Philip Rikhotso
Rikhotso was the winner of the prestigious Brett Kebble Award for 2004, an honour that he shared with Tanya Poole from Grahamstown. His career dates back to the early 1980s. He hails from the Limpopo Province where he was born in 1945 to Shangaan parents. Limpopo is a province possessing some of South Africa’s best artists working in the sculptural idiom. His aptitude for carving combines an ancestral influence that directs the artist in conceptual aspects through dreams. This is coupled with a unique personal vision and a technical skill learned from his grandfather who was a carver. In 1971 Rikhotso abandoned his artistic pursuits for the mines in Johannesburg and later tended roses at Westpark Cemetery in 1977. He then returned to Giyani because of ill health and resumed woodcarving with renewed zest. Read More…