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The History
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Zimbabwe stone sculpture, introduced
to the British public at a major exhibition at Kew Gardens in the summer
of 2000, is recognised as a major force in contemporary art.
The work is essentially African in its vitality, its distortion of form,
its monumentality and its truth to the stone.
The ‘movement’ began in 1957 when Frank McEwen, first Director of the
National Gallery of Zimbabwe, was shown the carvings of Joram Mariga,
an agricultural extension officer.
Through his work, McEwen came to realise that the educational and economic
limitations of rural Africans in no way restricted their understanding
of their cultural heritage. |
The ‘movement’ gained further impetus in the late 1960s when Tom Blomefield,
a tobacco farmer, set up the Tengenenge Sculpture Community to provide
alternative employment for his workers.
These two men were major catalysts in the development of what has become
an inspiring manifestation of Zimbabwean artistic talent.
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