The Independent on Saturday

Phansi museum founder honoured

- WENDY JASSON DA COSTA wendy.jdc@inl.co.za

ARCHITECT Paul Mikula, the brain and inspiratio­n behind some of Durban’s most iconic projects, will be recognised for his contributi­on to society next week with an honorary doctorate in architectu­re from the University of KwaZulu-Natal.

“I’m not one of those people desperate for recognitio­n. But it feels very nice and it comes out of the blue. I’m glad about that, it’s welcome,” he said.

For several decades Mikula served the people of Durban, not just as an architect, but as an activist, seeking out new opportunit­ies to create community and promote developmen­t.

“Basically an architect is everything. You look at every aspect of life,” Mikula said.

One of his best-known projects is the BAT Centre on Victoria Embankment, which was developed in 1995 to promote the arts.

A venue for the visual arts, a music residency programme, youth developmen­t and a multimedia centre, Mikula said he wanted it to be a “safe haven” for artists from all over the province.

“Everybody was there, we could serve as a market for them. It worked well. Then ‘apartheid’ came in again and they ripped apart this community we had,” he said, referring to the ongoing divisions along racial lines that have even affected the art community since the advent of democracy.

The Bat Centre has also been used as a venue for live shows, and many well-known performers, like comedians, have made public debuts there.

However, it is Mikula’s love for art, and African art in particular, that led to the founding of the African art centre,

Phansi Museum, in Glenwood.

He calls it the “feel good museum”, and says everything in it, all 9 000 objects, are handmade and beautiful. “Ubuntu is about art.” Mikula, who now serves as the managing trustee, has trekked throughout southern Africa for years, gathering artefacts that have made the museum renowned for its various collection­s.

UKZN described him as “a respected architect who has made a significan­t contributi­on to the preservati­on and promotion of KZN’s arts and cultural heritage. His love for Zulu culture, music, arts and crafts, saw him turn big ideas into reality”.

Apart from his work as an artist, architect and activist, Mikula also played a significan­t role in ensuring that people in the municipali­ty had proper housing.

He was part of a project that assisted about 3 000 “unseen” people living in Amaoti, and ensured they were “brought into the open”. Several sites were created where they could settle.

At the age of 83, Mikula says the work can’t stop, there’s just too much to do. “Every day there’s another project that needs to be tackled.”

Full of humour, Mikula said he’d love to live as a hobo around the world for the next few years, just to observe life from a different perspectiv­e.

The honorary doctorate will be bestowed on him at UKZN’s Westville campus.

UKZN said he was one of seven distinguis­hed individual­s who would be honoured for their remarkable achievemen­ts in the fields of arts, social sciences and management.

“Through innovation, extensive knowledge and expertise in their respective fields, the honorary graduands have positively impacted the lives of people in South Africa and globally.”

Other recipients of the honorary doctorates include former eThekwini city manager Mike Sutcliffe; Prince Bhekizizwe Zeblon Zulu (Doctor of Literature) for his contributi­on to recording the rich history of the AmaZulu nation; world-renowned guitarist Muziwakhe “Madala” Kunene (Doctor of Music); Professor Obioma Nnaemeka (Doctor of Social Science), an expert in the fields of gender/women studies and developmen­t; and Professor Kwame Anthony Appiah (Doctor of Literature), who is at the leading edge of current thinking about questions of identity, nationalis­m, cosmopolit­anism and universal ethics.

UKZN would also posthumous­ly award Bavelile Gloria Hlongwa a Doctor of Administra­tion degree for being a champion of youth developmen­t, women empowermen­t and transforma­tion. Hlongwa, who was deputy minister for mineral resources and energy, died in a car crash.

 ?? | SHELLEY KJONSTAD ?? FOUNDER Paul Mikula with exhibits at the Phansi Museum African arts centre in Glenwood. Mikula will be awarded an honorary doctorate (architectu­re) by the University of KwaZulu-Natal next week. African News Agency (ANA)
| SHELLEY KJONSTAD FOUNDER Paul Mikula with exhibits at the Phansi Museum African arts centre in Glenwood. Mikula will be awarded an honorary doctorate (architectu­re) by the University of KwaZulu-Natal next week. African News Agency (ANA)

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