Noria Mabasa Shaping Dreams The exhibition OPENS

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Noria Mabasa Shaping Dreams The exhibition OPENS

The Villa-Legodi Centre for Sculpture, located at NIROX Sculpture Park, is pleased to  announce the opening of Noria Mabasa: Shaping Dreams. The exhibition will open to the public on Saturday, 22 October 2022, and run until 20  November 2022.

Held in collaboration with !KAURU Contemporary Art from Africa and the Vhutsila Arts and Craft Centre, the exhibition is the culmination of a larger project which began in May 

2022, when Noria Mabasa began making new work in residence at NIROX. 

84 year old Noria Mabasa is a world-renowned South African artist who has been creating and perfecting her art as a sculptor since 1974.

Her sculptures are precise objects, constructed by employing a visual language that foregrounds colour and texture to an exacting degree – ultimately pointing to the way we encounter nature by seeking spiritual guidance from them. Her work has been exhibited locally and internationally and is  displayed in museums, private and corporate collections.

The Shona-Venda pottery style was developed around the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries; certain styles have clearly defined identities that have been appreciated by multiple generations.

Sparked by a dream from her ancestors, Noria Mabasa’s artistic journey is influenced by the canon of Vhutsila – meaning art is inclusive of all art forms including traditional drum making, pottery, murals and sculpture. Her work largely centres on indigenous traditions of material cultural production, in particular pottery and woodwork. 

She lives and works in her rural home, where she remains a traditional potter and runs an art school teaching young children the art of Venda traditional pottery and sculpting. 

Generously supported by the Department of Sport, Arts and Culture, her NIROX residency was accompanied by a series of workshops with learners of different ages, and an exhibition in the Residency Studio of thirty-eight pre-existing works in clay and wood, produced between 2004 and 2022. 

“The exhibition at the Centre is comprised of new works produced during her residency and since, with a new selection of pre-existing works that speak to its overarching concerns. Where the initial exhibition asked what assumptions we bring to the work of Noria Mabasa, questioning the extent to which our knowledge is informed by things that have little to do with the artist, this exhibition provides fresh insight into the artist’s practice, as told through her particular lens.”

Says Tshepiso Mohlala of  !KAURU.

The exhibition will open to the public on Saturday, 22 October 2022 from 2pm til 4pm, and run until 20  November 2022. On Sunday there will be a walkabout at 2pm  with the Centre’s curator,  Sven Christian, followed by a discussion with Nontobeko Ntombela at 4PM.

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