MAKERS | AFRICA | GABON | SCULPTURE
Vincent Moukagni-Boukinda | Sculptor

Self-taught Gabonese sculptor Vincent Moukagni-Boukinda has spent over 30 years carving Mbigou stone into female figures poised between nature and human form. Deeply rooted in Gabon, his work embodies material memory, tradition, and a contemporary national artistic and historical identity.
In Libreville, behind a low garden wall in Awendjé, Vincent Moukagni-Boukinda, known to many simply as “Skeety,” works among slabs of pierre de Mbigou, Gabon’s most symbolic stone. For more than three decades, Skeety has been carving this soft local steatite into polished figures that have come to represent a distinctive facet of Gabonese identity.
Born in 1958, Skeety is entirely self-taught. He discovered his gift young, first sketching, then carving wood before finding his medium in Mbigou stone, a material that has been quarried for generations in the forests of southern Gabon. His preferred subject is the Gabonese woman: strong, serene, emerging in bas-relief from the rough face of the rock. It is this technique, leaving part of the raw stone untouched, that gives his sculptures their signature sense of balance between natural force and human form.

During the ’80s and ’90s, Skeety’s work gained local attention through exhibitions in Libreville and Port-Gentil. By the early 2000s, he was being called le maître de la Pierre de Mbigou, the master of Mbigou stone, by national media.
He has produced commissioned works for Gabonese institutions, including large sculptures installed at hospitals in Libreville and Port-Gentil, and his work has even appeared on the cover of Gabon’s national school history textbook.
Skeety’s connection to Gabon’s political history is significant. During the presidency of Omar Bongo, whose government promoted cultural pride as part of its national image, Skeety’s art was widely showcased as a point of heritage. The country’s largest bank once used his sculptures in its official calendar.
The full interview appears in the new issue of the magazine: Cabana Issue 25.
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Words and Images by Harrison Thane