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Petra Sittig
Petra Sittig
299 episodes
3 days ago
In this interview I’m speaking with South African sculptor and installation artist Snelihle Maphumulo, an extraordinary young creative whose work is deeply rooted in both her Zulu heritage and her Christian faith. Snelihle was born and raised in Durban, KwaZulu-Natal, and she studied Fine Art, Sculpture, and Visual Culture at Rhodes University. What makes her work so unique is the material she chooses to work with: sheep hide. In Zulu tradition, hide carries cultural significance—it's connected to ceremonies, identity, and ancestral heritage. But for Snelihle, the sheep hide also has a powerful spiritual meaning. It represents the biblical idea of God as the Shepherd and humanity as the sheep under His care. Through her sculptures and installations, she uses the hide to express the themes of protection, guidance, and faith. Her artworks often create quiet, contemplative spaces that invite you to reflect on the relationship between the physical material and the spiritual symbolism behind it. What I love about her practice is how she brings together two worlds—her cultural roots and her personal Christian belief—without separating them. Instead, she weaves them into a conversation, showing how tradition and faith can coexist and inform each other in beautiful and unexpected ways. In this interview, Snelihle shares how she transforms this traditional material into a message of hope, vulnerability, and divine connection. Her work is not just about sculpture—it’s about storytelling, identity, and the deep relationship between culture and spirituality.
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Performing Arts
Arts,
TV & Film,
Visual Arts,
Film Interviews
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In this interview I’m speaking with South African sculptor and installation artist Snelihle Maphumulo, an extraordinary young creative whose work is deeply rooted in both her Zulu heritage and her Christian faith. Snelihle was born and raised in Durban, KwaZulu-Natal, and she studied Fine Art, Sculpture, and Visual Culture at Rhodes University. What makes her work so unique is the material she chooses to work with: sheep hide. In Zulu tradition, hide carries cultural significance—it's connected to ceremonies, identity, and ancestral heritage. But for Snelihle, the sheep hide also has a powerful spiritual meaning. It represents the biblical idea of God as the Shepherd and humanity as the sheep under His care. Through her sculptures and installations, she uses the hide to express the themes of protection, guidance, and faith. Her artworks often create quiet, contemplative spaces that invite you to reflect on the relationship between the physical material and the spiritual symbolism behind it. What I love about her practice is how she brings together two worlds—her cultural roots and her personal Christian belief—without separating them. Instead, she weaves them into a conversation, showing how tradition and faith can coexist and inform each other in beautiful and unexpected ways. In this interview, Snelihle shares how she transforms this traditional material into a message of hope, vulnerability, and divine connection. Her work is not just about sculpture—it’s about storytelling, identity, and the deep relationship between culture and spirituality.
Show more...
Performing Arts
Arts,
TV & Film,
Visual Arts,
Film Interviews
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Thresholds of Being: Leanne Olivier on Art, Myth, and the Feminine
Petra Sittig
1 hour 12 minutes 13 seconds
2 months ago
Thresholds of Being: Leanne Olivier on Art, Myth, and the Feminine
In this conversation, I had the privilege of speaking with Leanne Olivier, a South African artist who makes her home in the vast landscapes of the Kalahari, Northern Cape. Her artistic journey moves through the thresholds of human experience, where stories, symbols, and myths converge. Olivier’s practice lives in these liminal spaces — places of transition, in-between states — where the seen and unseen meet. Drawing from diverse cultural traditions, ancient mythologies, and spiritual thought, she questions the illusion of certainty and fixedness. Her work often takes shape through the many faces of the archetypal Feminine — a presence that both shifts and dissolves, becoming and unbecoming at once. In the interview, Olivier reflects on the inspirations that move her and the inner dialogue that unfolds while she works. Her creative process is rooted in collaboration, a ceremonial exchange with those she paints, unfolding within her studio, which she calls her “suburban cave.” Her figurative realism carries a classical strength, yet her paintings are infused with the raw textures of the earth — clay, hematite, bone meal, ash, mica, and charcoal. These earthly materials are not merely tools, but living metaphors, conduits that call us back to essence, to the primal and the sacred. Through her words and her art, Leanne Olivier reveals a practice that is at once deeply personal and universally human — a journey into the mysteries of becoming. https://leanneolivier.com/about
Petra Sittig
In this interview I’m speaking with South African sculptor and installation artist Snelihle Maphumulo, an extraordinary young creative whose work is deeply rooted in both her Zulu heritage and her Christian faith. Snelihle was born and raised in Durban, KwaZulu-Natal, and she studied Fine Art, Sculpture, and Visual Culture at Rhodes University. What makes her work so unique is the material she chooses to work with: sheep hide. In Zulu tradition, hide carries cultural significance—it's connected to ceremonies, identity, and ancestral heritage. But for Snelihle, the sheep hide also has a powerful spiritual meaning. It represents the biblical idea of God as the Shepherd and humanity as the sheep under His care. Through her sculptures and installations, she uses the hide to express the themes of protection, guidance, and faith. Her artworks often create quiet, contemplative spaces that invite you to reflect on the relationship between the physical material and the spiritual symbolism behind it. What I love about her practice is how she brings together two worlds—her cultural roots and her personal Christian belief—without separating them. Instead, she weaves them into a conversation, showing how tradition and faith can coexist and inform each other in beautiful and unexpected ways. In this interview, Snelihle shares how she transforms this traditional material into a message of hope, vulnerability, and divine connection. Her work is not just about sculpture—it’s about storytelling, identity, and the deep relationship between culture and spirituality.