ARCHIVED EXHIBITION
South Lecture Room
Contemporary prints and paintings produced in western Botswana over the last twenty five years feature in the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology’s summer South Lecture Room exhibition.
Many of the artists responsible talk about their work as a form of storytelling, and the stories they tell relate to the lives of their ancestors, hunting and gathering, but also their lives today, living on a former mission with limited access to the land and the resources it once supplied. The exhibition will juxtapose black and white images of San people in Botswana during the 1930s from the museum’s collections, with the colourful images produced more recently at the Kuru Art Project.
This art workshop, established in 1990 at D’Kar in western Botswana, was inspired by the ancient tradition of San rock art found across southern Africa. While many of the images have similarities to the rock art tradition, others feature beads and beadwork, another ancient tradition of artistic practice associated with San people. Archaeological finds have suggested that people in Botswana made beads from ostrich eggshell before our species, Homo Sapiens, arrived in Europe, and the exhibition explores the connections between beadwork and painting as artistic practices.