Monday, 3 July 2023
AVNI CHRONICLES KENYAN LIFE IN HER ART
By Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted 7.3..23)
Avni Shah gave herself a serious challenge at the dawn of the COVID pandemic in early 2020.
As if she knew it was going to be a long haul, she decided, rather than lapse into boredom, depression or despair, she would lift up her light on the easel and canvas, and get down to work creating 100 paintings to be completed by the end of the pandemic.
“I knew I wouldn’t do it if I wasn’t consistent and constant in my efforts,” Avni told BDLife on the opening night of her solo exhibition at Village Market entitled ’Beyond the Canvas’.
One could easily see, upon entry into her show last Friday night that she had achieved her goal. But she said she stood corrected after a friend found two more of her paintings, making the complete count 102.
Curating her exhibition with assistance from her fellow artist, Evans Ngure, Avni grouped her paintings according to their content. Several abstract pieces got strewn among almost every topic. Yet she covered so many aspects of Kenya during those three years that her abstract art gets lost amidst the realistic and impressionistic works that she carefully chronicled.
In fact, she covered everything from flowers, the Big Five, and birds of all types to architecture, boats, and Maasai. She also painted wildebeest in migration and old dhows at the Coast.
Speaking to her husband Mayur who seemed just as energized and enthusiastic about her art as his wife, he told BDLife his family loved accompanying her around the country. “I wasn’t surprised to see so many paintings of historic places in her show. We were there with her as she sketched and photographed places like the Old Town in Mombasa and flamingos in Elementaita,” he said.
Avni’s good friend, Maguri Dodhia also shared her thoughts of the exhibition. “Avni’s art makes me feel as if I’m on safari with her. She puts the spirit of the place into her paintings,” she said.
It is true that landscapes and iconic places are important features in her art. Some in watercolor as in her ‘Mombasa Old Town Shoreline’; others are in oil on canvas as in her view of Mount Kenya. But the majority of her works are in acrylics on canvas. Like many artists, she said she likes acrylics because they dry much more quickly than oils.
Avni didn’t start challenging herself to be a fine artist the other day. She initially was inspired to study with the British artist Keith Harrington who gave her the basic skills to set her off on a journey that took her first to study fine art at the JJ School of Art in Mumbai. It’s from there that she received a diploma in Art Education, enabling her to teach all ages in art, from five-year-olds all the way up to students in secondary school and beyond. But today, she is a full-time artist who’s in love with her color palette as works like ‘Mathioya Express’, ‘Street Maize Roasters’, and ‘The Plunge’ of wildebeests during the migration all attest. In fact, many of her works have a luminosity of light that reflects a rainbow prism-like effect. That effect is in part resultant from the many layers of paint that she lays down as she strives to achieve both a deepened texture as well as coloration to her art.
One area of her painting that filled several panels of her show was dedicated to what she calls ‘contemporary art’. It’s in the arena of transportation, the means by which most Kenyans get around town and countryside. Those means include everything from the country bus and big bus matatu to boda boda motorcycles, and ordinary bicycles. There are also plenty of walkers, as for instance, the women on the way to market loaded with babies on their backs and baskets either on their heads or draped over their heads and backs.
Avni is clearly a keen observer of everyday Kenyan life which her art reflects not only from a realistic point of view, but impressionistically and in abstract terms as well. Her paintings have been shown all over Europe and exhibited in Kenya consistently.
It was her guest of honor, the financial analyst, economics columnist, and fellow artist Ritesh Barot who fondly observed the way she “paints with a ferocity which comes with years of experimenting with colors and canvas.” He also described her as “a highly competent, incredibly skilled artist,” a description to which I also concur.
Avni’s exhibition runs until July 10th at Village Market.
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