About

{"ops":[{"insert":"I am a sculptor based in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, and my practice is rooted in a deep engagement with human behaviour and the evolving relationship between people and their environment. Working primarily in sculpture, I seek to translate social and environmental tensions into tangible forms, creating works that invite reflection on how we live, what we value, and what we choose to ignore.My work is guided by close observation of everyday life—our habits, contradictions, and shared vulnerabilities. I am particularly drawn to the subtle ways in which social structures shape individual choices, and how those choices, in turn, impact the natural world. By examining this interplay, my sculptures become sites where the human condition and environmental realities confront one another.Environmental concerns are central to my practice. I explore themes such as degradation, waste, resilience, and renewal, often referencing the landscapes and urban spaces of Bulawayo and Zimbabwe more broadly. Through form, texture, and material, I highlight the traces we leave on the earth and the silent stories embedded in our surroundings. In doing so, I aim to question prevailing attitudes of consumption, neglect, and disconnection.Social issues are inseparable from these environmental narratives. My work addresses inequality, displacement, and the fragility of community, revealing how social pressures and environmental crises are intertwined. Each piece is conceived as both a record and a provocation: a record of lived realities and a provocation to reconsider our responsibilities to one another and to the spaces we inhabit.Ultimately, my sculptures function as contemplative objects—acts of environmental creation that transform concern into form. By engaging with them, I hope viewers will recognize both their complicity and their capacity for change, and consider how new ways of seeing might lead to new ways of being.\n"}]}