By
Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted 21 October 2019)
Kioko
Mwitiki didn’t need to set up an art gallery in his name to make himself a
player on the global – leave alone the local art scene.
One of
Kenya’s first scrap-metal sculptors, Kioko started early to create life-size
replicas of Kenyan wildlife and take them everywhere from the JKIA, Berlin,
London and Jos to Copenhagen, San Diego, Missoula, Montana and Tel Aviv.
He might
have become one of those Kenyan artists who is better known abroad than back
home if he hadn’t constructed his own Kioko Mwitiki Art Gallery next door to
Lavington Mall.
Now his
gallery attracts up-and-coming artists like Matt Kayem, whose one-man exhibition
just opened last weekend (running through early December) to come have exhibitions
at his spacious double-decker venue.
Kioko also
attracts aspiring artists of all ages to come and take classes with art
teachers like Teresa Wanjiku who offers one-on-one classes as well as group
sessions upstairs in an atmosphere suffused with artistry by everyone from Kioko
himself and Victor Omondi to Peter Kibunja, Annabel Wanjiku and Shade Kamau.
“I’ve taught
students as young as three and as old as 39,” says Teresa who’s a graduate of Kenyatta
University’s fine arts department.
“We have
lots of professional people come in. Some are retired, others have successful
careers but come in saying they have always loved art but had felt pressured to
become a lawyer or some other professional,” says Kioko. “They admit they feel
there’s a gap in their lives and want it filled with art. That’s how they start
taking art classes with us.”
Teresa Wanjiku with Victor Omondi's painting of Bob Marley
But Kioko says he has met a number of millennial artists who claim they don’t need galleries anymore since they successfully sell their works on Instagram. Meanwhile, there are others who want to rent space in his gallery to hold pop-up exhibitions without necessarily being represented by Kioko or even assisted by his new curator Za’idi Onsango.
But Kioko says he has met a number of millennial artists who claim they don’t need galleries anymore since they successfully sell their works on Instagram. Meanwhile, there are others who want to rent space in his gallery to hold pop-up exhibitions without necessarily being represented by Kioko or even assisted by his new curator Za’idi Onsango.
“We are up
for that as well, since we also meet young artists who sell their works online,
but also want a little space to show their art in our gallery. We are happy to
give it to them.
“We also
don’t mind advising young artists who come in and ask for it,” he says as he
introduces me to Za’idi, who assisted the Ugandan artist Matt Kayem in curating
his current exhibition with Thadde Tewa.
“I really like Matt’s art because I feel his style is unique,” says Za’idi referring both to his way of painting on denim [not canvas] and his style of print-making which is to orchestrate visual settings and then including himself in them.
“I really like Matt’s art because I feel his style is unique,” says Za’idi referring both to his way of painting on denim [not canvas] and his style of print-making which is to orchestrate visual settings and then including himself in them.
Practically
all Kayem’s prints feature himself in self portraits either as a ‘Royal Guard’
holding his spear and sitting on a wooden stool or as a ‘Son of the Sun’
basking in equatorial light or as a ‘Bad Baganda, Good African’.
He’s ‘bad’,
he says because he’s not a typical Baganda. He’s transgressive because he wears
dreadlocks which most don’t, has pierced ears which few have, and in one
self-portrait, he even places his foot atop a branch-full of matoke bananas
which is unthinkable for an upstanding Baganda to do.
Intent on
rejecting ethnic elitism, Kayem’s prints use colorful African textiles (aka Dutch
wax-print fabric) as backdrops. In a sense, they are more like autobiographical
installations in which he designs the visual content; and then photographer
Saidi Stunner ‘shoots’ him in various poses, including one in which he aims to
deconstruct color stereotypes. Called ‘Beyond Melanin’ he stands in a row with
three beautiful young women, each having a slightly different shade of
chocolate brown.
Kayem’s
paintings are less polished but more reflective of his fascination with African
history and African-American culture. Several works feature a mix of historic
and contemporary images. One has an Egyptian pharaoh standing next to Kanye
West, Ghanaian architect David Ajaye and himself! Another has Michael Jackson
in a line with Mohammed Ali, George Washington Carver, Beyonce and himself.
Kayem’s art
is meant to ensure you won’t forget him although his most unforgettable painting
isn’t in this exhibition. It is on his Instagram account. It is a portrait of a
male nude that Za’idi saw and assumes is him.
“His
presence in his artwork gives it an intimacy which I like,” she says, wondering
what would’ve happened if it had been included in the show.
“It might
have shocked some people, but it could have sparked good conversation and
debate.”
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