AfricanColours Artist Association (AAA) 4 Deary Avenue, Belgravia, Harare, Zimbabwe. Phone + 263 4252 962 / aaa@africancolours.com
Posted on Monday 8th October, 2007
The changing nature of art
By Stephen Garan'anga

The changing nature of art is determined by the changing of what art is made from. The 20th century C20 artists’ movement away from traditional materials, stone, bronze, wood, clay to the engagement of the natural or man-made object is in keeping, however, with the tradition of the African mask maker who would take the wood from the tree, the feathers from the back of the chicken, the bones of the dead cattle and the pigments used by the late stone age artists and fashion them into a mask worn to appease deities and spirits. Such an approach was also Picasso’s, who created from an astounding array of life’s leftovers a goat, or some kind of object which, because it was made by an artist, was during his time called a sculpture. These approaches presaged an alternative way of looking at art by artists today. All artists respond in some way to what they see around them, and what they feel about what they see.
But the challenge in the C20 to the longer
Such is the case with today’s young contemporary mixed media sculptors in Zimbabwe They have minds which work very differently to the minds of many artists working in the country today whose concerns are dedicated by the needs and wants of their materials.
The young mixed media sculptors’ work is in a mixture of traditional materials, in particular bronze of a sickly green and opal stone with a greenish palor. But they also use full-bodied fruit opal stone and gnarled bits of old tree which seems to rot before the eyes of the viewers. They speak of nature’s decay as well as its eternal. But they also use an array of found objects, things we consign to the bin and the tip and rush to the store to buy new ones.
In a recent interview with The AfricanColours Artists’ Association (AAA) during its current nationwide visual arts seminars, one of the leading young religious mixed media artist with his colleagues had this to c
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