Africa, the South Pacific, and the Americas

The Law Givers
The Law Givers
Artist Nicholas Mukomberanwa
     nationality Zimbabwean
     birth-death 1940-
Creation date 1998-1999
Materials serpentine stone
Dimensions 27 x 22 x 9 in.
Credit line Gift of the Alliance of the Indianapolis Museum of Art
Accession number 2001.5
Gallery Label

Nicholas Mukomberanwa was a pioneer in the contemporary Shona sculpture movement. His work is in the permanent collections of museums around the world. The artist began carving stone in 1962 after meeting Frank McEwen, the first director of the National Gallery, in what was then Salisbury, Rhodesia. In the 1950s, while colonialism was still in effect, McEwen, a British man, opened a workshop that provided Shona sculptors a safe place to work, and the opportunity for their art to be introduced to Europe and America. Shona sculptors inherited a sophisticated culture, which produced stone structures and sculpture 500 years ago. In this stone carving, the continuity of Shona culture is articulated by the loving and powerful embrace of the elders. Recognized by their wavy beards, they may be receiving guidance from an ancestor spirit to assist them in their leadership. About “The Law Givers,” the artist says, “We accept what the elders decide and their decisions become our laws.”


Descriptive tags added by visitors:

?bronze, aged 62, angular, bearded, Cubist, died november 2002, highly regarded internationally, hug, like Picasso, metal, modern, mother with children, Nicholas Mukomberanwa, One of Zimbabwe's most gifted sculptors, smooth, solid, The Law Givers, three figures, warm embrace, Zimbabwe
Click a tag to see more works with the same tag

Separate multiple tags with commas.
CAPTCHA
We use puzzles that computers can't solve to prevent spam from appearing on our website. Please solve the following puzzle before posting.
Efroymson_Entrance_Pavilion_D.jpgEfroymson Family Entrance Pavilion