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ZimSculpt

Curators of Zimbabwean Sculpture Worldwide

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Square Chikwanda

Location: Mvurwi
Age: 49

Works for Sale

We don't currently have anything by Square Chikwanda available. Please contact us if you would like to commission a piece or to be notified when we have any pieces by Square Chikwanda for sale.

Enquire

Previous Works

  • Mermaid Not for sale
    Mermaid
    Not for sale
  • Relaxing Not for sale
    Relaxing
    Not for sale
  • Sorrow Not for sale
    Sorrow
    Not for sale
  • Hide N' Seek Not for sale
    Hide N' Seek
    Not for sale
  • Leaf Head Not for sale
    Leaf Head
    Not for sale
  • Deciding Not for sale
    Deciding
    Not for sale
  • Shona Princess Not for sale
    Shona Princess
    Not for sale
  • Seated Girl Not for sale
    Seated Girl
    Not for sale

Square was born in 1972 in Mvurwi, Zimbabwe.

When Square was seven he moved to Tengenenge with his father. Square finished primary school and quickly learnt to sculpt and become a full-time sculptor when he was 13 years old. In 1993 he left Tengenenge to continue sculpting in Harare. He has worked at the Chapungu Sculpture Park since 1993.

From the moment Square started sculpting you could see he had a completely individual style.

Exhibitions to date:

1986, 1987, 1988, 1992, 1997 Annual Heritage Exhibition, National Gallery, Harare
1988 Museum for Humour and Satire, Bucharest, Bulgaria
1991 NSA Gallery, Overport, Durban, South Africa

Permanent collections:

Tengenenge, Zimbabwe
Chapungu Sculpture Park, Harare, Zimbabwe
1997 Africa Museum, Berg en Dal, Netherlands

Square currently has his own book available, if you would like to order a copy, please contact us.

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A real treat here in Wimbledon. At Cannizaro Park a superb open-air exhibition of Zimbabwean sculpture. There were many pieces, large and small, and a wide variety of different stone used in imaginative ways. And, overall, a real sense of Africa, linked to a long artistic tradition.

I was told that many of the sculptors had been trained within their own families: a father, an uncle, a grandfather, passing on the old skills.

Catholic Herald
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