- Source: Andries Botha (artist)
Andries Johannes Botha (born 22 September 1952) is a South African artist and political activist who lives and works in Durban, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. He is known for his sculpture.
Early life and education
Botha was born in Pretoria, and graduated from the University of Natal in the 1970s.
Career
As a young man, Botha engaged in printmaking and sculpture, and founded and chaired the Community Arts Workshop (1984–86). He won several awards for his art, including the Volkskas Atelier Merit Award in 1987, the Cape Town Triennial Merit Award (1988), the Standard Bank Young Artist Award (1990) and the National Vita Art Award (1992). He created artwork based on traditional indigenous craft techniques.
Botha began lecturing at the Durban University of Technology in 1998. He founded the NGO Create Africa South Trust in 2002.
In 2006 Botha was invited to participate in the "Table of Free Voices" in Berlin. His creation "Dropping Knowledge" asked leaders in the fields of creative and scientific thinking to answer 100 questions put to them by the public simultaneously at a round table. That year he was commissioned for the Beaufort Triennale.
Botha founded the Amazwi Abesifazane Trust, registered in 2008, and the Human Elephant Foundation, (registered 2009)
Botha has exhibited his drawings and sculptures in Brittany, the Canary Islands during 2008, South Korea during 2011 and locally in South Africa during 2010 and 2011.
Botha set up the Andries Botha Foundation (registered 2012). In 2012 he participated in "Planet under Pressure" in London where leaders in their fields discussed issues pertaining to sustainable development and the threats to the planet.
Botha has used his art to comment on the social and political challenges of his time. He also has created works on a variety of themes, including the co-existence of humans with other life forms, creativity, citizenship and lifelong learning.
In 2010 work on a sculpture that he was creating for the eThekwini Municipality was halted because the design was said to be too close to the logo of a political party. The sculpture was to be a group of elephants. After several years of negotiations, a somewhat altered design was agreed upon and Botha once more began work. In the meantime, much of the framework which Both had installed had been stolen and sold for scrap metal. The sculptures were also damaged with red and black paint.
Publications
Andries Botha, "US Wordfest Artist, 2010, 24 pp, colour illus, paperback, Stellenbosch, 2010
Andries Botha, "Standard Bank Young Artist Award", 1991, 24 pages
References
Further reading
Carol Becker. Zones of Contention: Essays on Art, Institutions, Gender, and Anxiety. State University of New York Press. pp. 114–. ISBN 978-0-7914-9612-1.
Marlene Dumas, "Damenwahl 2 - Marlene Dumas and Andries Botha", Oktagon Verlagsgesellscaft Mbh, 1999
Editors Jean Loup Pivin and Simon Njami. Portfolios Jackson Hlungwani, Andries Botha, Thomas Kgope, William Kentridge, Willie Bester and panorama of contemporary art in South Africa : art, photo, literature, dance, theatre, music, architecture, heritage, design, ritual art, talks, memory, news. "Revue Noire" Number 11, 1993Edition December 1993.
Virginia MacKenny, "Artthrob", Issue No. 32, April 2000
Bernadac (M-L.) et al. curators, "Africa Remix, l'art contemporain d'un continent", Paris, 2005
Abdelwahab Meddeb, Lucy Duran, "Africa Remix: Contemporary Art of a Continent", Haywood Publishing, London, 2005
External links
Official website
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Andries Botha (artist)
- Andries Botha
- P. W. Botha
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- List of Afrikaners
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- List of white Africans of European ancestry
- Paul Roos Gymnasium