A compelling introduction to the art of the Nguni diaspora-a pivotal chapter of African history that reshaped societies across southeast Africa and continues to resonate today.
In the early nineteenth century, a period of warfare and political upheaval-triggered in part by the expansion of the Zulu kingdom-compelled many Nguni communities to leave their homeland in what is now KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. As these groups migrated, some as far as present-day Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe, their artistic traditions evolved in response to new environments. Highlighting the central role of art within these communities, Nguni: Migrant Nations of Southeast Africa shows how the battlefield, the domestic sphere, and the body became key sites for making and sustaining identity during a time of profound transformation.
In this portrait of a people in movement, equal weight is given to scholarly inquiry and the knowledge held by custodians of Nguni oral tradition. Essays on Nguni origins, history, and art are enriched by testimonies developed in collaboration with the descendants of four historic rulers-Shaka, Mzilikazi, Zwangendaba, and Langalibalele I-whose family lines are traced in a genealogical map designed by Nontsikelelo Mutiti. The publication explores a wide range of nineteenth-century objects, from shields, spears, and staffs to headrests, beadwork, and baskets, many of which are published here for the first time. A series of photographs by South African photographer Jabulani Dhlamini, documenting the revival of historic Nguni cultural practices, brings these historic artworks into dialogue with the present.
Distributed for the Yale University Art Gallery
Exhibition schedule:
Yale University Art Gallery
(September 11, 2026-June 20, 2027)
| ISBN: | 9780300292763 |
| Publication date: | 12th January 2027 |
| Author: | James Green |
| Publisher: | Yale University Art Gallery an imprint of Yale University Press |
| Format: | Hardback |
| Pagination: | 240 pages |
| Genres: |
History of art Exhibition catalogues and specific collections |
A compelling introduction to the art of the Nguni diaspora-a pivotal chapter of African history that reshaped societies across southeast Africa and continues to resonate today.
In the early nineteenth century, a period of warfare and political upheaval-triggered in part by the expansion of the Zulu kingdom-compelled many Nguni communities to leave their homeland in what is now KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. As these groups migrated, some as far as present-day Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe, their artistic traditions evolved in response to new environments. Highlighting the central role of art within these communities, Nguni: Migrant Nations of Southeast Africa shows how the battlefield, the domestic sphere, and the body became key sites for making and sustaining identity during a time of profound transformation.
In this portrait of a people in movement, equal weight is given to scholarly inquiry and the knowledge held by custodians of Nguni oral tradition. Essays on Nguni origins, history, and art are enriched by testimonies developed in collaboration with the descendants of four historic rulers-Shaka, Mzilikazi, Zwangendaba, and Langalibalele I-whose family lines are traced in a genealogical map designed by Nontsikelelo Mutiti. The publication explores a wide range of nineteenth-century objects, from shields, spears, and staffs to headrests, beadwork, and baskets, many of which are published here for the first time. A series of photographs by South African photographer Jabulani Dhlamini, documenting the revival of historic Nguni cultural practices, brings these historic artworks into dialogue with the present.
Distributed for the Yale University Art Gallery
Exhibition schedule:
Yale University Art Gallery
(September 11, 2026-June 20, 2027)
Nguni features in the following genres: History of art, Exhibition catalogues and specific collections
Nguni is available in Hardback
Nguni was written by James Green and published by Yale University Art Gallery an imprint of Yale University Press
Nguni has 240 pages
£36.00