The Prague Post - The women behind Zimbabwe's striking hut painting art

EUR -
AED 4.267024
AFN 77.670638
ALL 96.465871
AMD 445.058449
ANG 2.080243
AOA 1065.448908
ARS 1661.270266
AUD 1.769697
AWG 2.091394
AZN 1.973052
BAM 1.949049
BBD 2.343184
BDT 141.639403
BGN 1.955567
BHD 0.437957
BIF 3427.62771
BMD 1.161886
BND 1.503991
BOB 8.056096
BRL 6.222359
BSD 1.16337
BTN 103.203533
BWP 15.476394
BYN 3.955599
BYR 22772.957205
BZD 2.339796
CAD 1.622794
CDF 2881.475894
CHF 0.930467
CLF 0.028421
CLP 1114.957092
CNY 8.272103
CNH 8.303973
COP 4504.049419
CRC 585.369932
CUC 1.161886
CUP 30.789968
CVE 109.884393
CZK 24.381586
DJF 207.172416
DKK 7.465579
DOP 72.837399
DZD 150.900556
EGP 55.2477
ERN 17.428284
ETB 169.130753
FJD 2.634169
FKP 0.862276
GBP 0.867568
GEL 3.154546
GGP 0.862276
GHS 14.542629
GIP 0.862276
GMD 83.655791
GNF 10090.051045
GTQ 8.914124
GYD 243.357083
HKD 9.043194
HNL 30.545069
HRK 7.535759
HTG 152.232711
HUF 393.415608
IDR 19303.566888
ILS 3.820857
IMP 0.862276
INR 103.155458
IQD 1522.070099
IRR 48868.907312
ISK 141.610452
JEP 0.862276
JMD 186.214208
JOD 0.823734
JPY 176.998208
KES 150.111685
KGS 101.606918
KHR 4670.821654
KMF 491.477768
KPW 1045.692998
KRW 1650.644826
KWD 0.356237
KYD 0.969542
KZT 628.861809
LAK 25229.612079
LBP 104523.528002
LKR 351.891153
LRD 212.314605
LSL 20.031134
LTL 3.430746
LVL 0.702813
LYD 6.307154
MAD 10.612242
MDL 19.404788
MGA 5182.050907
MKD 61.622986
MMK 2439.423078
MNT 4179.169043
MOP 9.326296
MRU 46.40706
MUR 53.179655
MVR 17.770888
MWK 2016.914006
MXN 21.391481
MYR 4.90282
MZN 74.248288
NAD 20.031339
NGN 1705.113305
NIO 42.811713
NOK 11.614095
NPR 165.125344
NZD 2.022605
OMR 0.446748
PAB 1.16337
PEN 4.026852
PGK 4.882069
PHP 67.45915
PKR 329.545651
PLN 4.254085
PYG 8136.816472
QAR 4.252271
RON 5.099048
RSD 117.158714
RUB 95.358902
RWF 1682.410308
SAR 4.358284
SBD 9.562948
SCR 17.251236
SDG 698.873457
SEK 10.968374
SGD 1.505136
SHP 0.91306
SLE 27.095613
SLL 24364.163753
SOS 664.027936
SRD 44.224876
STD 24048.685496
STN 24.899208
SVC 10.17974
SYP 15106.679163
SZL 20.031108
THB 37.766513
TJS 10.790425
TMT 4.0666
TND 3.393291
TOP 2.721247
TRY 48.463223
TTD 7.901631
TWD 35.515587
TZS 2854.262554
UAH 48.078371
UGX 4001.141229
USD 1.161886
UYU 46.439149
UZS 13988.547804
VES 219.611274
VND 30627.30367
VUV 140.508882
WST 3.228337
XAF 653.689998
XAG 0.023863
XAU 0.000288
XCD 3.140054
XCG 2.096738
XDR 0.812984
XOF 653.692801
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.737453
ZAR 20.035009
ZMK 10458.360477
ZMW 27.601397
ZWL 374.12668
  • RBGPF

