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Henry Tayali

Henry Nkole Tayali (22 November 1943 – 22 July 1987) was a multi-lingual Zambian painter, sculptor, printmaker, raconteur and lecturer.[1] He has been described as Zambia's most famous painter.[2][3]

Henry Tayali
Henry Tayali, early 1980s
Born
Henry Nkole Tayali

(1943-11-22)22 November 1943
Died22 July 1987(1987-07-22) (aged 43)
 Aachen, West Germany
NationalityZambian
EducationB.A. (Fine Art), Makerere University, Uganda; M.A., Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, West Germany
Known forPainter, Printmaker, Sculptor, Raconteur, Lecturer
Notable workThe Graduate, The Bull, Destiny, Mother Afrika

Biography edit

Early life edit

Tayali was born on 22 November 1943 to Edward Nkole Tayali (1914–1995) and Esnati Mumba Tayali (née Chola, 1923–1963) in Serenje in the British Colony of Northern Rhodesia (later to become Zambia), a town near the site of the Nsalu 12,000-year-old rock and cave paintings.[4] His father, the first born of five children, had won a scholarship to study at a South African University, but never took it up because his own mother died suddenly, and he chose to stay and look after his younger siblings. In order to support them, Tayali's father emigrated from Northern Rhodesia to work in Bulawayo in Southern Rhodesia, ending up in the Department of Housing and Amenities.[citation needed]

Education edit

 
Henry Tayali at Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda

Tayali first started painting while at school in Bulawayo in the late 1950s. He attended secondary school in Bulawayo at Mpopoma High School and during this time produced the work Destiny.[5] The proceeds from the sale of his paintings were held in the Henry Tayali Painting Fund, administered by Trustees who included Eric Gargett and E. H. Ashton. The money in the Fund would be released when Henry was accepted at University (see also[6]).

In early 1967, before his Cambridge 'O' Level Certificate results came out, Tayali left Rhodesia (the Southern was dropped when Zambia gained independence in 1964) for Zambia, and applied for a bursary from the Zambian Government - expressing an interest in Architecture with Art. With help from his father (who went to school at Lubwa Mission in Chinsali in Northern Rhodesia with the likes of Kenneth Kaunda (President of Zambia 1964–1991), Simon Kapwepwe (Vice President 1967–1970), and Wesley Nyirenda and others, and who lobbied the Ministry of Education at Ridgeway in Lusaka on his behalf), he was awarded a Zambian Government scholarship to study at Uganda's Makerere University in Kampala, where he graduated[7] in 1971 with a Bachelor of Arts degree. Shortly after Idi Amin seized power in Uganda, Tayali returned to Zambia and then started work at the University of Zambia where he joined the Institute of African Studies in Lusaka as a lecturer in African art and later as University Artist.[8] In 1972, Tayali got a German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) scholarship to study for a Masters in Fine Arts at the Staatliche Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, West Germany. Tayali was the first recipient of the DAAD to be selected from south of the equator.[9]

His professor, Gerd Weber, said of him, "Of all the foreign students who have worked in my class, Henry Tayali is by far the most talented of them all. His work constitutes a synthesis between the traditional African art, the tools and techniques of the modern era." (see also[10]).

After graduating in 1975, and fluent in German (in addition to English, Bemba, Ndebele, and Ngoni), he returned to Lusaka to the Institute of African Studies.

In early 1978, Tayali returned to West Germany to embark on a Doctor of Fine Arts degree at the Akademie für Bildende Künste, but the arrangements did not work out and he returned to Zambia bitterly disappointed.

Marriage and family edit

In 1971, he married Regina Mary Birungi Kivubiro while still in Uganda, and just before returning to Zambia and they had a son in 1972, Rhodrick Tayali. Regina died in 1976. Tayali had a daughter in 1980, Katwishi Alanda Tayali, followed in 1983 by a son, Chaswe Angio Tayali, with Rosemary Kaluwa, whom he later married. Tayali's son Rhodrick is an artist and interior designer by training and a graduate of the Fachhochschule Aachen, and is also an accomplished artist in his own right.[11][12]

Tayali died on 22 July 1987 while visiting his eldest son and family friends the Moiks / Moik-Becker in Aachen, West Germany, after attending his youngest brother's wedding in Southampton, England. He was buried at Leopards Hill Cemetery in Lusaka.[citation needed]

Career edit

 
Henry Tayali showing some of his artwork to then Zambian President Kenneth Kaunda, 1972

