Tina Benawra with her painting 'Upendo Kazi' at Hotel Intercontinental Nairobi
By Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted 24 September 201)
Creating art
for the visually-impaired sounds like an oxymoron, a contradiction in terms.
Indeed, it sounds like an impossibility.
Yet once you
meet Tina Benawra, the diminutive Kenyan artist who loves painting on large
canvases like the one currently on display in the front lobby of Hotel
Intercontinental, you won’t be surprised to find that very little looks
impossible to her.
Growing up on
the edge of Nairobi’s CBD in Ngara, the only little girl in a ‘hood full of
busy little boys, Tina joined in on all their games, including making toy matatus and cars from Kimbo tins, soda
bottle tops and wires.
“I think
that’s when I acquired my taste for both art and science,” says the former
bio-physicist turned filmmaker turned visual artist whose paintings literally
speak to the visually impaired.
Having grown
up the middle child between two brothers, Tina’s parents were conventional
enough to educate their boys while encouraging their girl to get a job. Tina completed
her A-levels on a scholarship but then went to work as a flight attendant.
That’s how
she got to Basel, Switzerland where she found the Open University enabled her
to study and work simultaneously. It was the sciences that intrigued her most
initially. But after several years, first researching a cure for AIDS, then
shifting into engineering, she realized the sciences alone couldn’t satisfy her
soul. So she went to study film in the UK, now realizing the arts had more
appeal to her over the long haul.
Having
studied film editing and scriptwriting before learning a family member back
home wasn’t well, Tina returned to Kenya in 2015 just in time to participate in
the Machakos Film Festival. But she wasn’t ready to move back to Kenya just yet.
Her home base was still Basel.
It was there
that she began studying the Swiss psychologist CG Jung and the unconscious. “I
found myself buying cans of spray paint and ‘automatically’ creating graffiti
on walls,” she says. Some of her graffiti had a more controlled and realistic
feel to it, but progressively, it’s gotten more surreal and automatic.
Around the
same time, Tina realized her twin loves of art and engineering could go hand in
hand. She’d come back to Kenya to attend her brother’s wedding; and while she
was here, she took a course in welding from a friend in Mlololongo. (She wanted
to weld scrap metal into a water fountain).
It wasn’t
long thereafter that she began meeting Kenyans who shared nearly as broad a
range of interests as she had. Prior to that time, Tina was flying back and
forth between Switzerland and Kenya, and hadn’t settled in sufficiently to see
much of the Nairobi arts scene.
But the
scale was now tipping towards spending more time and doing more with her art in
Kenya. That’s when she met Velma Kiome of the Christian Blind Mission and began
to see how her art could serve as a form of therapy for relieving the disabled
of their sense of isolation and alienation.
When she got
the call to create a painting for the visually impaired, Tina first thought of
texture and the blind literally feeling her paintings. But then she decided to
learn braille, the language of the blind. Now she incorporates a bit of it into
her highly textured artworks.
The one at
Hotel Intercontinental is for the visually impaired in two respects. On the one
hand, it can be felt and read to be appreciated. But it can also be bought
since the funds from its sale will go to CBM, to help build an art centre that
will enable to disabled to both paint and sculpt and get involved in expressing
more of their creative selves.
Tina is
already working on more artworks for the visually-impaired but now she wants to
also incorporate sound into her work, creating more multimedia art.
“I also have
a deep concern for the environment so I hope to create artworks that can educate
young people about the importance of protecting and preserving our environment,”
says this innovative young woman who, for the time being, is happy to be
working from this side of the world.
“I’ve got
several new projects that I’m working on which will keep me busy here for the
time being,” she adds. “So, yes, I guess I’m back, but I’m still on the move.”
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