Mariga was married four times. With his first wife, Doreen, he had a daughter, Mary. His second wife was Philipa, the mother of Owen, Richard and Robin. Anne was his third wife who was the mother of Walter, Daniel, Aaron and Jay. In 1976 Joram married Maud but they had no children. the nascent Shona sculpture movement was slow to gain momentum, partly because of the generally negative attitude in the 1960s and 1970s of local Europeans toward Frank McEwen and the sculptors he encouraged, in what was still a country ruled by a white minority government whose
Unilateral Declaration of Independence in 1965 was seen by the United Nations as racist. According to
Aeneas Chigwedere, a Zimbabwean historian and politician, there were at that time very few educated black Africans who saw any value in what Joram Mariga and others were doing and they did not buy art that reflected their own culture, owing to indoctrination by the white ruling class. The importance of individual artists and their patrons in drawing the new sculpture movement to the attention of a worldwide audience has been discussed by Pat Pearce (a sculptor who lived in Nyanga and who first introduced Mariga to McEwen) and by
Sidney Littlefield Kasfir. Much of Mariga's work includes themes drawn from the culture of the Shona people, and incorporates subject matter taken from nature. He believed that "One should avoid realism, create a large place for the brain and large eyes, because sculptures are beings who must be able to think and see for themselves for eternity". Many of his sculptures were carved in springstone but Joram also used more unusual stones such as leopard rock (a serpentine with green and yellow inclusions), and
lepidolite, in the lilac purple colour available to him. One of the lepidolite sculptures, “Spirit of Zimbabwe” (1989) was displayed at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park in 1990 and the catalogue for the exhibition Besides being a sculptor, Mariga was a teacher, counting among his students John and
Bernard Takawira and
Crispen Chakanyuka, (all his nephews),
Bernard Manyadure,
Kingsley Sambo, and
Moses Masaya. He would also take students from further afield, generally while travelling.
Selected solo or group exhibitions • 1962 New African Talent, National Gallery of Zimbabwe • 1963 New Art from Rhodesia, Commonwealth Arts Festival,
Royal Festival Hall, London • 1972 Shona sculptures of Rhodesia,
ICA Gallery, London • 1989 Whispering the Gospel of Sculpture, National Gallery of Zimbabwe • 1989 Zimbabwe op de Berg, Foundation Beelden op de Berg,
Wageningen, The Netherlands • 1990 Zimbabwe Heritage (National Gallery of Zimbabwe),
Auckland, New Zealand • 1990 Contemporary Stone Carving from Zimbabwe,
Yorkshire Sculpture Park, UK • 1991 The Thirty Five Years,
Chapungu Sculpture Park, Zimbabwe • 1993 Talking Stones II, The Contemporary Fine Art Gallery
Eton, Berkshire, UK • 1994 Joram Mariga: An Exhibition of Recent Sculpture, Chapungu Sculpture Park, Zimbabwe • 2000 Chapungu: Custom and Legend – A Culture in Stone,
Kew Gardens, UK • 2001 Tengenenge Art, Celia Winter-Irving, World Art Foundation, The Netherlands ==Further reading==