By
margaretta wa gacheru (1 November 2018)
Beatrice
Wanjiku is an abstract painter whose art speaks volumes.
It’s only
that hers is a language of color and movement, shape, shades and hues that
reflect her mood of the moment.
Her colors reflect
a vocabulary of feelings, which for the longest time has been dark, the color
of the darkest night. They’ve seemed shaped in shadows suggestive of despair,
be it with the world or the realm of her own psyche or both.
Yet the
darker her works have gotten in the past few years, the more they’ve had appeal
to those who see her art serving as a sort of abstract thermometer measuring the
world’s diminished light, warmth and love.
Personally,
that period of Beatrice’s paintings left me cold, as cold as I felt her art
expressed loss and loneliness and an alienation that apparently is shared by a
myriad of souls who feel starved for simple things like hope and faith and genuine
affection.
Bea’s art is
especially popular in the West where beauty in art is less valued than its
emotional power and depth. Bea’s works do convey intense emotional depth of
feeling. They speak to lonely hearts as well as to visionaries who understand
that she has tapped into a mood that transcends local likes or dislikes. She’s
an African artist who’s got a global vision and voice that resounds the
region’s crying need for retribution and reparations for all that has been stolen
from the continent over centuries.
Walter
Rodney wrote ‘How Europe Underdeveloped Africa’ nearly a half century ago, but
few African artists have produced works that convey as painful a picture as the
Guyanese historian painted in his book. But Beatrice has.
That is, she
has done so up until now when her vision seems to have morphed dramatically. In
her current exhibition at One Off Gallery, Beatrice reveals the side of herself
that I know best, the Bea who is more playful and able to see the irony of
living in the light while dwelling on the dark.
The title of
her current work is ‘Mourning a Memory’, the irony being that the memory to be
mourned is what she is clearly leaving behind, namely that deeply darkened
path. What’s even more ironic is that her works in this show seem almost
celebratory not mournful.
Just take
one of her recent series. It’s called ‘A Fragment of Ourselves Returning’, the
emphasis being on ‘returning’, coming back to a feeling of wholeness. What’s
more, there’s a lightening in her work, both visually and psychologically. The
black is still there but there’s an intermingling with a soft pastel hue. There
is even one in the series that’s flaming red with barely a touch of black. And
at the centre of the visage, that pastel hue veritably glows, lighting up the
entire figure at the heart of the work.
What’s
amazing is that in almost every piece in the exhibition, there seems to be a
central light which might represent a soul, or simply a renewed sense of hope.
It’s even apparent in another one of her recent series, this one entitled
‘Resume your flesh and form’. Bea is still making powerful statements with her
art, only that she’s shifted towards the light over darkness, towards
possibility over despair, and to a sense of renewal that is definitely new.
The other
common denominator in all of her current works at One Off is the feeling of
movement that reflects not just a sense of possibility but of progression.
Indeed, in several pieces her figures actually seem to be waking up. Even the
image of what looks like a child holding onto what could be a blanket (or is it
a sleeping person?), the child seems on the move.
And even
with one work called ‘In want of all things’, where the figure seems to be in
repose, lying flat on his back (or possibly doing a yoga pose, balancing upside
down), the central torso looks alive with brilliant colors churning under the
skin.
If
Beatrice’s previous works have spoken volumes visually, this current show
explains that she’s still got powerful emotions to convey, only now, a darkness
seems to have lifted and she has a different set of psychic concerns. More
hopeful certainly, but then, a work like ‘Aches of Ceaseless Divining’ reveals
that Bea hasn’t stopped exploring new realms, wants and desires. She’s still
passionate about painting, but also about living and finally putting those dark
memories to rest.
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