Note: While technically this piece qualifies as nepotism I am sick of writing about the election and Uncle Ken is a top bloke who has done a great thing.

Africa Dawning: Uncle Ken with his credenza. Photo: Mark Brake

Furniture is not commonly associated with politics. Bob Geldof did not try to feed the world with a chair.

My Uncle Ken Pfitzner is a gifted Adelaide cabinetmaker who spent a life-changing year of his adolescence travelling through Africa where, among other things, he was memorably attacked by a baboon.

Since then he has led a quieter life creating and restoring amazing pieces of furniture from his shambolic workshop in Edwardstown.

If everyone has an opus magnus in their life, Uncle Ken has just made his – a piece of furniture entitled “Africa Dawning” which when sold will raise $15,000 for child education programs in the impoverished nation of Sudan.

The piece is a credenza – an old Italian word for an elaborate sideboard – and it is a 300-hour labour of love which uses Ken’s carpentry talents as a vehicle for his greater passion, an end to famine and poverty in Africa.

The piece, on display at The Jam Factory in Adelaide’s Morphett St, is an extraordinary combination of timbers, ostrich leather, copper, recovered and distressed spokes from a wooden wagon wheel, wire and beads. It is an amazing piece of furniture in that has a rhythm and vibrancy which is immediately recognisable as belonging to the continent it honours.

Uncle Ken says that he made the piece because he wanted not just to celebrate Africa but to demand action for Sudan, where just 1.9 per cent of children finish primary school and one in every six babies dies before its first birthday.

The Jam Factory exhibition has been organised by the Australian charity Timpir, of which he is a member, “timpir” being a word from the Sudanese Dinka language which means the shoot of a plant, representing the growth of a new Sudan after the horror of civil war and genocide.

“I don’t really want the credenza to be the focus, what I was trying to do with it was to capture the light and the colour and energy of Africa and to use different materials towards that end,” he says.

“But the reason for doing it is what counts and it is about bringing attention to the work of Timpir and the starvation and suffering still going on in Sudan, which many Australians aren’t familiar with.

“I suppose I sound like a bit of an old fart but you go through life doing things and making things and I really wanted to make this piece as a statement for social change and to bring attention and raise funds for the plight of people in this extraordinary country.”

The exhibition finishes on September 5.

9 comments

Show oldest | newest first

    • Chris Mansell says:

      10:23am | 31/08/10

      Well done, Penberthy, you & your uncle Ken. This made a refeshing change from your standard, reactionary, right-wing drivel & yes, I think most of us have had enough of the election & its aftermath - although I hold hope for a new, improved democracy, better connected with the real & immediate needs of this country & the region.
      Timpir is truly a grass-roots organisation & as such it cannot help but be successful. A success in which each of us may choose to become a part.
      Well done, Uncle Ken & more power to nepotism, David Penberthy!!

    • Ripa says:

      03:35am | 30/08/10

      Good on you Penbo, im an enthusiastic woodworker, and your uncles piece gets a 2 thumbs up. marketry? inlay? exotic woods? i want more pictures man more pictures ok? ok? I hope he raises a fortune.

    • Joolz says:

      08:01pm | 29/08/10

      Yes. This is nepotism. But it’s good nepotism and a very welcome break from the perennial question of who will blink first.

      It’s a beautiful piece of work which will do beautiful work and in turn do good work.

    • Steve_of_Cornubia says:

      05:29pm | 29/08/10

      I want one. However, my interior decorator (a.k.a. Mrs Wife) would doubtless veto the idea on the basis that it ‘doesn’t go’ with our decor.

    • Vicki PS says:

      01:35am | 29/08/10

      Well done that man!  Thanks for telling us about your Uncle Ken, Penbo.  What an amazingly beautiful piece of work—and the credenza is pretty good too.

    • stephen says:

      06:57pm | 28/08/10

      May we all be attacked by a baboon.

    • Julie Coker-Godson says:

      06:44pm | 28/08/10

      David, your uncle Ken’s work is a truly beautiful piece of furniture.  Oh how I wish I had the funds to purchase!  I lived in New Guinea for 2 and a half years when my father was posted to the then HMAS Tarangau before it was closed down.  We picked up a lot of very beautiful hand carved crocodiles, masks, grass skirts, belts and shells (8 tea chests of them!).  Those were beautiful times for me.  I love this piece of work and please thank Ken for sharing it with us.  I wish his organisation all the very best for their efforts for the people of Sudan who have had it really tough for more years than I can remember.

    • Ziggy says:

      11:38am | 28/08/10

      Good and noble sentiment and deeds. Wish him well. Africa is a basket case and I despair of how to help solve the problems. I spent much of my life fighting wars in Angola, the Congo,Zaire,Zimbabwe and Rwanda. I became badly depressed by all the horror and lack of any meaningful progress But you just have to keep chiseling away. One small positive step at a time. The more such steps, the more salvation for the future.

    • Jaimes says:

      10:45am | 28/08/10

      Good on you Ken smile

      You’re right when you say that “many Australians aren’t familiar with” suffering and starvation in Sudan ... likewise many other impoverished nations, a large number of them in Africa.

      You’ve created a beautiful piece to raise awareness, and I wish you the best of luck smile

 

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