When the family was in Bulawayo, Tayali's natural talent was spotted early on by Alex Lambeth, who ran the African Affairs Department of Bulawayo City Council. Lambeth encouraged Tayali to pursue art as a career, and enrolled him on an artwork course. This led to Henry's first exhibition in Bulawayo at the age of fifteen.[3][13] His painting career took off after that, and using water colours, Tayali begun to produce varied, vibrant, dynamic works such as Sunset Road and Destiny.[14][15] He also produced sculptures - amongst them The Graduate[16] at the University of Zambia campus in Lusaka, as well as silk-screens and woodcuts, a few of these were printed as greeting cards and sold through newsagents and book stores. Tayali held exhibitions in Lusaka, Bulawayo, Aachen, Düsseldorf, London (Commonwealth Institute, 1983), Alberta, and Toronto as well as in Zambia, where a few of his exhibitions were opened by Kenneth Kaunda, the first President of Zambia.[17] He was associated with artists, authors and politicians, including Simon and Cynthia Zukas,[18] Andrew Sardanis[19] (whose property at Chaminuka houses a collection of Tayali's paintings and sculptures amongst others) and American Professor Melvin Edwards[20] at home and abroad, many of them becoming lifelong friends. There were also joint exhibitions and support, such as that provided by the Alliance Francaise.[21]

His works still continue to be exhibited in Zambia and across the world, and his influence carries on[22][23][24] at the National Gallery of Zimbabwe.[25] Numerous examples of Tayali's works are held in private collections across the globe.[26]

Tayali was also a keen photographer, having studied photography for his Masters, and always carried his trusted Leica SLR camera with him wherever he went. On his projects for the University, he produced a huge catalogue of photographs (often developing the prints himself, and having photographic slides made) of artefacts and people, something he worked hard for as a record for posterity.[27] Some of the photographs he took on his field trips around Zambia were turned into postcards.

Other work included efforts to establish a School of Fine Arts in Zambia and numerous field trips within Zambia to record and preserve the arts and cultures of the various tribes for posterity, including audio recordings. He was involved in organising, and part of, the attendance of the Zambian delegation at the Second African Festival of Arts and Culture in Lagos, Nigeria, 1977 (FESTAC'77).[28]

In addition to lecturing at the University of Zambia, Tayali also lectured at the Evelyn Hone College near the city centre in Lusaka.

He was also a restaurant/hotel critic, having travelled extensively all over the world as well as widely within Zambia in that role.

Works edit

 
Henry Tayali - Village Scene at Night (early 1960s water colour painting)
 
Henry Tayali and his brother Bright Tayali and early metalwork sculptures, Roma, Lusaka, 1976

As a young man, Tayali had started his painting using water colours, producing works of great detail, vividness and vibrancy - his depiction of human figures similar in style to the Italian Renaissance painter Michelangelo (e.g. his watercolours held at the US National Archive: see External Links below) - before progressing to oil paintings. His paintings evolved from the fine art style of the late 1950s/1960s/early 1970s, to semi-abstract, through to abstract, and then edging to minimalism at the time of his death. His paintings were distinctive, blending African and Western styles, reflecting the influences on his life.

Tayali's paintings ranged in size from small scale to large wall murals – as in the German Embassy in Lusaka [29] – and very large canvases of more than two metres in length by at least a metre and a half. Often, he would be working simultaneously on four or more paintings at a go, and different prints and sculptures at the same time – all the while with the backdrop of lecturing at the University, or undertaking research in different and remote parts of Zambia (mostly by road), or travelling internationally.

His woodcuts and silk-screens remained largely the same in composition throughout the latter half of his life, and he used them to pass frank comment on the lives of his subjects – the ordinary, common, people of Zambia (and Zimbabwe earlier),[30] particularly the beer gardens with their many characters, their many facets, their rich tapestry of social gatherings and social interactions (see Bier Garten below). Some critics have called some of his works 'crowded social realism'.[31] Equally, he would not leave out depicting his observations of the lone beggar in the street, or the market trader women,[32] or politicians in Africa. He was not averse to using his art to pass comment on any of them.[33]

From a young age, Tayali had always been interested in sculptures and modelling - and he went on to produce sculptures such as The Graduate seen here on the banner of the University of Zambia web-page, at the UNZA Great East Road campus. Funded by donations from the Zambia State Lottery, the Anglo-American Corporation and some individuals, it depicts a graduating student in his flowing gown and mortar board hat, the book in his left hand signifying progress through learning in the modern world, and the hoe in the right hand the hard work and progress through agriculture that has underpinned the country in general. He also produced a huge sculpture of a bird (work in concrete) at the Kapiri Mposhi railway station - the terminus end of the mid-seventies Chinese built Tazara (TAnzania ZAmbia RAilway) railway, whose other end is in Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania's capital on the Indian Ocean coast. From about 1976, he started working with welded metal sculptures. Initially these were fairly simple as he was new to the medium and its techniques, but by the time of his death they had a majestic complexity to them - probably the most famous example is The Bull, which was mounted on the road to Lusaka International Airport.

