| (Jackson)
Hlungwani's innocence is the artistic type that seems to have no particular axe
to grind. While he believes he is living among lesser mortals, that he has
a direct connection to God and His heaven, he makes no fuss about it. By most
standards the man is eccentric, an almost ludicrous figure of diminutive impishness.
He wears a none too clean army issue coat over old pants that fall on a broken
pair of shoes. His body though, looks glowingly clean, which is another paradox
of sorts. For his cleanliness is more than bodily, it is almost spiritual.
It is induced also by an engaging charm and honesty that is open and arresting.
The cleanliness is made striking in a bizarre way when he lifts his pants to show
his grotesque scars, livid with what seems to be a form of cancer eating into
his lower limbs. Instead of turning away in disgust, instead of experiencing
the expected nauseous smell, instead of shying away in dismay, one is left with
a fascinated awe.
For just as dramatically, the pants are dropped, the subject is dropped, the legs
are forgotten and the artist goes cheerily on to the next subject. You can
call him a crazy old man, a mystic like William Blake, a rustic philosopher with
decidedly quirky religious views. But you cannot ignore, underrate or dismiss
his art. Nor can you miss the serenity and harmony that connects this diminutive
sculptor to this world. Walking, almost skipping like a sprite on grotesquely
scarred legs, Jackson Hlungwani is a born communicator. He says the most unusual
things, with a childlike innocence that is quaintly genuine. It is inoffensively
generous this offering, so totally without the slightest wish to impress or be
rewarded. Aggrey Klaaste in an essay titled "an
Intriguing Encounter"
Jackson
Hlungwani's big game hunting grandfather, Bhandi Pavalala, died a week before
Hlungwani was born into a prosperous Tsonga family at Nkanyawi in the Northern
Province in 1923. The baby refused to be breast fed a sure sign for the community
that his mother had committed adultery. To clear her name she consulted a
traditional healer who divined that her version was true and that the problem
was in fact caused by the grandfather who had been reborn through the child.
"Before I was born I remember my grandfather appearing to me to inform me that
I was a prophet of heaven sent to work with our people," confirmed the dreadlocked
Hlungwani who has spent his whole life honouring this injunction from God
Hlungwani's upbringing was little different from other Tsonga boys, but was invaluable
for when he later formulated his religious ideas and began making art. The
countryside, as he herded his fathers longhorn cattle, was the perfect environment
in which to come to grips with the natural universe.
He studied the rivers, the movement of fish, the plants, the wildlife, the climate,
the cosmos and, in due course, amalgamated what he had observed with teachings
about the traditional ancestral world, Tsonga concepts about community and Christian
beliefs in a rhythmic, evolving, all embracing cycle of life that never appeared
contradictory. And when the day was done his father taught him how to fashion
functional items from wood and metal. Like other young men, too, he was sent
to find employment in the city when he came of age. In Johannesburg he worked
for a tea and coffee merchant but was dismissed and repatriated home in 1941 after
loosing a finger in an accident. There he joined the African Zionist Church
and was ordained a minister in 1946 leaving shortly afterwards to start his own
sect, Jerusalem One Christ, in Mbhokota. In Mbhokota he became Xidonkani,
the Little Donkey, the mount that brought the Virgin Mary to Bethlehem. On
a hill, atop which was an Iron Age site, he and his small band of followers began
enhancing the intrinsic qualities of the site by creating a Great Zimbabwe like
labyrinth of dry packed stone walls that he called New Jerusalem. "The New
Jerusalem is conceived as a pilgrimage route where mortal life is viewed as a
journey", wrote Peter Rich in an essay titled The New Jerusalem. The plan
of the New Jerusalem is referred to by Hlungwane as "The Map of Life". It
is a route with a beginning and an end, an entrance and an exit, an ascent and
a descent. Upon visiting the acropolis one returns via the same route that one
came. Hlungwani
reiterates that he will return in another life to complete the task bestowed upon
him. This does not, however, deter his obsession to complete what must now
be done towards its building in this life. His dualistic world view, which
is made apparent to us in religious metaphor, is composed of opposites first and
last, beginning and end, life and death, entrance and exit, male and female, left
and right, good and evil. These opposites are articulated in the route, and
are experienced on the various entrance thresholds and space on the acropolis.