    -1.0800

    77.14

    -1.4%

  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    23.74

    -0.25%

  • BTI

    0.8000

    51.98

    +1.54%

  • GSK

    0.0500

    43.5

    +0.11%

  • RIO

    -0.7300

    66.25

    -1.1%

  • NGG

    -0.0200

    73.88

    -0.03%

  • SCS

    -0.1200

    16.86

    -0.71%

  • RELX

    -0.9700

    45.44

    -2.13%

  • AZN

    0.3800

    85.87

    +0.44%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.4

    -0.16%

  • BCC

    -0.6600

    74.52

    -0.89%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1900

    15.39

    -1.23%

  • BP

    0.1400

    34.97

    +0.4%

  • JRI

    -0.1100

    14.07

    -0.78%

  • BCE

    0.1000

    23.29

    +0.43%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    11.27

    -0.18%

The women behind Zimbabwe's striking hut painting art
The women behind Zimbabwe's striking hut painting art / Photo: Zinyange Auntony - AFP

The women behind Zimbabwe's striking hut painting art

The golden rays of the afternoon sun enhance the bold, hand-painted patterns on the mud walls of a round, thatched hut in Peggy Masuku's village of Matobo in southwestern Zimbabwe.

Text size:

Outside, at a small table with two curved seats -- all fashioned out of mud -- Masuku shows visitors how she mixes soil pigments, charcoal and ash to create the earth tones that make the striking motifs.

The 54-year-old is admired as one of the best among hundreds of women who practise the traditional art of hut painting in the picturesque granite hills of Matobo, where the rocks hold spiritual value.

The art is gaining recognition beyond this part of rural Zimbabwe, with the bold patterns incorporated into fashion and designs that are finding a small market as far away as Europe and bringing income to its village artists.

For the self-effacing Masuku, it all started when her stepmother assigned her, as the youngest girl in the family, the duty of smearing a cow-dung paste onto the walls and floors of the family huts, a traditional technique to maintain the structures.

"My stepmother would oversee this chore and make sure I did it to perfection. Initially, I thought this was abuse but I later realised it was good training," Masuku told AFP.

"I graduated to doing the hut painting, which elderly women did, and over time became quite good at it."

- International interest -

Masuku's talent first found recognition through a competition called My Beautiful Home, in which she has featured among the winners several times since its launch in 2014.

The annual event is the brainchild of Veronique Attala, a French woman who stumbled on "a beautifully decorated hut" when lost while hiking in the Matobo Hills, a UNESCO heritage site that has one of the highest concentrations of rock paintings in Africa.

Attala, who has lived in Zimbabwe for more than 30 years, was inspired to nurture the tradition and support the women artists and their farming communities.

A new project headed by the German Embassy has also started testing out the commercial promise of these designs.

In collaboration with Zimbabwe's National Gallery and Fashion Council, it has launched the Matobo Collection featuring the work of selected artists reproduced on saleable items such as textiles, flowerpots and lampshades.

The project is helping to find markets in other parts of Zimbabwe and also abroad, mainly in Germany, with the artists receiving a licence fee for their designs and royalties for every sale.

To help the women navigate issues of copyright and compensation, the embassy has also brought in intellectual property lawyers.

"The aim is to further promote the artistry of the ladies of Matobo and, subsequently, create greater awareness of this unique cultural heritage, nationally as well as internationally," the embassy's cultural attache Katrin Simon told AFP.

One of those selected for the Matobo Collection is Elgar Maphosa, who is impressed that the traditions of her community have "come this far".

"It is something that we do as routine," the 58-year-old villager said. "I never at any time imagined that I would one day get an income out of it while also learning new things."

- Younger generation -

Hut painting is an ancient Ndebele tradition in which the motifs were originally imbued with meaning.

It was a "mode of communicating the worldview or beliefs, as well as ideals and values of communities that lived long ago," said cultural historian Pathisa Nyathi.

"Over time the meanings got lost and, owing to the interaction with other cultures including Western, emphasis is now on aesthetics," Nyathi told AFP.

Emboldened by her success at My Beautiful Home, Masuku has been commissioned to paint buildings at Zimbabwe's top tourist resort town of Victoria Falls, which she hopes will lead to more projects.

Younger women are also learning the craft, including 26-year-old Nozipho, a development studies graduate and civil servant who is currently learning the art from her mother, and hopes to follow the steps of the older women in her community.

N.Simek--TPP