His painting Destiny, produced while Tayali was still in school, has been described as "an attempt to express the profound thoughts of a serious young man, about the struggles of Mankind now and in the future" and has been exhibited around the world.,[5] see also[34] In 1991, it was purchased by the Lechwe Trust, a charity which supports visual artists in Zambia. Tayali had a close association with the Mpapa Gallery, where his works had often been exhibited.[8][35]

Speaking of his work in 1979, Tayali said, "My art is concerned with the suffering of the people and I want it to be the echo of that suffering. I see the problems of the continent... I am just recording what I and my people feel, but I do not attempt to provide answers to our problems ".[36]

Writing in 1980, the American academic Bob Barde placed Tayali's woodcut prints on a par with Europe's great printmakers such as Käthe Kollwitz and Théodore Géricault.[36] Tayali's woodcut subjects were usually about the common African man (and woman), and the feelings evoked by his daily travails, and the prevailing political landscape of the times. Barde described his prints as "powerful" and said that he "seems destined to play an important role in modern African art."

On a personal side, with his trademark paint-splattered jeans and majestic walk, he also had a terrific sense of humour to counterbalance his serious approach to work,[37] and this sometimes broke out in - apart from the comments - exaggerated physical attributes on some of his subjects in a few of his works.[38] The art writer, Jean Kennedy said that Tayali's work, "makes strong statements, frequently leavened with humor, about personal and communal tragedies".[39]

Legacy edit

 
Henry Tayali, with Lungu, Lusaka, 1976

Tayali was one of the first Africans to work tirelessly to raise the profile of indigenous African art and crafts in Zambia, Africa, and the world through workshops, conferences, discussions, exhibitions, newspaper articles, magazines and television appearances.[40]

He played a very pivotal and influential role in cultural and artistic development in Zambia.[3][41] and Africa.[42][43] He was president of the International Association of Artists in Zambia (which fell under UNESCO), and represented Zambia at various international symposia and conferences.[44] He also headed the Art Centre Foundation, the National Craft Council of Zambia, and the National Museums Board.

In reflection of his work and legacy, it has been suggested that his work Destiny is a historical piece of art, and not just an eye-catcher.[45]

In 1989, over seventy artists from around Zambia convened at Evelyn Hone College of Applied Arts and Sciences, and formed the Zambia National Visual Arts Council (VAC) in his honour - as the national organisation for visual artists to be run by artists in Zambia. They named its headquarters at the Lusaka Showgrounds "The Henry Tayali Visual Art Centre".[3] The Visual Arts Council started its operations in 1991, but the Visual Arts Centre was officially opened later in 1995. It hosts art competitions, exhibitions, and seminars and it is one of the must-sees on the Zambian tourist circuit.[46][47][48] The Ngoma Awards,[49] sponsored by the National Arts Council of Zambia confers the "Henry Tayali Award" for Best Two-Dimensional Visual Artist.[50]

