Together for Pangolins
Timed Online Auction, 24 July - 5 August 2024
Session One
About the SessionPangolins have been on the planet for 80 million years. They survived a mass extinction, 66 million years ago, when an asteroid collided with Earth, wiping out 75% of earth’s animals, including non-bird dinosaurs. Now, a pangolin is poached every five minutes, making them the most poached mammal on earth, threatened with extinction at the hands of man, and the title of 'the most poached mammal on the planet'.
The curated collection of mainly pangolin-themed artworks and sculptures on this auction, aims to raise funding for the African Pangolin Working Group. Consisting of 19 pieces, these works are by upcoming and established artists and sculptors, who have aligned themselves with this important conservation cause.
There are eight species of pangolins, four in Asia and four in Africa. Currently, the Asian pangolins are listed on the IUCN Red List as Endangered and Critically Endangered – from the over harvesting and use of pangolin scales in Chinese Traditional Medicine. This has resulted in the rampant illegal trade of Africa’s pangolins, which are exported to Vietnam and China, where 60% of the population of China use traditional medicine, and pangolins are considered a powerful cure. Pangolin scales consist of keratin (like fingernails) and their curative powers have never been proved. Pangolins, considered the ‘wise old man’, and ‘the bringer of rain’, by African indigenous cultures, are benign creatures that have no teeth and don’t vocalise, preying on ants and termites – essential for the balance of ecosystems wherever they occur.
The African Pangolin Working Group was established in 2011, as one of the first three non-government organisations worldwide, that had a focus on pangolins exclusively. The African Pangolin Working Group strive towards the conservation and protection of all four African pangolin species by generating knowledge, developing partnerships and creating public awareness and education initiatives. The APWG has a footprint in both practical conservation projects, as well as strategic and landscape level conservation management strategies in South African, Southern Africa, and West Africa. Fundraising through partnerships with significant entities, like Strauss & Co, who have donated their platform for conducting this auction, is vital for the life-saving work of the African Pangolin Working Group and will contribute to significant steps towards saving pangolins now and into the future. Without fast and efficient action, pangolins could be extinct in the wild within 10 years.
About this Item
signed, dated 2022/3, numbered 1/3 and inscribed with the artist's name, the title, the weaver's names Margaret Zulu, Mumzi Mandaudzi and Bahla Mamba, and inscribed 'Woven in the Stephens Tapestry Studio, directed by Marguerite Stephens' on a label attached to the reverse
Notes
It was in 2002 that I had a deeply distressing dream of pangolins, at which time I knew little about this mystical animal. The dream imagery (of what I call ‘a big dream’ ) compelled and informed my first charcoal and pastel drawing in 2014. An internal relationship with pangolins began – that of longing, of empathy and of sadness, which emerged in 2017 as a collage of thousands of pangolin spirits leaving Mother Earth. In 2019 the Pangolin Collage Artwork EXTINCTION: an 84-million-year-old pangolin species’ inspired a collaboration with Marguerite Stephens and the Stephens Tapestry Studio, to weave a tapestry. A year later in 2020 I woke from a ‘guided dream’ of a Pangolin mother running across a landscape carrying her baby on her back. An empathic and hopeful image of REGENERATION merged with the imagery from the founding EXTINCTION Collage Cartoon of 2019.
The Pangolins REGENERATION artwork as a tapestry was completed in 2021 at the Stephens Tapestry Studio with Marguerite Stephens and fourth generation weaver Margaret Zulu. A ‘RED THREAD’ runs through the tapestry and speaks of a bloodline: an 84-million-year-old ancestry on the edge of extinction. Known to be Rainmakers and acknowledged by the Elders, pangolins were the mystical carriers of messages to the Gods and a vital connection between Sky and Earth.
- Marilyn MacDowell