womens charter

The Women’s Charter Tapestries depict women’s brave struggle for gender equality. Originally designed for a planned Women’s Museum of Living History in Tshwane, all twelve pieces explore themes of women’s emancipation and draw attention to the inherently patriarchal structure of traditional Xhosa culture. Some of the elderly women in the community who participated in the … Read More

threads that make up a car

This richly embroidered Keiskamma artwork, produced for Mercedes-Benz SA, represents the threads that connect local industry with the labour force from the surrounding communities. The imagery that envelops the vehicle invites us to pause and reflect on the human stories behind the end product, showing that beneath the artwork is a vehicle greater than the … Read More

vuselela

Vuselela was the first public exhibition of the Keiskamma Art Project. Nguni cows emerged as a central theme of the exhibition and over subsequent years became an integral part of the artists’ collective vision. The iconography of cattle, which invokes the story of the nineteenth century Xhosa prophetess Nongqawuse, becomes increasingly prominent in the Project’s … Read More

biko tapestry

The Biko Tapestry, spearheaded by artist Nomfusi Nkani who died in 2017, honours South African anti-apartheid activist Steve Biko and his deep Eastern Cape roots. Telling Biko’s story against the backdrop of the Black Consciousness Movement, and using Biko’s, I Write What I Like: A Selection of his Writings as inspiration, Nkani used images from … Read More

democracy tapestry

The Democracy Tapestry is a clear-sighted commentary on the first ten years of democracy in South Africa. Embroidered on a substrate of green hessian suggesting new growth, the artwork reveals many tangible improvements in the community over the decade following the 1994 elections. The panels depict the arrival of modern farming equipment, mobile clinics and … Read More

keiskamma tapestry

The extensive, exquisitely detailed artwork that has come to be known as the Keiskamma Tapestry, and which for many years has been dispayed in the corridors of the Houses of Parliament in Cape Town, is based on the iconic Bayeaux Tapestry in Colmar, France. Made to the same dimensions, the Keiskamma Tapestry similarly makes use … Read More