LAP Lambert Academic Publishing ( 2010-12-28 )
€ 68,00
This Masters thesis (History of art, UKZN) is a compilation of reformulated exhibition catalogue essays on three South African black artists and considers how indigenous African and changing cultural world-view impacts the interpretation of visual artworks. The artists are: The late Trevor Makhoba, who can be considered a master of the African oral genre in its visual form, one that goes back to the praise-poets of old. Azaria Mbatha, who lives in voluntary exile in Sweden after being one of the first students at the Lutheran mission art-school of Rorke's Drift. Mbatha is known for his sequential narrative scenes in highly contrasting linocut-prints reflecting his African indigenous idiom and story-telling roots. Finally the late Cyprian Shilakoe, a Bakoni (north Sotho) who also studied at Rorke's Drift and is known for his deeply evocative and brooding aquatint-etchings reflective of his cultural beliefs, especially those on the realms between the worlds of the living and their ancestors.
Book Details: |
|
ISBN-13: |
978-3-8383-9259-2 |
ISBN-10: |
3838392590 |
EAN: |
9783838392592 |
Book language: |
English |
By (author) : |
Yvonne Winters |
Number of pages: |
172 |
Published on: |
2010-12-28 |
Category: |
History of art |