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- Moffat Takadiwa
- Colonial product V , 2023
- Keyboard keys in plastic
-
- 121 ×
- 92 × cm
- 47 5/8 ×
- 36 1/4 × inches
Moffat Takadiwa’s studio is situated in Mbare, a working-class suburb on the outskirts of Harare, whose informal economy is partially based on the recycling of electronic goods and the sale of second-hand products imported from Europe. Over the past ten years, he has been collecting computer keyboards, used toothbrushes, empty toothpaste tubes and pen casings, as well as bottle caps, plastic bucket handles, spoons and many other objects. More recently, belt buckles and zippers have appeared in the giant tapestries exhibited as part of Zimbabwe’s national pavilion at the 2024 Venice Biennale.












- Moffat Takadiwa
- White toothpaste b , 2024
- Tubes of toothpaste, defunct bank notes, and metal belt buckles
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- 55 ×
- 50 ×
- 50 × cm
- 21 5/8 ×
- 19 11/16 ×
- 19 11/16 × inches









- Moffat Takadiwa
- The tobacco farms , 2024
- Computer and calculator keys, bottle tops and toothbrushes in plastic
-
- 200 ×
- 145 ×
- 5 × cm
- 78 3/4 ×
- 57 1/16 ×
- 1 15/16 × inches









- Moffat Takadiwa
- Yellow for Gold , 2024
- Toothbrush heads, belt buckles and computer keys
-
- 236 ×
- 189 ×
- 10 × cm
- 92 15/16 ×
- 74 7/16 ×
- 3 15/16 × inches













- Moffat Takadiwa
- White Circle , 2023
- Computer keys in plastic
-
- 177 ×
- 177 × cm
- 69 11/16 ×
- 69 11/16 × inches
The circle, omnipresent in Moffat Takadiwa’s oeuvre, not only refers to a shape found in numerous everyday objects but also evokes the outlines of Great Zimbabwe, a legendary medieval city, today in ruins, but which once sat at the center of an empire that encompassed present-day Zimbabwe and Mozambique. The aesthetic appeal of his works—which borrow motifs and colors from a variety of cultures in his country—underpins a scathing critique of the legacy of a troubled colonial past, while at the same time praising the resistance groups that fought against it.













- Moffat Takadiwa
- The water vessels , 2024
- Computer keys, pen barrels and bucket handles in plastic
-
- 180 ×
- 775 ×
- 35 × cm
- 70 7/8 ×
- 305 1/8 ×
- 13 3/4 × inches
For Moffat Takadiwa, the turning point came in 2015 with the protest movement “Rhodes Must Fall,” which challenged the predominant Western worldview in the curricula of South African universities. This was the moment when he realized that it was time to find his own path, employing an artistic language that drew on his local socio-cultural surroundings. Using keys from computer keyboards, present in many of his works, Moffat Takadiwa began developing a “de-colonialized” vocabulary. Through his multicolored mosaics, whose constituent elements are strung together with fishing line, the artist relentlessly builds connections between past and present, between the ancestral wisdom of yesterday and the urban societies of today. Each new work is a narrative that invites the viewer to contemplate the interdependence of communities across centuries and beyond geographical borders.





- Moffat Takadiwa
- KoreKore Handwriting III , 2023
- Computer keys and toothbrush heads in plastic
-
- 256 ×
- 172 × cm
- 100 13/16 ×
- 67 11/16 × inches








- Moffat Takadiwa
- Age of Exploration , 2024
- Computer keys and toothbrush head in plastic
-
- 110 ×
- 240 ×
- 5 × cm
- 43 5/16 ×
- 94 1/2 ×
- 1 15/16 × inches
Moffat Takadiwa’s works are akin to algorithms relentlessly producing variants of the same narrative. They methodically chart the journeys of goods that have been returned to Africa. Raw materials extracted from the continent are shipped to Europe or China, where they are used in the manufacturing process. When they finally “return to their homeland,” Moffat Takadiwa transforms them into precious objects, some of which once again make their way back to the West, destined for museums and collectors.
— N’Goné Fall








- Moffat Takadiwa
- Belt re-simbi/ metal belt , 2024
- Plastic computer and calculator keys, belt buckles
-
- 145 ×
- 365 ×
- 15 × cm
- 57 1/16 ×
- 143 11/16 ×
- 5 7/8 × inches



- Moffat Takadiwa
- Water vehicle , 2024
- Plastic computer and calculator keys, button accessories
-
- 75 ×
- 160 ×
- 5 × cm
- 29 1/2 ×
- 63 ×
- 1 15/16 × inches
Moffat Takadiwa creates large format sculptures from materials found on garbage dumps, notably computer parts, plastic bottle-caps, toothbrushes and toothpaste tubes. After gathering great quantities of these objects and sorting them by color and shape, the artist weaves these discarded scraps into rich wall hangings. Once suspended, these post-industrial fabrics, through their intricate beauty, acquire an aura of ritual or totemic artifacts.
Born in 1983, Moffat Takadiwa lives and works on the outskirts of Harare in Mbare, one of the largest recycling centers in the country and an important hub for the informal economy. Belonging to the post-independence generation, his work reflects his preoccupation with issues such as consumerism, inequality, post-colonialism and the environment. Since the earliest days of his artistic career, he has used his practice as a platform for the rehabilitation of his community, working with young local artists and designers, with a view to founding the world first artistic center based on the use of reclaimed materials.
The National Gallery of Zimbabwe, Harare, staged a major solo exhibition of Moffat Takadiwa in 2023. In 2024, he had his first solo exhibition in a French institution at the Galerie Édouard Manet, Gennevilliers, and represents Zimbabwe at the 60th Biennale di Venezia alongside five other artists. He exhibited his works in major institutions abroad as well, most notably at the Craft Contemporary (US), during the exhibition organized by Jeffrey Deitch and Gagosian at the Moore Building in Miami (US), at the ARoS Kunstmuseumat, Aarhus (DK), the MACAAL, Marrakesh (MA) and the Arnhem Museum (NL).