[51]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Turner, Jane D (1996). The Dictionary of Art. Grove. pp. 602. ISBN 1-884446-00-0. Retrieved 22 May 2009. Tayali.
  2. ^ Taylor, Scott D (2006). Culture and Customs of Zambia. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 60. ISBN 978-0-313-33246-3. Retrieved 22 May 2009.
  3. ^ a b c d Kaleyi, Calvin (October 1998). "The Henry Tayali legacy". Profit. pp. 34–35.
  4. ^ "Nsalu Cave". Retrieved 11 November 2011.
  5. ^ a b . The Zambia Lowdown. 2005. Archived from the original on 20 July 2011. Retrieved 22 May 2009.
  6. ^ Watkin, Elizabeth (27 June 2012). "A Secret Heritage: Modern Art in Zambia". Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  7. ^ Kakande, Angelo (July 2011). "Contemplating the Early Years Exhibition, Moving Past Propaganda: A Critical Review". START Journal of Arts and Crafts, Kampala, Unganda. Retrieved 11 November 2011.
  8. ^ a b Chibesa, David (8 October 1988). "Tayali's art goes on show at Mpapa". Times of Zambia. p. 4.
  9. ^ "Afrika: German Review of Political, Economic and Cultural Affairs in Africa and Madagascar". 1978.
  10. ^ "Henry Tayali (Zambia) – And Counting Featured Artist". KAURU CONTEMPORARY ART FROM AFRICA. Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  11. ^ (in German). Rhodrick Tayali. Archived from the original on 22 August 2009. Retrieved 11 June 2009.
  12. ^ Hornemann, Ina (17 March 2008). "Tayali erlebt zweiten Frühling in Altena". DerWesten (in German). Retrieved 11 June 2009.
  13. ^ . Zambia National Visual Arts Council. Archived from the original on 15 July 2011. Retrieved 22 May 2009.
  14. ^ "Echoes of Suffering - Zambia's Henry Tayali: An Artist of International Stature". Ndeke - Zambia Airways In-flight Magazine. No. 37. March 1993. pp. 28–32.
  15. ^ "Henry Tayali". African Sunrise. 1988. pp. 43–47.
  16. ^ "The Graduate". Times of Zambia. 3 April 1979. p. 4.
  17. ^ Tembo, Franklin (9 July 1978). "Art Has a bright Future - If Taken Seriously". Times of Zambia.
  18. ^ Leib, Sharon Rosen (October 2010). "Travel – The Jews of Zambia". San Diego Jewish. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
  19. ^ "Chaminuka: Place on the Hill". Retrieved 11 June 2009.
  20. ^ "Melvin Edwards Biography". Retrieved 11 June 2009.
  21. ^ Kachingwe, Kelvin. "Kala refugees want training opportunities". Times of Zambia. Retrieved 12 June 2009.
  22. ^ Mulenga, Andrew. "Focus Zambia: Henry Tayali - Outside the Spotlight". Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  23. ^ "Transitions". The Brunei Gallery. 2005. Retrieved 10 November 2011.
  24. ^ "Adventure Travel News". Retrieved 10 November 2011.
  25. ^ "Permanent Collection". Retrieved 10 November 2011.
  26. ^ 1 artwork by or after Henry Tayali, Art UK. Retrieved 2014-10-08.
  27. ^ Tayali, Henry; Joe Kivubiro (1987). Images of Southern Africa: An Exhibition of Graphics. Flinders University of South Australia. ISBN 978-0-7258-0360-5.
  28. ^ "FESTAC'77". Retrieved 11 November 2011.
  29. ^ Miko, William. "Visual Voices". Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  30. ^ Murphy, Alan; et al. (March 2010). Zambia & Malawi (1st ed.). Lonely Planet. pp. 47. ISBN 978-1-74179-433-5.
  31. ^ "Twins Seven Seven & Henry Tayali" (in German). Retrieved 11 June 2009.
  32. ^ Tharani, Nadir (1989). "The work of the Zambian artist, Henry Tayal" (PDF). Africa Events. Retrieved 10 November 2011.
  33. ^ Witkamp, Bert (2013). "HENRY TAYALI AND FACKSON KULYA: Academic and folk art in Zambia of the seventies and eighties". Z-factor Art Site. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
  34. ^ Mubiana, Desmond (15 July 1985). "Mpapa show brings out ten years of printmaking". Times of Zambia.
  35. ^ a b Barde, Bob (1980). "Henry Tayali: Zambian Printmaker". African Arts. 13 (3). UCLA James S. Coleman African Studies Center: 82. doi:10.2307/3335710. JSTOR 3335710.
  36. ^ Setti, Godfrey (January 2000). "An Analysis of the Contribution of Four Painters to the Development of Contemporary Zambian Painting from 1950 to 1997". Research Essay for Master of Fine Art, Rhodes University South Africa. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
  37. ^ "Henry Tayali". In Situ. July 1978. p. 38.
  38. ^ Kennedy, Jean (1992). New Currents, Ancient Rivers: Contemporary African Artists in a Generation of Change. Smithsonian Institution Press. ISBN 978-1-56098-037-7.
  39. ^ Gaikwad, Mukta (15 March 2010). "African Art History". Retrieved 11 November 2011.
  40. ^ Meyers, Jane Kinney (27 June 2012). "Outreach to Vulnerable Youth in Africa through Partnerships for Innovative Programming: The Lubuto Library Project" (PDF). conference.ifla.org. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
  41. ^ Gaikwad, Mukta (15 March 2010). "African Art History". Buzzle. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
  42. ^ Kennedy, Jean (1992). "Between the Natural and Supernatural". extract. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
  43. ^ Mubiana, Desmond (6 July 1985). "Strategy for arts unveiled". Times of Zambia.
  44. ^ "Lechwe's Art Showcased". Times of Zambia. 28 May 2010. Retrieved 10 November 2010.
  45. ^ "Places to Visit - Lusaka". Zambia Tourist Board. Retrieved 22 May 2009.
  46. ^ "THE HENRY TAYALI ART CENTRE". African Digital Art. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
  47. ^ McIntyre, Chris (2008). Zambia: The Bradt Travel Guide. Guidebook. ISBN 978-1-84162-226-2.
  48. ^ . National Arts Council of Zambia. Archived from the original on 26 June 2009. Retrieved 17 July 2009.
  49. ^ Kachingwe, Kelvin. "Annual Ngoma Awards: 10 years later". Times of Zambia. Retrieved 22 May 2009.
  50. ^ "About Henry Tayali". Henry Tayali Art Gallery. 2 September 2012. Retrieved 8 October 2014.

