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Black rhino: bronze, wild olive base. Mike Exelby
Black rhino: bronze, wild olive base. Mike Exelby
Black rhino: bronze, wild olive base. Mike Exelby
Black rhino: bronze, wild olive base. Mike Exelby
Black rhino: bronze, wild olive base. Mike Exelby
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Hluhluwe Sculpture - Limited Edition of 8

Mike Exelby

South Africa

Sculpture, Bronze on Bronze

Size: 11.4 W x 5.9 H x 4.7 D in

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$2,800

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About The Artwork

“Hluhluwe” is the sculpture of a male black rhino; it is bronze on a wild olive base. It is sculpted in the same style and scale as Umfolozi, Mike’s white rhino sculpture (also for sale here). The black rhino (Diceros bicornis), one of the most majestic animals in Africa, is classified as Critically Endangered. Because they are browsers black rhino do not have the same abundant feeding opportunities that their cousin, the white rhino, have and habitation loss as well as poaching are decimating this magnificent species. During the 1980s Mike Exelby worked extensively at Hluhluwe Game Reserve, designing lodges and bush camps scattered around the park. While there he spent many hours observing the park’s rhinos, and inspiration for his Hluhluwe sculpture was drawn from his time and interactions there. Hluhluwe Game Reserve the reserve encompasses the land that was once the hunting grounds of the early Zulu kings, and was proclaimed a park in the late 1800s. Today, it has amalgamated with Umfolozi, and is known at the Hluhluwe-iMfolozi Park, one of South Africa’s greatest wildlife reserves.

Details & Dimensions

Sculpture:Bronze on Bronze

Artist Produced Limited Edition of:8

Size:11.4 W x 5.9 H x 4.7 D in

Shipping & Returns

Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

Born and raised in Zimbabwe, sculptor Mike Exelby cultivated a keen interest in wildlife and the outdoors at an early age. Hiking in the Matopo Hills and classifying skulls in the bowels of the Bulawayo Museum always took precedence over doing school work, and it soon became evident that Mike was destined to work in the natural sciences. In 1969 Mike flew to the USA to begin his studies in wildlife science at Texas A&M University. On his return to Zimbabwe it was back to the bush, but this time under very different circumstances. In 1976 Mike was appointed founder manager of the Wildlife Society’s Umgeni Valley Project in South Africa; it was there that he met and married Carol (Gower-Jackson), and together they have raised three children. After leaving the Wildlife Society in the early 1980s Mike established himself as a sought-after eco-architect, and he has spent the past four decades designing and establishing safari lodges, bush camps, bird hides and homes that are sensitive to the surrounding environment. He has an unusual gift for seeing exquisite potential in nature, and for conceptualising designs and plans that blend effortlessly into a natural setting. It was inevitable that Mike’s talents and interests would lead him to bronze and wildlife sculpture. He is a self-taught sculptor and works from his home in South Africa.

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