“Even salt companies, they wouldn’t say salt is just for food anymore,” he said, crouching over his portrait of Obama on his dining room floor.
The 31-year-old applies glue to cloth and then sprinkles table salt to sketch the portrait. Some of the famous faces he has drawn include global icon Nelson Mandela. Often, he’ll chance his luck with passers by.
Maimela – who quit his job at a retail store last year to pursue his craft – said he has loved art since he was a child but could never afford professional training.Getting started on a commissioned piece of work requires a tiny investment of less than 50 US cents for salt and a little extra for glue. He said he can sell a piece for about $30.
Maimela, who also works in pencil, has not been able to get any of his work shown in galleries and relies on the Internet to generate interest in his work.
“Being an artist in total is not easy, because not everyone understand art and then not everyone is willing to buy art. But everyone is willing to buy something that’s provoking to their feelings,” Maimela said. — Reuters
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