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・ Adam Lyth
・ Adam M. Brown
・ Adam M. Byrd
・ Adam M. Jarchow
・ Adam M. Robinson, Jr.
・ Adam Mabane
・ Adam MacDonald
・ Adam MacDougall
・ Adam MacDougall (musician)
・ Adam Maciejewski
・ Adam MacKenzie
・ Adam Mackenzie
・ Adam Macklin
・ Adam Macrow
・ Adam Mada
Adam Madebe
・ Adam Maher
・ Adam Mahrburg
・ Adam Maida
・ Adam Mair
・ Adam Maitland
・ Adam Majchrowicz
・ Adam Makowicz
・ Adam Malik
・ Adam Malik (tennis)
・ Adam Malima
・ Adam Mamawala
・ Adam Mania
・ Adam Mansbach
・ Adam Marciniak


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Adam Madebe : ウィキペディア英語版
Adam Madebe
Adam Madebe Born 1954 in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe Lives and Works in Johannesburg.
Adam Madebe has had a long career in the arts and is now widely considered to be Zimbabwe's most famous indigenous sculptor in metal, winning many awards for his works, including the notable President’s Award for Excellence in 1994. His sculptures, which are often life-size or larger, are part of prestigious collections across the world with some of his works such as his Fallen Warrior shown at the British (Museum ), still used as case studies for fine art students in Zimbabwe today. He won a succession of major prizes in national exhibitions and has received commissions for a number of important public sculptures in Zimbabwe, South Africa and Botswana including a monumental set of three workers displayed at Construction House, Harare, completed in (1992 ) and a tribute to miners located at Krugersdorp, completed in 2005. In 2014 his brass sculpture of Mahatma Gandhi was unveiled in (Rustenburg ). The subject of an educational television programme made for Channel (4 ), he is known primarily for his figurative work, but has also achieved great acclaim for his semi-figurative and conceptual work such as 'Hot Seat' (1989)(). This and other works by this artist will be shown at the 1:54 Contemporary African Art Fair in Somerset House in London in October 2015.〔(【引用サイトリンク】website=1-54 Contemporary Art Fair )
== Workshops ==
Adam Madebe participated in the 1989 Pachipamwe II (Workshop ) held at Cyrene Mission outside Bulawayo, Zimbabwe alongside such luminaries as Joram Mariga, Bernard Matemera, Bill Ainslie, Voti Thebe, Sokari Douglas Camp and David Koloane.
He was then invited by the Triangle Arts Trust to attend their annual workshop in Pine Plains, New York State in 1990 and in 1995 attended an International Artists Workshop at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park.

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