Included in Hlungwani's New Jerusalem were living quarters, the Temple of Jupiter,
altars, raised platforms, healing rooms, Christ's office, God's aerial and, at
the top, Golgotha, the place of skulls, of the dead, from which one turned resurrected
and walked back into a new life. Within these walls he preached a religion
that moved with great ease between Christianity and African beliefs, God and gods,
Father and ancestors with traditional remedies, amulets and a Bible that served
the same function as divining bones. It was a brand of mystical Christianity
firmly rooted to the African soil that was Hlungwani's own. New Jerusalem, before
1978, was decorated with restrained, undemonstrative woodcarvings. That all
changed when he became embroiled in a conflict with the devil that drove him to
the brink of suicide before Jesus saved him. "I saw Satan with my own eyes and
he shot arrows through my legs", he told Reverend Theo Schneider. "I managed
to shake off one of these arrows, but the other one remained inside my flesh.
It disappeared completely into my body, becoming a snake. The following morning
I saw abscesses on one of my legs, discharging puss and a little bit of blood.
The other leg was swollen and dry, but itchy. It remained itchy for a long
time without bursting, but when it eventually burst it occasioned a large wound
which went from bad to worse. I smelt horribly. Life is sweet smelling, but
I smelt the smell of death, like the foul-smelling flowers and fruits of the muhatamba
tree".
"I was planning to commit suicide because I could not stand it anymore. I
decided to wait for the sun to rise the following day before I put my plan into
action. The night had come and I was lying down, thinking of the coming day
and what I was going to do, when suddenly Jesus appeared. Actually, there
were three persons. They came from the northern horizon, the Kalanga country.
I was lying on my back, looking up at them with my head at the level of their
feet as they were steadily approaching; then, they had arrived. Jesus was
standing on one side and his companions took me by the armpit and made me sit.
Jesus stretched out his right arm and grasped my right hand. While speaking
he would emphasise his words by pointing at me with his left hand. Number
one, he said: "You see, today you are healed, you will not die." Then, number
two: "You will serve God for your whole life." Number three, he said: "You
will see God Himself. Look over there." He was pointing in the direction
from which they had come. I did not, in fact, see God¹s full stature. I only
saw his legs, from the knees down. I watched the legs passing by, going in the
direction of KwaZulu. Then Jesus ceased holding my hands. The other
two also stopped supporting me on both sides. They began moving away, and
they finally also disappeared below the horizon. When they had gone I remained
in the sitting position. I was wide-awake. I had watched all the happenings
with my own eyes. I became drowsy and slept for a while. All of a sudden I
woke up and jumped as high as the roof of the hut. When I fell back I found
myself standing straight on my two legs". This ecstatic religious and healing
experience filled Hlungwani with an enormous energy that he frenetically expended
on sculptures for New Jerusalem artefacts imbued with passion and humour intended
to fill his faithful with inspiration. Heaven and earth met in works that
included powerful images of the supernatural, crosses, traditional medicine gourds,
birds, animals and the joy of life. In cairns in the walls he erected angels
with overarching wings, birds eggs on God's legs to remind of the ulcers on his
own, an aeroplane for Cain, Adam in shorts and sandals, a necktied Angel Gabriel
with a satchel on his back and an athletic Jesus playing football. And everywhere
there were the fish that were the symbols of Christ and the people of the Northern
Province. Fish don't fight, fish are happy, fish teach, I teach", he proclaimed.
New Jerusalem, after Hlungwani was discovered by the art world in the 1980s
and brought to Johannesburg, was plundered by collectors and left to grow over
with tropical bush and weeds. The artist was feted and pampered until the
illuminati tired of him and he returned to his home to sculpt under an avocado
tree greeting visitors with a wave and an exuberant "Hallelujah". His sculptures,
round the side of his hut, lie weathered and mixed with the works of his students
against a wall. Beaming, he is happy to show anyone these works and divulge little
secrets about each one. Inside the hut a hen sits on her eggs on the table among
religious posters and books which he flips through for ideas. And when people
leave he refuses to say "Bye-bye" preferring "Until we meet again". He crosses
many cultural barriers yet he has found a unique identity, concluded Klaaste.
He, by virtue of his convictions and aspirations, invites us to reassess
our preconceptions. He invites us to enjoy, to be educated by the free creative
spirit in a man. He reminds us of universal truths. Especially he reminds
us that man has the free will, the creative space to express himself and his world
in many ways. It is up to us to express this difference, this unique creative
spirit, in sincere and genuine ways if we are to change the world, if ever so
slightly. It gives people, through the creative experience, the happy feeling
that the eternal truths can be reached in many ways.
Article by Pat Hopkins Tel: +27 11 679-4718 e-mail: hopkins@icon.co.za |