about us
Phansi is pronounced ‘punzi’, meaning ‘below’ or ‘beneath in IsiZulu, after the basement location where it began.
‘Phansi’ is also known as the place beneath, where the ancestral spirits dwell.
The museum was started in 2000 as a small private museum, and has since expanded to host one of the biggest and most
spectacular collections of African arts and crafts in the world.
The collection is held in Roberts House, a fully restored Victorian national monument, in Glenwood, Durban, South Africa.
Three floors of the Victorian mansion are packed with Zulu beadwork, earplugs, wire baskets, milk-pails, beer-pots and fertility
dolls ; Ndebele blankets and ceremonial items, and artefacts from the eastern Cape, Namibia and Kenya.
The most popular exhibit is the life-size marionette room, where thirty life-size puppets are adorned with ceremonial dress
from all over Southern Africa. This collection was exhibited at ABC Home, in Manhattan, New York, over the festive season
2008/2009, to great acclaim.
Museum hostess and tour-guide, Phumzile Nkosi, is a real treasure. Descended from Swazi Royalty,she is the ‘human face’ of the
museum, and is extremely popular with visitors. Tours can last between 20 minutes to an hour, depending on the time-constraints
of the visitor.
The museum hosts cultural workshops and functions. Regular live music evenings provide a platform for local and visiting artists
to showcase original material.
The publishing division, Phansi Publishing, publishes short runs of specialist-interest arts, crafts and cultural literature.
It has for the last 10 years produced an annual calendar which has become an iconic collecters item, adorning the walls of rural
schools and boardrooms alike.
The museum has a partnership with the Amazwi Abesifazane (Voices of Women) memory cloth project, and houses an archive of
over 2000 memory cloths, exhibiting groups of these on a rotating basis.
The BAT Shop has recently relocated from the BAT Centre to the museum, and sells funky original contemporay local crafts.
The museum coffee shop Ikhishi’ serves fabulous light meals and great coffee.
Opening hours: 8am - 4pm Mon- Fri, weekends by appointment.
Entrance fee (includes a museum tour +- 45 minutes long): Adults: R35 Students: R22 Children under 16: R28
(not recommended for children under 12 years)
The Phansi Museum is governed by the Phansi Museum Trust, a registered Non-Profit Organisation.
NPO No: 060/966 Trust Reg No: IT876/07/PMB Audited by Victor Fernandez & Co (pty)ltd Trustees: P.E.Myeni, H.D.Mikula, N.E.Zondi