Neftaly Email: sayprobiz@gmail.com Call/WhatsApp: + 27 84 313 7407

[Contact Neftaly] [About Neftaly][Services] [Recruit] [Agri] [Apply] [Login] [Courses] [Corporate Training] [Study] [School] [Sell Courses] [Career Guidance] [Training Material[ListBusiness/NPO/Govt] [Shop] [Volunteer] [Internships[Jobs] [Tenders] [Funding] [Learnerships] [Bursary] [Freelancers] [Sell] [Camps] [Events&Catering] [Research] [Laboratory] [Sponsor] [Machines] [Partner] [Advertise]  [Influencers] [Publish] [Write ] [Invest ] [Franchise] [Staff] [CharityNPO] [Donate] [Give] [Clinic/Hospital] [Competitions] [Travel] [Idea/Support] [Events] [Classified] [Groups] [Pages]

Tag: guardians

  • Neftaly discusses sculpture as ancestral guardians.

    Neftaly discusses sculpture as ancestral guardians.

    Sculpture as Ancestral Guardians

    Sculpture has long stood as more than just an artistic expression—it is a vessel of memory, protection, and connection across generations. In many cultures, sculpted forms represent ancestral guardians, figures carved to embody the spirit and wisdom of those who came before us. These works serve as keepers of heritage, bridging the visible world with the unseen realm of ancestry.

    Ancestral guardian sculptures are often placed in sacred spaces, community grounds, or family shrines. Their presence provides guidance and a sense of continuity, reminding communities of their shared roots. Each detail—the posture, material, and symbolic design—carries meaning, telling stories of resilience, identity, and spiritual protection.

    For Neftaly, sculpture is not simply a static artifact; it is a living dialogue with history. By engaging with ancestral guardian sculptures, we honor traditions, preserve cultural memory, and create opportunities for future generations to draw strength from their past. These guardians remind us that creativity and identity are inseparable from the communities that nurture them.

  • Neftaly examines sculpture as ancestral guardians.

    Neftaly examines sculpture as ancestral guardians.

    Neftaly Examines Sculpture as Ancestral Guardians

    In a powerful exploration of heritage, memory, and spiritual resilience, Neftaly delves into the role of sculpture as a living bridge between past and present — guardians of ancestry, identity, and cultural continuity.

    Sculpture, in this context, is not merely a form of artistic expression but a sacred vessel of lineage. Across African and diasporic traditions, sculptural forms have long served as embodiments of ancestors — protectors of the community, keepers of knowledge, and intermediaries between the earthly and the divine. Through carved wood, stone, clay, and mixed media, these figures preserve stories often unspoken, yet deeply felt.

    Neftaly’s curatorial lens repositions these sculptures not as static museum artifacts, but as animate presences: guardians that watch, guide, and remember. The exhibition/initiative brings together contemporary and traditional works, showcasing how artists today continue to channel ancestral energy — invoking protective spirits, reclaiming fragmented histories, and resisting erasure.

    This thematic focus invites viewers to engage with sculpture as more than form — as presence. Whether evoking ancestral wisdom, mourning dispossession, or invoking protection, each piece resonates with the idea that the past is not gone — it lives among us, in sculpted figures, cultural rituals, and communal memory.

    Neftaly’s examination is both a celebration and a call — to honor the guardians who came before, and to recognize the enduring role of art in shaping how we remember, relate, and rise.