ARTIST’S STATEMENT
As a South African and an Appalachian
American-African artist my art celebrates the coalescence of the materials and
traditions of these diverse regions. My practice is largely intertextual,
utilizing mixed media dominated by acrylic or oil on canvas, collaged with
fabric and newsprint and an assembly of conceptual three-dimensional found
objects. Each painting functions as a narrative of domestic, gender and
workplace tensions. Some works pay homage to performance – particularly dance
and music – in a manner these art forms function as a healing force in society.
I also indulge in conventional modes of expression occasionally, focusing on
the media of acrylics and oils on canvas, on pre-Renaissance encaustic wax on
canvas, and on black-and-white and color linocuts on paper. The works are a
fusion of styles drawing variously from Basotho traditional murals called
litema and lipatrone, South African township art and European expressionist
modes, particularly Brasque-inspired Cubism. Quite often there is symbiosis
between my painting and storytelling as some of my art is influenced by or
loosely interprets scenes and characters of my novels.
BRIEF BIO:
Zakes Mda is a South African, Lesotho
and Appalachian American African writer, painter, filmmaker, and music
composer. He holds BFA (Painting and History of Art), an MFA (Theatre) and an
MA (Telecommunications) from Ohio University, and a PhD from the University of
Cape Town. He has been awarded honorary doctorates in literature by the
University of Cape Town, Wits University, and the University of the Free State;
in technology by the Central University of Technology; and in art by Dartmouth
College and Durban University of Technology. He has published 25 books, eleven
of which are novels and the rest collections of plays, poetry and a monograph
on the theory and practice of theatre-for-development. His paintings have been
exhibited in South Africa (Polokwane Art Museum, Durban Art Gallery), Lesotho
(Alliance Francaise, National University of Lesotho), Sweden (Kulturhuset) and
the USA (Trisolini Gallery Athens, Hayley Gallery Columbus Ohio) and are in
private collections in those countries and in Spain and Sweden. His writings
have been translated into 22 languages, including Estonian, Catalan, Korean,
Serbian, German, Swedish, Dutch, Turkish, Norwegian, and Italian. They have won
many awards in South Africa, the USA and Italy, including the Amstel Playwright
of the Year Award, the Commonwealth Writers Prize for Africa, the M-Net Prize,
Sanlam Prizes (twice), The Pringle Award, the Sunday Times Literary Prize
(twice), the Zora Neale Hurston/Richard Wright Legacy Award, Premio Narrativa
Sud del Mondo, the University of Johannesburg Literary Prize, and the American
Library Association Notable Book. He is a recipient of Ikhamanga Order in
Silver, a national award of the South African government. He commutes between
the USA, where he teaches creative writing at John Hopkins University and is
Professor Emeritus at Ohio University, and South Africa, where he is a
beekeeper in the Eastern Cape (running a project he established in 2000 with
rural women), and a director of NeoZane, an animation film production company.