Overview
    Identifiers
    Alternate Site Codes
    DC13/NAMM/0018
    Inventory Number
    3318CD1102
    Site Name
    Nobel Square, Victoria & Alfred Waterfront, Cape Town
    Site Category
    Record Administration
    Author
    Noncedo.Royi
    Last modified
    Thursday, May 2, 2024 - 21:26
    Monuments & Memorials Recordings
    Identifiers
    Inventory Reference
    Recording date
    Recorders
    Primary?
    Off
    Site Recording Admin Comments
    Purpose:
    Classifications
    Monument Type
    Description

    Nobel Square in the Victoria & Alfred Waterfront pays tribute to South Africa's four Nobel Peace Prize Laureates: the late Nkosi Albert Luthuli, Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu, former State President F.W. de Klerk and former President Nelson Mandela, in remembrance of the peace prize that has been awarded to the man that brought freedom in our country
    The larger-than-life bronze sculptures of the four Laureates were created by internationally acclaimed artist Claudette Schreuders, reflecting the ambiquities of the search for an "African" indentity in post-apartheid 21st Century. The fifth sculpture in the square, "Peace and Democracy", created by Noria Mabasa, acknowledges the contribution of women and children to the attainment of peace in South Africa.

    Contains Animal figures?
    No
    Contains Human figures?
    No
    Designer
    Construction Date Comment
    1993,1984 and 1960
    Construction Materials
    BRONZE
    Pedestal Material
    Stone
    Person/Institution Commemorated
    Event Commemorated
    Nobel Peace Prize
    Date Unveiled
    Unveiled Comment
    Mr Ebrahim Rasool
    Inscriptions
    Nobel Square is a public square in the Victoria & Alfred Waterfront neighborhood of Cape Town, South Africa. It opened in December 2005 and includes sculptures of the country's four Nobel Peace Prize winners, Albert Lutuli, Desmond Tutu, F. W. de Klerk, and Nelson Mandela. The square was the brainchild of Ebrahim Rasool, Premier of Western Cape from 2004 to 2008, and his predecessor Marthinus van Schalkwyk. Supported by the government of the Western Cape, the project was launched after consultations with Lutuli's family and the still-living Prize winners, who attended the unveiling with Lutuli's daughter and the Norwegian Ambassador to South Africa. The statues, slightly taller than the four people depicted, are arranged in a semicircle with their backs to Table Mountain. Quotes of each figure are inscribed on the ground in front of them. A fifth sculpture, entitled "Peace and Democracy," represents the role of women and children in the anti-apartheid movement. All five sculptures are bronze and stand on a 386-m² granite surface. A competition invited ten artists from around South Africa to submit proposals, with Claudette Schreuders's entry inspiring the four sculptures of Nobel winners and Noria Mabasa's idea selected for "Peace and Democracy
      Location
      Location
      Mapping
      -33.906559, 18.419714
      Western Cape
      • City of Cape Town
      Directions to Site
      The Hexagon circle street opposite DoRego's Hexagon in Queenstown.
      Access details
      Public
      Media
      Images uploaded directly to Site
      Images uploaded to linked Site Recordings