By
Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted 13 November 2018)
Like so many
Kenyan artists, Eric ‘Stickky’ Muriiuki was ‘supposed’ to become something
other than an artist. Maybe a doctor or an engineer or it even a lawyer.
But from the
look of his current one-man exhibition at Nairobi National Museum’s Creativity
Gallery, it appears that Stickky is stuck on the visual arts.
Last
Saturday, he gave an ‘Artist Talk’ in the Gallery and shared a bit of his
history, his style of painting and some of the reasons for him creating art as
he does.
“I admit I
have a fetish for shoes,” Stickky told a crowd who had gathering in the gallery
specifically to listen to his views on art. “I grew up in the 1990s when shoes
were very important,” he adds, recalling the way he wore shoes back then. But
now he paints them.
“I started
out by painting shoes,” said Stickky who literally painted plain white canvas
tennis shoes with beautiful designs and colorful patterns. None of them were in
the show, probably because he sold most of them, after his friends recognized
that his shoes were works of art.
What he did
have in the exhibition, which he entitled “Watu, Viatu na Mavazi” were
paintings of shoes. One was an antique shoe (a leather boot actually) which
he’d retrieved from somewhere. It had special significance to him such that it
could’ve been called ‘Portrait of an Old Shoe’. Instead, he named it ‘Kiatu
changu’.
But Stickky
has branched out since that first phase of his artistic career. He attributes
that growth to his working closely with Patrick Mukabi at the Dust Depo Art
Studio, next to the Railway Museum. Patrick has a way of mentoring and
inspiring young artists which compels them to grow. Plus he puts his mentees
(of which Stickky was one) to work helping him teach children’s art at places
like The Hub, Dusit D2 Hotel and any number of other venues.
In this
show, Stickky has included paintings of other mitumba (second hand) items, such as sweaters and denim jackets and
even a shawl reminiscent of his grandmother’s kanga which he says she used to
drape around her legs to keep her warm in evenings when he was growing up in
Nyeri.
But it isn’t
only the variety of found vestments that reveal Stickky’s artistic development.
It’s also the way he’s able to create a three-dimensional effect out of a 2D
jacket. At a distance, that baggy multi-colored jacket looked like it was
practically falling out of his painting.
But
Stickky’s show also has a number of ‘watu’ (people) featured in it. He’s
painted several portraits of pretty women, women he suggests are dream
sweethearts, not actual ones.
The one set
of paintings by the artist that I find most appealing and most reflective of
his ability to capture dynamic action is untitled. But it’s a football match
among boys who are clearly playing to win. The painting is primarily a charcoal
drawing on a long sheet of brown paper. The paper is so long that it nearly
covers one whole gallery wall. And then it seems to spill over onto walls on
either side of the central drawing.
Mukabi’s influence is evident in this powerful work. It’s reminiscent of a long charcoal drawing that the mentor did called ‘The Journey’ which I first saw at Alliance Francaise several years ago. Both paintings reveal people in motion. In Patrick’s case, they were migrants; in Stickky’s they are big boys have fun, striving to control a football and trying to kick it home for a goal.
Mukabi’s influence is evident in this powerful work. It’s reminiscent of a long charcoal drawing that the mentor did called ‘The Journey’ which I first saw at Alliance Francaise several years ago. Both paintings reveal people in motion. In Patrick’s case, they were migrants; in Stickky’s they are big boys have fun, striving to control a football and trying to kick it home for a goal.
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