Further reading edit

  • Zukas, Cynthia (1993) (in English). "Henry Tayali: A Re-Assessment"
  • Fall, N'Gone and Pivin, Jean Loup (2002) (in English). "An Anthology of African Art"
  • Pitcher, Gemma; Andrew, David; Armstrong, Kate; Bainbridge, James; Bewer, Tim and Carillet, Jean-Bernard (2007) (in English). "Africa"

External links edit

henry, tayali, henry, nkole, tayali, november, 1943, july, 1987, multi, lingual, zambian, painter, sculptor, printmaker, raconteur, lecturer, been, described, zambia, most, famous, painter, early, 1980sbornhenry, nkole, tayali, 1943, november, 1943, serenje, n. Henry Nkole Tayali 22 November 1943 22 July 1987 was a multi lingual Zambian painter sculptor printmaker raconteur and lecturer 1 He has been described as Zambia s most famous painter 2 3 Henry TayaliHenry Tayali early 1980sBornHenry Nkole Tayali 1943 11 22 22 November 1943 Serenje Northern RhodesiaDied22 July 1987 1987 07 22 aged 43 Aachen West GermanyNationalityZambianEducationB A Fine Art Makerere University Uganda M A Kunstakademie Dusseldorf West GermanyKnown forPainter Printmaker Sculptor Raconteur LecturerNotable workThe Graduate The Bull Destiny Mother Afrika Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Education 1 3 Marriage and family 1 4 Career 2 Works 3 Legacy 4 Notes 5 Further reading 6 External linksBiography editEarly life edit Tayali was born on 22 November 1943 to Edward Nkole Tayali 1914 1995 and Esnati Mumba Tayali nee Chola 1923 1963 in Serenje in the British Colony of Northern Rhodesia later to become Zambia a town near the site of the Nsalu 12 000 year old rock and cave paintings 4 His father the first born of five children had won a scholarship to study at a South African University but never took it up because his own mother died suddenly and he chose to stay and look after his younger siblings In order to support them Tayali s father emigrated from Northern Rhodesia to work in Bulawayo in Southern Rhodesia ending up in the Department of Housing and Amenities citation needed Education edit nbsp Henry Tayali at Makerere University Kampala UgandaTayali first started painting while at school in Bulawayo in the late 1950s He attended secondary school in Bulawayo at Mpopoma High School and during this time produced the work Destiny 5 The proceeds from the sale of his paintings were held in the Henry Tayali Painting Fund administered by Trustees who included Eric Gargett and E H Ashton The money in the Fund would be released when Henry was accepted at University see also 6 In early 1967 before his Cambridge O Level Certificate results came out Tayali left Rhodesia the Southern was dropped when Zambia gained independence in 1964 for Zambia and applied for a bursary from the Zambian Government expressing an interest in Architecture with Art With help from his father who went to school at Lubwa Mission in Chinsali in Northern Rhodesia with the likes of Kenneth Kaunda President of Zambia 1964 1991 Simon Kapwepwe Vice President 1967 1970 and Wesley Nyirenda and others and who lobbied the Ministry of Education at Ridgeway in Lusaka on his behalf he was awarded a Zambian Government scholarship to study at Uganda s Makerere University in Kampala where he graduated 7 in 1971 with a Bachelor of Arts degree Shortly after Idi Amin seized power in Uganda Tayali returned to Zambia and then started work at the University of Zambia where he joined the Institute of African Studies in Lusaka as a lecturer in African art and later as University Artist 8 In 1972 Tayali got a German Academic Exchange Service DAAD scholarship to study for a Masters in Fine Arts at the Staatliche Kunstakademie Dusseldorf West Germany Tayali was the first recipient of the DAAD to be selected from south of the equator 9 His professor Gerd Weber said of him Of all the foreign students who have worked in my class Henry Tayali is by far the most talented of them all His work constitutes a synthesis between the traditional African art the tools and techniques of the modern era see also 10 After graduating in 1975 and fluent in German in addition to English Bemba Ndebele and Ngoni he returned to Lusaka to the Institute of African Studies In early 1978 Tayali returned to West Germany to embark on a Doctor of Fine Arts degree at the Akademie fur Bildende Kunste but the arrangements did not work out and he returned to Zambia bitterly disappointed Marriage and family edit In 1971 he married Regina Mary Birungi Kivubiro while still in Uganda and just before returning to Zambia and they had a son in 1972 Rhodrick Tayali Regina died in 1976 Tayali had a daughter in 1980 Katwishi Alanda Tayali followed in 1983 by a son Chaswe Angio Tayali with Rosemary Kaluwa whom he later married Tayali s son Rhodrick is an artist and interior designer by training and a graduate of the Fachhochschule Aachen and is also an accomplished artist in his own right 11 12 Tayali died on 22 July 1987 while visiting his eldest son and family friends the Moiks Moik Becker in Aachen