Accession No
2014.213
Description
print; linocut - Linocut by Velile Sydwell Soha titled 'Loneliness of the Shacks', 1993. Edition: 25/100. Condition: Good.
Place
Africa; Southern Africa; South Africa; KwaZulu Natal; Rorke's Drift; Evangelical Lutheran Art and Craft Centre
Period
Source
Hobbs, Philippa Anne [collector and vendor]; Art Fund [monetary donor]; V&A Purchase Grant Fund [monetary donor]
Department
Anth
Reference Numbers
2014.213; 25/100
Cultural Affliation
Material
Pigment; Paper
Local Term
Measurements
510mm x 320mm
Events
Context (CMS Context)
(Bio) 'Velile Sydwell Soha (1956/1957-) developed an interest in art at a very young age. Encouraged to pursue his talent as an adult, he attended A.M.A.C ** and went on to study at Rorke's Drift Art School in Kwa Zulu Natal from [1981-1982]. The school was founded by the Swedish Missionaries and this was the principal facility for the black artists in South Africa.
Soha's experiences have continued to inspire him in his artistic pursuits. He returned to Cape Town in 1984 to teach young artists at the Nyanga Art Centre and A.M.A.C** for several years before devoting himself full time to his art career.
He has participated in several Thupela workshops and he is a current artist in Residence at Greatmore Studios in Cape Town. His work has been featured in many solo and group exhibitions across South Africa and in Namibia, Germany, United Kingdom, Argentina, U.S.A., Holland, Sweden and Canada. He has worked on mural projects and received many commissions for book illustrations.
“I am a realistic artist, mixing colours in order to use them as naturally as possibleâ€' he says of his work, “I express myself mostly through township and rural scenes like homelands. My aim is to show the outside community how my people live their lives.â€
When Soha was at Rorke's Drift Art School they were taught how to select and specialize in subjects that they were doing at the time. He specialized in graphics/printmaking because his lecturer gave him encouragement and saw he was very good in printmaking. This encouragement inspired him.
** Please note that CAP (Community Arts Project) has been renamed AMAC (Arts and Media Access Centre)' [From http://www.capegallery.co.za/velile_soha_cv.htm]. Also featured in Hobbs and Rankin: 'Rorke's Drift Empowering Prints', 2003, p.224.
Event Date 12/8/2014
Author: Remke van der Velden
Context (CMS Context)
Acquired directly from the artist by Hobbs in Cape Town in ?1996. One of the works made by Rorke's Drift artists post 1982. From an unpublished internal document, 'Comments on valuations of Rorke's Drift works in the Hobbs collection', by P. Hobbs, undated [2013]. Shown at public galleries in 1997: Albany Museum, Festival Georgetown, Johannesburg Art Gallery. Published in Hobbs and Rankin: 'Printmaking in a transforming South Africa', 1997. From an unpublished internal document, 'PH Comments on artworks', by P. Hobbs, undated [2013].
Event Date 12/8/2014
Author: Remke van der Velden
Context (CMS Context)
The Hobbs' Rorke's Drift Collection was purchased from the collector, South African printmaker and art historian Philippa Anne Hobbs, with money from the Victoria and Albert Museum Purchase Grant Fund, The Art Fund and private donations. The collection included items received through a combination of gift and purchase.
From the early 1960s, one of the most important centres for new practice in southern Africa was the Evangelical Lutheran Art and Craft Centre, situated at the battlefield site of Rorke's Drift in what is now KwaZulu Natal. The project was led by teachers, Peder and Ulla Gowenius, graduates of the Konstfackskolan, a Bauhaus style modernist institute. They worked with patients recuperating from tuberculosis at the Ceza Hospital and saw crafts such as weaving essentially as therapeutic, but economic empowerment was also an aim, hence work was sold locally and through exhibitions in Sweden, a training programme was developed, and printmaking was introduced early in 1962. From the beginning, linocuts made by Azaria Mbatha (1941-) and Muziweyixhwala Tabethe were highly impressive; they embraced Biblical subjects, indigenous belief, and historical scenes related to Zulu identity.
In 1963 the ELC relocated to Rorke's Drift and expanded its activities. The Centre was virtually alone in providing a place during the Apartheid period in which black artists could train and produce work. In 1968 Otto and Malin Lundbohm arrived, bringing new expertise in textile screenprinting; Otto Lundbohm became principal in 1969 and led the school until 1975. Students who became major practitioners included Dan Rakgoathe (1937-), Vuminkosi Zulu (1948-1996), Charles Nkosi (1949), Tony Nkotsi (1955-), and Sam Nhlengethwa (1955-).
From the mid-1990s Philippa Hobbs collaborated with Elizabeth Rankin towards what is now the standard monograph, Rorke's Drift: Empowering Prints (2003). To facilitate her research she assembled a collection, purchasing some works from artists, and a substantial group from former principal, Otto Lundbohm, who had himself bought the prints directly from the artists. A total of 61 works fully represent the development of printmaking at Rorke's Drift. The collection includes the key early works by Mbatha and Tabete, dating from 1962, and prints by all the other significant Rorke's Drift artists .These are complemented by a further 22 prints made by Rorke's Drift artists after the centre closed in 1982; this group includes Joel Sibisi's 1994 print, Voting at Rorke's Drift, bringing the story into the post-Apartheid period. The Hobbs collection is the strongest of any private collection representing the ELC and these artists and incorporates the personal collection of a key figure, centre principal Otto Lundbohm.
The collection represents what is not only a chapter of foundational importance in South African art history, but a vital movement that exemplifies the emergence of local modernisms worldwide. With the encouragement of outside teachers, these Zulu and other artists embraced new techniques and styles and produced art that imagined a changing world and their place within it. This was an art that gave voice to visions of liberation as well as to customary belief, the local vision of history and the environment, and to the Christian theology that became and remains fundamental and empowering for many Africans today.
Event Date 12/8/2014
Author: maa
Description (CMS Description)
Linocut by Velile Sydwell Soha titled 'Loneliness of the Shacks', 1993. Edition: 25/100. Condition: Good.
Event Date 12/8/2014
Author: maa
FM:267808
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