South African Design: Past & Present
Timed Online Auction, 13 June - 9 July 2025
Interior Elements: Wood, Metal, Fibre, Ceramic & Glass Art
About the SessionThis sale traces the heritage of South African design across centuries of creative expression highlighting diverse design objects through two sessions. Uniting the sessions is a celebration of the versatility of materials - metal, wood, glass, clay, fibre - and how artists and artisans have transformed them over time into works of wonder, rich in both tradition and innovation.
About this Item
Notes
This jocolo was made in 1941 by Anna Maselela. The house represented on the jocolo is Anna Maselela's mother-in-law's house that stood on the farm that they lived on. It was made for a first wife as there are no extra small tails on the edges of the item.
Makers of Ndebele beadwork were always women and the artistry has become highly acclaimed and recognizable, partly due to mural artist Esther Mahlangu's celebrated designs painted on the BMW Art Car that toured the world in 1991 - blending automobile design with African art. This famous Ndebele icon was again lowered into the Iziko South African National Gallery in March 2024 to mark the start of a global tour for the artist's retrospective exhibition.
Striking geometric designs in bold blocks of texture and colour applied to the exterior walls of homesteads (kraals) in the north-eastern regions of South Africa can be traced back as early as the 17th century. At this time, Ndebele immigrants from the east found refuge within Sotho-Tswana communities, where they adopted aspects of their hosts' culture such as settled agriculture and mural decoration. Over time this developed into a new and distinctly evolving Ndebele style. Designs on decorated walls were repeated in beadwork embellishment on ceremonial costume such as women's marriage attire, similar to the presented lot. Richly beaded frontal aprons were worn to symbolically indicate the stages of a woman's life.
Older pieces such as this one were threaded with sinew, whereas the newer ones were threaded with cotton. The beading on older beadwork is also much tighter and the beads much smaller, making the quality of the workmanship infinitely better. The jocolo is a particularly important part of the wedding ensemble as the primary step in the journey of her adult life - marriage. It is distinguishable by five frontal flaps - pointing down like a hand, made from copious quantities of tiny, imported glass 'seed' beads embroidered onto a goatskin backing. Presented to the bride by her new husband's mother, the five pennants bring blessings of many children.
The distinctive, bright, primary colours and predominance of white beads as in this superb example, indicate the current preferences and availability of beads in the 1960s. The florescence of new colours and designs in the mid-20th century is understood as the assertion of Ndebele identity in an historic struggle for freedom. The acclaimed Ndebele artist Isa Kabini expresses this attitude simply in her powerful statement that "… we see what is around us and we make it our own".
- Carol Kaufmann, December 2024
1. Iziko SANG (2024) Then I knew I was good at Painting: Esther Mahlangu. A Retrospective. Iziko SANG February - August 2024.
2. In Carol Kaufmann (2010) 'The 8th Definitive: The luminous beauty of South African beadwork on stamps', SA Post Office Philatelic Services and Iziko Museums, Pretoria.