West Germany after attending his youngest brother s wedding in Southampton England He was buried at Leopards Hill Cemetery in Lusaka citation needed Career edit nbsp Henry Tayali showing some of his artwork to then Zambian President Kenneth Kaunda 1972When the family was in Bulawayo Tayali s natural talent was spotted early on by Alex Lambeth who ran the African Affairs Department of Bulawayo City Council Lambeth encouraged Tayali to pursue art as a career and enrolled him on an artwork course This led to Henry s first exhibition in Bulawayo at the age of fifteen 3 13 His painting career took off after that and using water colours Tayali begun to produce varied vibrant dynamic works such as Sunset Road and Destiny 14 15 He also produced sculptures amongst them The Graduate 16 at the University of Zambia campus in Lusaka as well as silk screens and woodcuts a few of these were printed as greeting cards and sold through newsagents and book stores Tayali held exhibitions in Lusaka Bulawayo Aachen Dusseldorf London Commonwealth Institute 1983 Alberta and Toronto as well as in Zambia where a few of his exhibitions were opened by Kenneth Kaunda the first President of Zambia 17 He was associated with artists authors and politicians including Simon and Cynthia Zukas 18 Andrew Sardanis 19 whose property at Chaminuka houses a collection of Tayali s paintings and sculptures amongst others and American Professor Melvin Edwards 20 at home and abroad many of them becoming lifelong friends There were also joint exhibitions and support such as that provided by the Alliance Francaise 21 His works still continue to be exhibited in Zambia and across the world and his influence carries on 22 23 24 at the National Gallery of Zimbabwe 25 Numerous examples of Tayali s works are held in private collections across the globe 26 Tayali was also a keen photographer having studied photography for his Masters and always carried his trusted Leica SLR camera with him wherever he went On his projects for the University he produced a huge catalogue of photographs often developing the prints himself and having photographic slides made of artefacts and people something he worked hard for as a record for posterity 27 Some of the photographs he took on his field trips around Zambia were turned into postcards Other work included efforts to establish a School of Fine Arts in Zambia and numerous field trips within Zambia to record and preserve the arts and cultures of the various tribes for posterity including audio recordings He was involved in organising and part of the attendance of the Zambian delegation at the Second African Festival of Arts and Culture in Lagos Nigeria 1977 FESTAC 77 28 In addition to lecturing at the University of Zambia Tayali also lectured at the Evelyn Hone College near the city centre in Lusaka He was also a restaurant hotel critic having travelled extensively all over the world as well as widely within Zambia in that role Works edit nbsp Henry Tayali Village Scene at Night early 1960s water colour painting nbsp Henry Tayali and his brother Bright Tayali and early metalwork sculptures Roma Lusaka 1976As a young man Tayali had started his painting using water colours producing works of great detail vividness and vibrancy his depiction of human figures similar in style to the Italian Renaissance painter Michelangelo e g his watercolours held at the US National Archive see External Links below before progressing to oil paintings His paintings evolved from the fine art style of the late 1950s 1960s early 1970s to semi abstract through to abstract and then edging to minimalism at the time of his death His paintings were distinctive blending African and Western styles reflecting the influences on his life Tayali s paintings ranged in size from small scale to large wall murals as in the German Embassy in Lusaka 29 and very large canvases of more than two metres in length by at least a metre and a half Often he would be working simultaneously on four or more paintings at a go and different prints and sculptures at the same time all the while with the backdrop of lecturing at the University or undertaking research in different and remote parts of Zambia mostly by road or travelling internationally His woodcuts and silk screens remained largely the same in composition throughout the latter half of his life and he used them to pass frank comment on the lives of his subjects the ordinary common people of Zambia and Zimbabwe earlier 30 particularly the beer gardens with their many characters their many facets their rich tapestry of social gatherings and social interactions see Bier Garten below Some critics have called some of his works crowded social realism 31 Equally he would not leave out depicting his observations of the lone beggar in the street or the market trader women 32 or politicians in Africa He was not averse to using his art to pass comment on any of them 33 From a young age Tayali had always been interested in sculptures and