Fanizani Akuda
Fanizani Akuda is one of the last surviving members of the first generation of Zimbabwean sculptors. His work has been exhibited worldwide for decades and is in the permanent collection of the National Gallery of Zimbabwe as well as many private collections.
Fanizani was born in 1932 in Zambia, but came to Zimbabwe in 1949. He worked on Tom Blomefield's Tengenenge farm where the famous sculpture community was based. In 1966, Tom gave him a set of sculpting tools and encouraged him to experiment with the stone. His early work showed promise and he was hooked; sculpting became his life-long career.
In the late 1970s, Fanizani decided to move to the city, to escape the disruption of the war of independence. Now in his seventies, he is still sculpting.
Career highlights:
International Sculpture Symposium, Borkel en Schaft, Netherlands (1990s)
Featured in book 'Sculptors from Zimbabwe: The First Generation' by Ben Joosten (1991)
'The Legend of Zimbabwe's Stone Sculpture: Fanizani Akuda', solo retrospective, National Gallery of Zimbabwe, Harare, Zimbabwe (2005)
'Master Sculptors of Zimbabwe', Group exhibition, Netherlands (2005) and Italy (2006)