Nelson Mandela
18 facts about the 9m Mandela statue
- The R8-million statue at the Union Buildings was commissioned in June 2013.
- It is 9-metres high, the tallest figurative bronze sculture of Mandela. The tallest memorial is Marco Cianfanelli's steel construction at the capture site near Howick in KwaZulu Natal, which is 9.48-metres tall.
- Made out of bronze, the statue weighs 3.5 tons. The stainless steel armature inside the statue weighs an additional 800kg.
- The "wingspan" of the statue - from fingertip to fingertip - is eight metres.
- It was initially commissioned by the National Heritage Council, a agency of the Department of Arts and Culture, as part of the celebrations to mark the centenary of the Union Buildings, South Africa's seat of government, in Pretoria.
- The statue is situated at the Union Buildings, the same place where Mandela was inaugurated as South Africa's first democratically elected president in 1994. Zuma has since declared the Union Buildings a national heritage site.
- South African sculptors André Prinsloo and Ruhan Janse van Vuuren were responsible for creating the statue. The artists are part of a stable of sculptors who have been working on various projects for the government's Long Walk to Freedom project.
- The project was overseen by Dali Tambo, the son of struggle veteran Oliver Tambo, who was a close friend of Mandela's. Tambo is the chief executive of Koketso Growth, which managed the project on behalf of the NHC.
- The project received final approval in mid-July 2013, giving the artists just four months to complete the giant statue. "We finished it in record time," Prinsloo said in an interview with IOL.
- The statue was cast in 147 pieces.
- Metal work and engineering was carried out with assistance from the Knight brothers at Sculpture Casting Services Foundary in Cape Town. The legs and arms were cast by the company's branch in Nottingham road in KwaZulu-Natal and transported to the site by flat-bed truck.
- It took three weeks to complete constructing the giant statue with a complementary team of 35 workers, Prinsloo said.
- The statue shows a smiling Mandela, with his arms outstreched and his hands open, as if to embrace the nation. "You will notice that in all the statues that have been made of Madiba, he is raising his fist and at times stretching it. That derives from the slogan of the ANC," Zuma explained at the unveiling. "This one is different from many. He is stretching out his hands. He is embracing the whole nation. You shouldn’t say this is not Madiba because we know him with his one [raised] hand."
- The design was approved by a committee including Paul Mashatile, the minister of arts and culture, Tambo, and representatives from the National Heritage Council, Prinsloo said.
- Prinsloo told SAinfo that the artists considered his open arms not only as a gesture of reconiciliation, but also one of bestowing a blessing. "Mandela is looking down on the people in front of him, blessing them." It is also in the spirit of the hymn, God bless Africa, he said.
- The Mandela statue stand where a figure of former prime minister James Barry Hertzog used to stand. Hertzog was prime minister from 1924-1939. "Following an exhaustive consultation process, and in the spirit of reconciliation that our country has become renowned for, the representatives of Hertzog agreed that his statue be relocated to another spot in the Union Buildings in order to make way for Madiba's statue," Zuma said.
The statue of Nelson Mandela at the Union Buildings in Pretoria stands 9m tall. He has one leg slightly in front of the other to demonstrate a nation on the move, and his arms are outstretched as if embracing the nation (Photo: GCIS)
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