By
Margaretta wa Gacheru (3 December 2018)
Peterson Kamwathi
is a mixed media metaphysician who mines his heart and imagination to create
art that can both please and perplex.
Kamwathi is
also a modern-day master whose current exhibition, entitled ‘Ebb and Flow’ at
One Off Gallery reflects a continuity in his soulful creative process.
For while he
admits his current works are deeply self-reflective, (implying he creates to
sort out his soul using pastels, charcoal and spray paint), he also
interrogates larger socio-global issues in his art.
His empathy
for migrants, refugees and outsiders generally is reflected in most of his
current works. The one exception perhaps is the most colorful painting in the
show entitled ‘Good Neighbors’. It’s the one that greets you as you enter One
Off’s former stable which Carol Lees’ wisely converted to stretch out her
exhibition space and allow for more natural light to filter through.
But even
then, Kamwathi’s colors are segmented into eight irregular shapes, each one
edged with silhouettes of men, with each of those men having his own
distinctive form and stance. One might easily assume that every color on his
paper (not canvas) represents a migrant community that sticks together just as
the Central American asylum seekers walking to the US border stuck together in
their so-called caravan.
One thing
you can be sure about Kamwathi is that every line, stroke and hue carries with
it some symbolic significance. The symbolism is part of the enduring charm of
his art and partly what must have intrigued the curator of African art at the venerable
British Museum in London enough to buy Kamwathi’s art in order to exhibit it prominently
in the Museum.
Kamwathi is
the only contemporary Kenyan artist to be part of the British Museum’s
permanent collection which is something of a ‘big deal.’ It might also suggest
that fame and fortune could have easily gone to the artist’s head. But no way.
Kamwathi remains the quiet gentleman who has no airs, attitudes or arrogant
ways of relating publicly or privately.
The beauty of
his symbolism is that although his symbols might initially seem obscure, once
his imagery is understood one can appreciate how deeply the artist interrogates
his environment, including its politics, economics, societal and cultural
features. His art is infused with political messages which can be received
subliminally as well as explicitly.
But like so
many wise social commentators in Kenya, Kamwathi’s social comments are covert;
they’re concealed in his charcoal drawings. It was true when he drew charging
bulls in the 2000s during the days when politics were fraught; the artist
practically foresaw the enflamed emotions that would break out after the 2007
elections.
In his
current show, Kamwathi’s compassion for migrants and refugees is apparent in
the one diptych he’s included. Entitled ‘The Journey. The Destination’, the
artist again uses silhouettes of men in motion. Many of them intersect, others
are in close proximity. But again they are united in one irregular oval shape, suggesting
they are all taking part in ‘the journey’. The enigma is to figure out where’s ‘the
destination’? Yet here is where you find the metaphysician in Kamwathi coming
out.
It would
seem that the journey and the destination are one, and the one is the process
of movement. In this mixed media collage, Kamwathi has cut out his men from
maps which one can see if you look closely.
The maps
were of the Mediterranean and its environs, he told Business Daily on the day his show opened. In earlier times, new maps
were normally drawn preceding imperial journeys which historically led to
imperial conquests and colonizing, Kamwathi explained. So again, the deeper
meaning of his symbols are cryptic initially, but once one has a clue, his
artworks have a larger, more profound significance.
There is one
other ‘Untitled’ work in his show which also reflects the concept of the unified
journey and destination. One man is perched on the pinnacle of a rooftop,
apparently running towards a giant cloudy swarm of still more miniature men.
What’s happening here? Where’s this man going? The response comes from Kamwathi
the metaphysician who suggests that swarm of beings represent the man’s past
and future combined. And it’s all in his mind.
Finally, one
clear sign that Kamwathi is keen to see his fellow Kenyans come along with him
on his artistic journey is the way he chose to share his gallery space with artists
Victor Mwangi, Martin Musyoka and David Mucai, his former Kenyatta University
classmates.
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