Sowetan

Andile’s ceramics a spiritual journey

Lectures open window into the soul for clay enthusiast­s

- By Lesley Mofokeng Entertainm­ent Editor

Andile Dyalvane, the exceptiona­l ceramic artist, wowed audiences in Johannesbu­rg this week with his dexterity and workmanshi­p at his first Clay Adventures Master Class Series at Victoria Yards in Bez Valley, Joburg.

He staged a dramatic ritual and burned herb impepho to call on the spirits of the ancestors as he commenced with the lecture. Dyalvane makes it clear that it’s not just about making pots, vases and bowls, but it’s a spiritual process with a deeper meaning.

He uses clay as a medium to tell stories and the orange, blue and yellow he licks the earthy toned bowls with gives them the distinctiv­e signature that has seen him exhibiting in SA and exporting his creations to the US, Denmark, France and Taiwan. His work is a permanent feature at the Iziko National Museum in Cape Town, at the Nelson Mandela Metropolit­an Museum of Art in Port Elizabeth and at Yingge Ceramic Museum in Taipei.

He has the prestigiou­s Southern Guild Design Foundation Designer of the Year, Visi Designer of the Year 09, and Decorex 08 Gold awards to his credit.

“It’s an honour that people recognise the passion, the uniqueness of this work and the story told, and they want to share [it]... For me, that is an honour, to just be myself and then someone wants to share and experience what you do through your craft,” he says.

What he makes is an aesthetica­lly pleasing cross between a striking painting and a decorative artefact that is an interior designer’s dream. Dyalvane, who has secured his place as the foremost ceramicist in the country, says he references the familiarit­y of the landscape of his Qoboqobo, Keiskammma home near East London in Eastern Cape. “I come from that era where we used to sit around the fire and be told stories. What I do with these vessels is to tell the stories from my childhood and what I’m experienci­ng currently. They reflect where I am and what I see. As this is a spiritual connection, I usually like to be allowed to have a free spirit.

“The landscape in the Eastern Cape is full of beautiful flowers, the greens, the terracotta soil, the red soil, the black soil. We have the beads and they are all referenced. And then in the city you see different textures and the fashion.” Dyalvane is creative director at his Imiso ceramic studio in The Old Biscuit Mill in Cape Town and has been in the game for almost 20 years using clay as a medium. On Wednesday, he shared his journey and inspired clay enthusiast­s to unleash their inner creativity as he took them step by step, from sketching of an idea to a polished and shining the finished product. “This is my life. If you do what you love, your energy is in the right position and you can do more.”

Dyalvane takes the classes to Port Elizabeth on November 15, Cape Town on February 27 next year, with the final series in Durban on April 3.

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