Monday 28 August 2023

MWACHA MILA, SWAHILI WISDOM INSPIRES FIVE ARTISTS TO CREATE

0126 Mwacha Mila is a Swahili proverb which, loosely translated, means ‘He who leaves his traditions is a slave’. It is also the name of the art exhibition of five young Kenyan artists from Eastlands who got together around the idea of illustrating the concept embedded in the proverb into pre-and post- colonial imagery. Opened last weekend at Nairobi National Museum’s Creativity Gallery, all five were on hand to get their viewers involved in an interactive exercise. “We presented them with a large blank sheet of paper and then invited them to make their mark on that page using oil pastels available to get them involved directly in the creative process. The only condition we gave them was that they ought to first check out the show before they responded to the paintings they have seen,” Joyce Kuria told BDLife a few days after the opening on August 11th. The five artists were all there to introduce themselves to their audience. They were Joyce Kuria, Daisy Buyanzi, and Husna Nyathira as well as Daddo Omutiti and Ebrah Ndungu. “We have known each other for a while, having met at exhibitions and in the streets where one or more of us was making wall murals and graffiti art,” says Joyce who was instrumental in proposing they have an exhibition together.
Four of the five identify themselves as ‘self-taught’ artists with the fifth having studied fine art at Kenyatta University. Ebrah was there briefly but left in less than a year, having felt he was wasting his time there. He had already seen how thriving a Kenyan art world was growing outside Universities’ hallowed halls and wanted to be part of it. Daisy says she studied accounts at USIU and got the degree. But her heart had always been in painting which is how she met Joyce and Husna at the Studio Soko in South B. They have been collaborating ever since.
Husna had studied IT and initially was shifting into digital art when she met Joyce and Daisy. Now they work together, but she also does other things like book illustrations and Virtual Reality work. Daddo started painting later than the rest. But he has moved quickly to create his own unique style and advancing from there. Both he and Ebrah have been influenced and inspired by the trio of graffiti artists, BSQ. Daddo also references Swift 9 as a mentor. Graffiti has clearly influenced all of these artists. But Joyce says science fiction has also seeped into several of her paintings. That is how she painted a cyborg [half human, half machine]. Her cybor initially looks like several other of her men, attired in traditional garbs; but if you look closely, you can see that one has a pair of sunglasses which are really his cyborg insignia. Then, teaming up with Daisy to form the team, Wet Paint, the two have developed their style of blending the traditional with the post-modern in which traditional male figures appear surrounded by images of computer mother boards.
Meanwhile, I’m nor clear how the other three artists align their artistry with the concept, except that all of Daddo’s lovely portraits of women look like they are hot-wired, perhaps to have sci-fi styled means of communicating, telepathically. And both their and Husna’s plants are beautiful. But at the same time, they look like they could have been genetically modified to be food to be lab-grown when the future arrives. Meanwhile, Daisy’s masked men and women still dwell in beautiful leafy green, untamed jungles. Yet again, if you look closely, you will see that her characters, like Ebrah’s and Husna’s, are living in pre-climate change environments. Alternatively, their imagery also has a sort of surrealistic, science fiction-like vibe. With regard to the media used by the five, Ebrah works almost entirely in acrylic paints, used to create bold expressions of faces that feel electrified. Only his mwana wa mumbi uses mixed media. This is in contrast to the others.
Daisy for instance used a mixture of media including kitenge fabric while the Wet Paint duo team works in mixed media, including wooden sticks as in a work like ‘Beyond’ using the sticks to create pre-colonial-like (cotton (nor leather) shields containing faces of post-modern faces of men. And both Husna and Joyce have moments when they paint in water colors, although Joyce blends her water colors with pen and ink to reveal her skill as a draftswoman. In all, Mwacha Mila is an exhibition that shouldn’t be missed.

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