modelling and he went on to produce sculptures such as The Graduate seen here on the banner of the University of Zambia web page at the UNZA Great East Road campus Funded by donations from the Zambia State Lottery the Anglo American Corporation and some individuals it depicts a graduating student in his flowing gown and mortar board hat the book in his left hand signifying progress through learning in the modern world and the hoe in the right hand the hard work and progress through agriculture that has underpinned the country in general He also produced a huge sculpture of a bird work in concrete at the Kapiri Mposhi railway station the terminus end of the mid seventies Chinese built Tazara TAnzania ZAmbia RAilway railway whose other end is in Dar es Salaam Tanzania s capital on the Indian Ocean coast From about 1976 he started working with welded metal sculptures Initially these were fairly simple as he was new to the medium and its techniques but by the time of his death they had a majestic complexity to them probably the most famous example is The Bull which was mounted on the road to Lusaka International Airport His painting Destiny produced while Tayali was still in school has been described as an attempt to express the profound thoughts of a serious young man about the struggles of Mankind now and in the future and has been exhibited around the world 5 see also 34 In 1991 it was purchased by the Lechwe Trust a charity which supports visual artists in Zambia Tayali had a close association with the Mpapa Gallery where his works had often been exhibited 8 35 Speaking of his work in 1979 Tayali said My art is concerned with the suffering of the people and I want it to be the echo of that suffering I see the problems of the continent I am just recording what I and my people feel but I do not attempt to provide answers to our problems 36 Writing in 1980 the American academic Bob Barde placed Tayali s woodcut prints on a par with Europe s great printmakers such as Kathe Kollwitz and Theodore Gericault 36 Tayali s woodcut subjects were usually about the common African man and woman and the feelings evoked by his daily travails and the prevailing political landscape of the times Barde described his prints as powerful and said that he seems destined to play an important role in modern African art On a personal side with his trademark paint splattered jeans and majestic walk he also had a terrific sense of humour to counterbalance his serious approach to work 37 and this sometimes broke out in apart from the comments exaggerated physical attributes on some of his subjects in a few of his works 38 The art writer Jean Kennedy said that Tayali s work makes strong statements frequently leavened with humor about personal and communal tragedies 39 Legacy edit nbsp Henry Tayali with Lungu Lusaka 1976Tayali was one of the first Africans to work tirelessly to raise the profile of indigenous African art and crafts in Zambia Africa and the world through workshops conferences discussions exhibitions newspaper articles magazines and television appearances 40 He played a very pivotal and influential role in cultural and artistic development in Zambia 3 41 and Africa 42 43 He was president of the International Association of Artists in Zambia which fell under UNESCO and represented Zambia at various international symposia and conferences 44 He also headed the Art Centre Foundation the National Craft Council of Zambia and the National Museums Board In reflection of his work and legacy it has been suggested that his work Destiny is a historical piece of art and not just an eye catcher 45 In 1989 over seventy artists from around Zambia convened at Evelyn Hone College of Applied Arts and Sciences and formed the Zambia National Visual Arts Council VAC in his honour as the national organisation for visual artists to be run by artists in Zambia They named its headquarters at the Lusaka Showgrounds The Henry Tayali Visual Art Centre 3 The Visual Arts Council started its operations in 1991 but the Visual Arts Centre was officially opened later in 1995 It hosts art competitions exhibitions and seminars and it is one of the must sees on the Zambian tourist circuit 46 47 48 The Ngoma Awards 49 sponsored by the National Arts Council of Zambia confers the Henry Tayali Award for Best Two Dimensional Visual Artist 50 51 nbsp The Beggar 1971 Woodcut 1 3 nbsp Mother Afrika 1974 Woodcut 6 20 nbsp The Village 1974 Silk screen 9 30 nbsp Bier Garten 1974 Woodcut 2 6 nbsp Abstract Painting mid eightiesNotes edit Turner Jane D 1996 The Dictionary of Art Grove pp 602 ISBN 1 884446 00 0 Retrieved 22 May 2009 Tayali Taylor Scott D 2006 Culture and Customs of Zambia Greenwood Publishing Group pp 60 ISBN 978 0 313 33246 3 Retrieved 22 May 2009 a b c d Kaleyi Calvin October 1998 The Henry Tayali legacy Profit pp 34 35 Nsalu Cave Retrieved 11 November 2011 a b The Tale of Two Rescues The Zambia Lowdown 2005 Archived from the original on 20 July 2011 Retrieved 22 May 2009 