Kuru Art Retrospective Comes to Gaborone
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Tuesday, September 23, 2025


Kuru Art Retrospective Comes to Gaborone



AFRICA.- The All Africa.Com’s Lerato Maleke reported that Kuru artists from D’Kar near Ghanzi, are preparing for their first retrospective exhibition, Dòro-qhãò Mola wa godimo in Setswana or Rainbow in English. The event will open on June 1 in the main gallery of the National Museum in Gaborone. It will run till June 20. There will be art on show from the very first years of the project’s existence (1991) up to now. A large number of art works from the Kuru permanent art collection will be on show. Some artworks will also come from private collections. Some of the early works will be on sale as well as new creations.

According to Cecilia Durkin who is working closely with the artists in Gaborone, the Member of Parliament for Mmadinare Ponatshego Kedikilwe will open the exhibition. She says the exhibition promises to be a great event. The Kuru Art Project is an income-generating project for the San in D’kar. It originated in 1990 and so far there are 14 artists participating in the project. They work in different techniques, but are well known for their colorful oil paintings on canvas, black and white linoleum prints, color linoleum prints and lithographs. Fourteen years after its inception, the art from the project, continues to stimulate the imagination.” Its success with modern media has amazed everybody. The artists’ wonderfully vibrant use of color, their simultaneously fresh and prehistoric images have earned them a position among the world’s foremost artists," said Durkin. Throughout the 14 years, the Kuru artists have exhibited extensively. The Kuru Art Project has had 66 exhibitions at several venues around the world.

These include the National Gallery, Zimbabwe, the South African National Museum, the Pretoria Art Museum, the Rebecca Hossack Gallery in London, Images of Africa in Copenhagen, Volkenkunde Museum in The Netherlands, Iwalawa-Haus in Germany, Art Gallery of the Northern Territory in Australia, Kani City Public Arts Centre in Japan and Dusable Museum in Chicago among others.

Apart from these exhibitions Durkin says the artists also received several awards over the years, and as such, they have gained their rightful place in the contemporary art scene. In 1993, they were honored with the Prize Ex Aequo at the International print Triennial Graphica Creativa in Finland. As a result some of the artists Thamae Setshogo, Qhaqhoo Xare and Qwaa Mangana, took part in Intergrafia "94, World Award Winners Gallery in Poland and Sweden. In 1996, one of the artists Sobe Sobe received the Jury Honorable Mention at the Graphica Creativa Exhibition in Finland.

The Kuru artists were then invited to exhibit in the Intergrafia 1997 World Award Winners Gallery in Poland. In 2003, the work of Coex’ae Bob, Thamae Setshogo and X’are Thama qualified for the Main Exhibition of the International Print Triennial in Poland and the work of Xgaoc’o X’are were included in the Etching versus Digital exhibition - a part of the International Print Triennial. In 1997 a painting of Cg’ose Ntcoxo was chosen as one of a collection of world images for British Airways.

The image traveled the world on the tailfins of eight British Airways planes and carried the name of Cg’ose, the Kuru Art Project and Botswana. In 2004, four paintings by Kuru artists Nxaedom Qhomatca (Ankie), Qgoma Ncokg’o (Qmao) and Cg’ose Ntcox’o were chosen by the Botswana Postal Services for a new collection of Botswana stamps. In 1995, the Kuru Art Project together with the Artists Press in South Africa produced Qauqaua, the first book of a traditional San story, written in a San language, as told by San artists, illustrated with original lithographs by San artists and bound in traditionally tanned goatskin.

Qauqaua was selected in 2001 for the "Voyages Exhibition" of the Smithsonian Institute Libraries and was listed by the Grolier Book Club as one of the top ten highlights of the exhibition. As their ancestors have done in years gone by, the San artists from the Kuru Art Project still create images that amaze the world. Scenes and forms, mysterious to the western eye, come naturally to them. To them, the forms they create have meaning and are part of their natural existence.

 "Art is an old recipe. It comes from our ancestors," says Dada Qgam, one of the oldest of the Kuru artists.

"It started with creation and will always be part of the human being," says Xgaiga Qhomatca, one of the 14 Kuru artists.











Today's News

September 23, 2025

Important Jewelry Auction Sparkles with $3.5M in Sales and Strong Buyer Demand at Freeman's │ Hindman

Stedelijk Museum Schiedam opens first exhibition in former Monopole cinema

Neon signage and popular mascots line up for Morphy's Oct. 4-5 Automobilia & Petroliana Auction

Pruzan Art Center at Wesleyan University to feature 18th-century British prints by William Hogarth

Nationalmuseum in Stockholm acquires a painting by Sofonisba Anguissola

Asian Art Week live sales at Christie's total $46,685,403

Never before displayed works by Eduard Arranz-Bravo shine in Barcelona before traveling to Paris

Exhibition unveils a new series of vibrant and textured paintings by Mariel Capanna

Galleria Continua celebrates 35 years with a major homage to artist Chen Zhen

Bakersfield Museum of Art welcomes Gilbert Vicario as new Executive Director and Chief Curator

Exhibition 'Free to move from chair to chair' opens at Centre d'art Ygrec-ENSAPC

421 Arts Campus celebrates ten-year anniversary

A dramatic new film reveals the real story of one of the greatest artists of all time

Carbon fibre takes new shape in Terence Woodgate's 'Lightness of Form'

New exhibition by Inuuteq Storch deconstructs myths about Greenland

Mönchehaus Museum: Kaiserring anniversary, scholarship, and new Director

Tom Burr's new exhibition 'Paul' reimagines Pasolini's unfinished film

Jennifer Packer receives 2025 Heinz Award for the Arts

Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma presents 2026 exhibition program

Sky Hopinka's 'Fainting Spells' explores Indigenous mythology in new Guggenheim Bilbao exhibition

Rosa Barba's 'Meaning Distances' exhibition opens 25 FPS Festival in Zagreb

Singapore Art Museum unveils two collection-based exhibitions Talking Objects and The Living Room

Freddie Robins: Apotropaic at the Douglas F. Cooley Memorial Art Gallery, Reed College




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 




Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)


Editor: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful