rose altarpiece

Inspired by Martin Schongauer’s 1473 altarpiece, The Virgin of the Rose Bush, the Rose Altarpiece celebrates the quiet heroism of women elders in the Hamburg district who took in children orphaned by the HIV/AIDS pandemic. Latin text in Shongauer’s altarpiece that translates as ‘Pick Me Also For Your Child, O Very Holy Virgin” becomes movingly, in the Rose Altarpiece, ‘Take Me Also For Your Child’. The late Nokwanda Makubalo is seen here with her niece’s daughter, whom she adopted after her niece died. The Rose Altarpiece speaks of the many mothers and grandmothers in the community who cared for orphans. Discovering the skill of papier maché, the artists incorporated paper roses – referencing not only the roses in Schongauer’s celebration of the Madonna and Child but also the sacred seventeenth-century Cartapesta statues made by Italian artists from Lecce in southern Italy. These beautiful, delicate forms represent the women’s tender humanity, expressed in their selfless commitment to the needs of their families and the wider community.

Keiskamma Artist Words
Rose Altarpiece

2005

Mixed media including fabric, appliqué, wirework, beading, embroidery,
photographs and paper roses

2 m high x 1.15 m wide

Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Art Museum, Gqeberha, Eastern Cape

Listen to the audio experience