Watkin Elizabeth 27 June 2012 A Secret Heritage Modern Art in Zambia Retrieved 23 January 2020 Kakande Angelo July 2011 Contemplating the Early Years Exhibition Moving Past Propaganda A Critical Review START Journal of Arts and Crafts Kampala Unganda Retrieved 11 November 2011 a b Chibesa David 8 October 1988 Tayali s art goes on show at Mpapa Times of Zambia p 4 Afrika German Review of Political Economic and Cultural Affairs in Africa and Madagascar 1978 Henry Tayali Zambia And Counting Featured Artist KAURU CONTEMPORARY ART FROM AFRICA Retrieved 23 January 2020 TAYALI in German Rhodrick Tayali Archived from the original on 22 August 2009 Retrieved 11 June 2009 Hornemann Ina 17 March 2008 Tayali erlebt zweiten Fruhling in Altena DerWesten in German Retrieved 11 June 2009 Henry Tayali Zambia National Visual Arts Council Archived from the original on 15 July 2011 Retrieved 22 May 2009 Echoes of Suffering Zambia s Henry Tayali An Artist of International Stature Ndeke Zambia Airways In flight Magazine No 37 March 1993 pp 28 32 Henry Tayali African Sunrise 1988 pp 43 47 The Graduate Times of Zambia 3 April 1979 p 4 Tembo Franklin 9 July 1978 Art Has a bright Future If Taken Seriously Times of Zambia Leib Sharon Rosen October 2010 Travel The Jews of Zambia San Diego Jewish Retrieved 8 October 2014 Chaminuka Place on the Hill Retrieved 11 June 2009 Melvin Edwards Biography Retrieved 11 June 2009 Kachingwe Kelvin Kala refugees want training opportunities Times of Zambia Retrieved 12 June 2009 Mulenga Andrew Focus Zambia Henry Tayali Outside the Spotlight Retrieved 23 January 2020 Transitions The Brunei Gallery 2005 Retrieved 10 November 2011 Adventure Travel News Retrieved 10 November 2011 Permanent Collection Retrieved 10 November 2011 1 artwork by or after Henry Tayali Art UK Retrieved 2014 10 08 Tayali Henry Joe Kivubiro 1987 Images of Southern Africa An Exhibition of Graphics Flinders University of South Australia ISBN 978 0 7258 0360 5 FESTAC 77 Retrieved 11 November 2011 Miko William Visual Voices Retrieved 23 January 2020 Zaucha Grazyna June 1996 Zambia identities in prints PDF Retrieved 10 November 2011 Murphy Alan et al March 2010 Zambia amp Malawi 1st ed Lonely Planet pp 47 ISBN 978 1 74179 433 5 Twins Seven Seven amp Henry Tayali in German Retrieved 11 June 2009 Tharani Nadir 1989 The work of the Zambian artist Henry Tayal PDF Africa Events Retrieved 10 November 2011 Witkamp Bert 2013 HENRY TAYALI AND FACKSON KULYA Academic and folk art in Zambia of the seventies and eighties Z factor Art Site Retrieved 8 October 2014 Mubiana Desmond 15 July 1985 Mpapa show brings out ten years of printmaking Times of Zambia a b Barde Bob 1980 Henry Tayali Zambian Printmaker African Arts 13 3 UCLA James S Coleman African Studies Center 82 doi 10 2307 3335710 JSTOR 3335710 Setti Godfrey January 2000 An Analysis of the Contribution of Four Painters to the Development of Contemporary Zambian Painting from 1950 to 1997 Research Essay for Master of Fine Art Rhodes University South Africa Retrieved 8 October 2014 Henry Tayali In Situ July 1978 p 38 Kennedy Jean 1992 New Currents Ancient Rivers Contemporary African Artists in a Generation of Change Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN 978 1 56098 037 7 Gaikwad Mukta 15 March 2010 African Art History Retrieved 11 November 2011 Meyers Jane Kinney 27 June 2012 Outreach to Vulnerable Youth in Africa through Partnerships for Innovative Programming The Lubuto Library Project PDF conference ifla org Retrieved 8 October 2014 Gaikwad Mukta 15 March 2010 African Art History Buzzle Retrieved 8 October 2014 Kennedy Jean 1992 Between the Natural and Supernatural extract Retrieved 8 October 2014 Mubiana Desmond 6 July 1985 Strategy for arts unveiled Times of Zambia Lechwe s Art Showcased Times of Zambia 28 May 2010 Retrieved 10 November 2010 Places to Visit Lusaka Zambia Tourist Board Retrieved 22 May 2009 THE HENRY TAYALI ART CENTRE African Digital Art Retrieved 8 October 2014 McIntyre Chris 2008 Zambia The Bradt Travel Guide Guidebook ISBN 978 1 84162 226 2 Ngoma awards National Arts Council of Zambia Archived from the original on 26 June 2009 Retrieved 17 July 2009 Kachingwe Kelvin Annual Ngoma Awards 10 years later Times of Zambia Retrieved 22 May 2009 About Henry Tayali Henry Tayali Art Gallery 2 September 2012 Retrieved 8 October 2014 Further reading editZukas Cynthia 1993 in English Henry Tayali A Re Assessment Fall N Gone and Pivin Jean Loup 2002 in English An Anthology of African Art Pitcher Gemma Andrew David Armstrong Kate Bainbridge James Bewer Tim and Carillet Jean Bernard 2007 in English Africa External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Henry Tayali Three watercolours by Henry Tayali Shipwrecked Sunset Road and The Omen held by the Harmon Foundation at the US National Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry Tayali amp oldid 1219363927, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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