The Mercury

Mural of water goddess raises awareness

- KRISTIN ENGEL kristin.engel@inl.co.za

CAPE Town has become home to two groundwate­r murals by South African artist Nadia Fisher, also known as Nardstar, and Danish artist Eske Touborg.

This Danish-South African street art collaborat­ion was initiated to raise awareness of the value of groundwate­r in the time of climate change.

Worldwide Fund for Nature (WWF) freshwater programme manager Klaudia Schachtsch­neider said: “Following the severe drought of 2015 to 2019, Cape Town was close to becoming the world’s first major metropolit­an area to run out of water.

Referred to as “Day Zero”, Cape Town’s storage dams were at an alltime low in early 2018. This resulted in an increase in the drilling of boreholes to access the reserves of natural groundwate­r.”

Schachtsch­neider said drought events were predicted to occur more frequently due to climate change, and water would become an even scarcer resource that would need to be managed carefully.

The theme for the murals was inspired by the UN’s World Water Day, observed on March 22, and focused on making the “invisible” groundwate­r, “visible”.

Nardstar has produced many murals around Cape Town, which ultimately focused on celebratin­g women of colour, as well as local fauna and flora.

She said her mural incorporat­ed the issue of water security into this subject matter. Her mural depicted a water goddess, Camissa – the Khoi name for Cape Town, which meant place of sweet water.

Camissa was shown to have hair made of water, which symbolised the above-ground water going into all the dams, then upside-down droplets which signified the groundwate­r leaving the earth. “This artwork aims to appreciate the water resources.”

Touborg’s mural was titled Zipper, and depicted a human hand gently unzipping the land in front of Table Mountain to reveal the groundwate­r below. “I wanted to make a connection between nature and humans. The hand has a very gentle touch on the zipper, because we need to have a gentle touch in how we use the world’s resources and be gentle in the way we manage groundwate­r and all other natural resources,” Touborg said.

Schachtsch­neider said the striking murals were a testament to Denmark’s long-standing collaborat­ion with South Africa. Denmark had supported the country on the sustainabl­e use of its water resources since 1994.

Danish Developmen­t Co-operation Minister Flemming Mortensen said he hoped the murals would urge the public to make water conservati­on a top priority.

 ?? | ARMAND HOUGH African News Agency (ANA) ?? NADIA Fisher, aka Nardstar, in front of her artwork. A Danish and South African public art collaborat­ion was launched at the V&A Waterfront in Cape Town.
| ARMAND HOUGH African News Agency (ANA) NADIA Fisher, aka Nardstar, in front of her artwork. A Danish and South African public art collaborat­ion was launched at the V&A Waterfront in Cape Town.
 ?? African News Agency (ANA) | ARMAND HOUGH ?? DANISH artist Eske Touborg in front of his mural ‘Zipper’.
African News Agency (ANA) | ARMAND HOUGH DANISH artist Eske Touborg in front of his mural ‘Zipper’.

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