo Transfrontier Park, hardwood trees, landscape, Life Drawing, lifestyle, Lin Barrie Art, Lin Barrie publication, lions, mozambique, music, Music festival, oral history, Painted Dogs, painted wolves, painting, paintings, pangolins, Poaching, poetry, pottery, predators, responsible tourism, rewilding, Rivers, safari, Save River, Shangaana people, sketching, Social Customs, spoken tradition, storytelling, Totem, tourism, tradition, traditional cattle herders, traditional craft, traditional dance, Traditional fabric, travel, trees, Tsonga, wild dogs, wilderness, wildlife, Xangana, Xibelani fabric, zimbabwe, Zimbabwe Artist, Zimbabwe artists, Zimbabwe Parks, Zimbabwean Art, Zimbabwean Artist, Zimbabwean tourism | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 9 Comments

Esther Mahlangu: hit painting, hip painting or hut painting!?

At Investec, my first up close view of an Esther Mahlangu artwork was a fiberglass pot painted in her studio, albeit signed by her. Used to the wonderful hand-built heavy clay pots of Gwayi and the finer earth- fired pots … Continue reading

Posted in abstract art, Abstract female exoressionist art, abstract female expressionist, Africa, africa, African child, art, art collaboration, art exhibition, art fair, art video, beading, beads, Changana people, childrens art, clay, community, Craftwork, cultural beliefs, culture, Design, drawing, earth pigment, esther mahlanga, film, Graffitti, Harare, hut painting, interior decor, interior design, investec art fair, kitchens, landscapes, lifestyle, lowveld, Machangana culture, mud huts, murals, national gallery, National Gallery of Zimbabwe, ndebele culture, painting, paintings, pottery, rural school,, Shangaana people, skulls, Social Customs, spoken tradition, storytelling, street art, tourism, tradition, traditional cattle herders, traditional dance, travel, Uncategorized, virtual art exhibition, wall art, wall murals, Xangana, zimbabwe, Zimbabwean Art | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Of Giant Snails and Tradition; Fire and Totems….

Of Giant Snails and Tradition; Fire and Totems…. In the Southeast lowveld of Zimbabwe, on the Save River, The Chauke Clan totem is the African Giant Snail…. here is my art installation of giant land snail shells and fire-fired clay … Continue reading

Posted in abstract art, adventure travel, Africa, African child, African flora, african wildlife, african wildlife conservation fund, art, art collaboration, beauty, bio diversity, Changana people, Chilo Gorge Safari Lodge, clive stockil, community conservation, conservation, conservation education, cooking, cultural beliefs, culture, eco-tourism, education, endangered species, food, food culture, giant African snail, gonarezhou national park, great limpopo transfrontier conservation Area, Greater Limpopo Transfrontier Park, hlungwani peiople, home grown food, homegrown, initiation rites, Lin Barrie Art, molluscs, oral history, Shangaana people, spoken tradition, Totem, tradition, travel, wilderness, wildlife trade | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments