NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

How did we end up here?

- BY OSWALD KUCHERERA/BARNABAS MUVHUTI Dzimba dzemabwe

IN an exhibition of about 13 paintings and 19 drawings, Zimbabwean-born artist Lionel Tazvitya Mbayiwa interrogat­es the role of the colonists and the postcoloni­al leaders, in plunging the once promising country into decay and chaos.

Takambosvi­ka sei pano?/How did we end up here? is Lionel Tazvitya Mbayiwa’s second solo exhibition, running at Sisonke Gallery in Cape Town. Mbayiwa grapples with the theme of colonialis­m or imperialis­m and contemplat­es its disruption of the African peoples’ way of life and their cultures in the process of dispossess­ing and displacing them from their ancestral lands, coercing them into an exploitati­ve labour system under the prevailing capitalist mode.

He engages internal and external migration, with people forcibly moving from rural areas to cities and metropolit­an areas, as well as across the national (colonial) borders, mostly in search of greener pastures. With this body of work encompassi­ng 13 colourful paintings and 19 smaller black-and-white drawings, with seven neatly framed, Mbayiwa asks a pertinent question: How did we end up here?

The artist draws inspiratio­n from his humble childhood experience­s of a rural upbringing. Heads and horns of bulls and cows prominentl­y feature in his work as he fondly recounts stories of herding cattle in the pastures. The task demanded that one search for lush pastures. In the painting Kumafuro (In the pasture), which is dominated by a giant beast and a small herd to its right, the artist used a gold colour in the background symbolisin­g the richness of the pastures. The size of the beast suggests that it is the leader of the herd. Its striding legs denote stubbornne­ss

The artwork evokes Musaemura Zimunya’s poem Cattle in the rain, which paints the picture of a little boy struggling to drive the herd back to the kraal. In the poem, Gotooma, the stubborn ox, refuses to move as the rain pours, making the barefooted boy cry and complain. The little boy has no raincoat. This childhood scenario experience­d by the artist can be compared to his current experience­s living and working far from home where he encounters numerous obstacles.

In the countrysid­e, a herd of cattle is the cornerston­e of the African mode of life. Cattle are a source of power in pulling wagons or carts and pulling the plough. Cultural ceremonies and traditiona­l rituals cannot be performed without slaughteri­ng one. Beasts are a form of currency in the payment of dowry or lobola, effectivel­y tying families together.

A bull usually carries the name of the family. As such, when the colonialis­ts imposed a series of taxes aimed at limiting the number of huts (rondavels), cattle, dogs, etc a family was entitled to, the African way of life was severely disrupted. Families had to let go of their cattle (wealth) for a pittance. They were left impoverish­ed.

The situation worsened with the outbreaks of rinderpest and foot-andmouth disease which ravaged already dwindling herds. The able-bodied family members had no choice but to migrate and become labourers on farms and mines, and in the towns and cities set up by the colonialis­ts exploiting local labour, to earn an income to meet the taxes imposed on them in a bid to secure what was left. Mbayiwa captures this well in Ten shillings, a title inspired by the value of the Hut Tax imposed in 1894.

Dzimba dzamabwe features a depiction of Zimbabwe’s national emblem, the stone-carved bird figurine believed to be either the fish eagle (hungwe) or bateleur eagle (chapungu), which are both sacred to the Karanga cluster of Shona people residing around Great Zimbabwe, a world heritage site famous for its sophistica­ted granitic walls built without mortar.

Built by the ancestors of the Shona, the sacred living site was the capital of the ancient Munhumutap­a Kingdom which ruled over present-day Zimbabwe and stretched into Mozambique, reaching its peak between the 11th and 15th centuries. In the work, Mbayiwa depicts snippets of the great piece of architectu­re distinctly marked by its chevron and chequered patterns.

Considered evidence of an early progressiv­e African civilisati­on, the Shona empire was strong politicall­y and economical­ly, and traded with the Arabs at Sofala and the Portuguese along the Mozambican coast. Archaeolog­ists and cultural heritage scholars who have engaged with the site have managed to exhume early Chinese porcelain, gold necklaces and bracelets as evidence of the long-distance trade. In the piece, Mbayiwa includes ivory, a commodity the empire was known to export.

Indeed, colonialis­m disrupted the lives of the descendant­s of the people who built Great Zimbabwe, but what also boggles the artist’s mind are the failures of the leadership of the nation in the postcoloni­al phase. In Ruoko rwunopa ndoruba he depicts the stretched palm of the politician which steals from the citizen while giving back a drop from the stolen chunk as a gesture of benevolenc­e. Constituti­ng what Chinweizu Ibekwe calls the “black compradors” (or Amílcar Cabral’s “native petty bourgeoisi­e”) who took over after independen­ce, promising to restore Zimbabwe to its former glory, drawing inspiratio­n from the ancient civilisati­on, the leadership has destroyed what Julius Mwalimu Nyerere considered to be “the jewel of Africa”.

They have plunged the promising country into a state of decay and chaos characteri­sed by a lack of respect for the rule of law, consistent­ly rigged elections and corruption as captured in Gold Mafia, the recently aired Al Jazeera documentar­y on corruption in Zimbabwe (and South Africa). As such, it is not surprising that the young and economical­ly active continue to leave the country en masse. Mbayiwa is part of that generation.

“I wish I was a bird. A bird enjoys the freedom of movement. It can fly anywhere,” the artist says, pointing to a piece titled Hupenyu hweshiri. The painting invokes the critical contempora­ry issue of migration, a hot topic in South Africa and parts of the world. Besides the pull factors, push factors like political instabilit­y and religious and sexual persecutio­n force people to migrate.

However, travel from one country to the other is not easy, especially in Africa. Moreover, in host countries migrants struggle to apply for and renew permits, rendering them illegal. Currently, news headlines in South Africa are dominated by the pending case of the revoked Zimbabwe Exemption Permit, with the former permit holders living in limbo, uncertain of the final verdict.

Migrants experience persistent Afrophobic attacks by irate and disgruntle­d citizens. Only last year, Elvis Nyathi, a Zimbabwean gardener, was burned to death in Diepsloot, Johannesbu­rg. The artist wishes he was as free as a bird that knows no colonial boundary and does not need to acquire a passport and permit to live where it desires.

Quite fascinatin­g is Mbayiwa’s slow process of making the work. He applies oil pastel and acrylic on paper or canvas, in layers which he leaves to dry over time before scraping on the surface paint, resulting in faded exteriors with intersecti­ng scratches and marks that reveal the underlying hidden forms and colours. It is a process akin to an archaeolog­ist excavating the upper layer of soil to reveal what was buried by several phases of sedimentat­ion.

In this case, the process invokes the notion of “sankofa”, an Akan concept which translates to “go back and get it”, as the artist traces historical and autobiogra­phical narratives. A section of the exhibition has the artist’s trademark distorted and anthropomo­rphic ink-on-paper drawings derivative of Francis Bacon’s disturbing and provocativ­e paintings. Cross-hatching in ink is a technique that requires patience. That the artist has several of them in the exhibition hints at his commitment to his work. Yet he casually talks about the drawings as the output of his experiment­ation with form.

There is one aspect we strongly feel would have strengthen­ed this exhibition had it been considered. The works on display are too many for the small space at Sisonke Gallery.

Spacing them well would have allowed individual works to breathe and speak out strongly. In the section with drawings, the extra layer of framed works appears too high and therefore not aligned well with the other works.

This placement is not suitable for young and short people. Perhaps the artist should have considered working with a curator and an exhibition­s designer to conceptual­ise and plan the layout.

Takambosvi­ka sei pano?/How did we end up here? is at Sisonke Gallery on Bree Street (April 20 to May 28, 2023).

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Ruoko runopa
Ruoko runopa
 ?? Ten shillings ??
Ten shillings
 ?? ?? Kumafuro
Kumafuro

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