AN UNPRECEDENTED EXHIBITION AT ONE OFF GALLERY
By Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted August 22, 2017)
Nudes are
what people look at every day – in the mirror, in the shower and occasionally
when they go to bed.
So
inherently there’s nothing lewd or distasteful about the nude. Indeed, many
artists throughout history have appreciated the beauty of the human form and
represented it in paintings, sculptures, motion pictures and even in great
literature.
Which is why
no one needed to miss the stunning group exhibition on The Nude that just closed
at One Off Gallery.
Featuring a
wide range of works by some of Kenya’s most accomplished artists, the nudes
range from being realistic and quite explicit to being semi-abstract, satirical
and beautifully sensitive as well.
For
instance, the sketched drawings by Timothy Brooke are evocative yet discrete
and gracefully rendered while those of Ehoodi Kichapi are bold and broad-stroked;
his women seemed almost militant, aggressive and practically ferocious.
Michael
Soi’s nudes seem solicitous, yet their presence in his painting says as much
about sexual double standards in Kenya as it does about the hypocrisy of those
who preach moral rectitude while simultaneously indulging their lustful
appetites.
In contrast,
it’s Patrick Mukabi’s nudes who seem most proud of their fully-featured fleshy
bodies. Their gaze is direct and unashamed. And unlike nearly all the other
nudes in this fascinating show, Patrick’s women seem unconcerned about being
represented for who and what they are, a plus-size that runs counter to the
current Western standards of what constitutes a beautiful (read ‘sleek and
slender’) body.
So while Patrick’s
women are presented in forward frontal poses, unlike most of the other nudes
represented in the One Off show, there is one exception. It’s also the only set
of male nudes on display and they are by Mercy Kagia, a relatively new face on
the ebullient Kenyan arts scene.
Mercy’s men
seem to being looking at us eye to eye. And whether that’s because men are more
confident about their bodies and less modest, Mercy’s drawings are refreshing
precisely because most male artists seem only to be inspired by the female
form, and most female artists apparently have other preoccupations besides the
male nude.
In any case,
most of the portraits of nudes in One Off’s show are rare and wonderful. I
believe they are also setting a precedent since I can’t recall Nairobi ever
having a group exhibition made up of all nudes ever before.
Of course,
we have seen Soi’s, Mukabi’s and Brooke’s nudes in the past, but they have
always been part of larger themed shows.
In fact,
Mukabi has pioneered painting portraits of the male nude which he first exhibited
back in 2008, following the country’s post-election violence. His nudes were
specifically making a statement about man as animal impelled by instincts that led
to the horrors of those troubling and traumatizing times.
The One Off
show is far less political than Mukabi’s, but that makes it no less artful,
effective and aesthetically attractive. Take for instance, Nadia Kisseleva’s
beautiful back-sided nudes which are tasteful yet sensual, gracefully contoured
and delicately colored.
Yet Michael
Soi’s searing social commentary is never far from his portraiture. Often
described as a visual storyteller, his work at One Off (the one I was able to
see) was clearly critiquing the Christian clergy who don’t seem to practice
what they preach.
And again
Mercy Kagia’s portraits of male nudes implicitly convey a feminist fearlessness
that reveals her willingness to challenge social conventions. Coincidentally,
she is the only female artist whose works appear in The Nude. Why this is so is
the subject for further research and discussion.
In the
meantime, as of tomorrow, One Off will host an exhibition of paintings by
Olivia Pendergast entitled Kenyan Atmospherics.
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