By Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted 16 September)
Agnes Waruguru
brings a breath of fresh air to Nairobi’s art scene with her first solo
exhibition entitled ‘Small Things to Consider’ at Circle Art Gallery. Having
opened September 9 and running through October 8, Agnes’ show has the honor of
being Circle Art’s first public opening since the pandemic shut it (and most
everything else) down.
Visitors can
only come by appointment and agree to follow all the safety precautions,
including masks and all the rest. But it is worth making the effort just to see
the way Circle continues to support up-and-coming young artists and appreciate
their various styles of experimentation.
In Agnes’
case, she was trained to be a painter [in Kenya and the US] but chose early on
to break away from the conventional approach of working on primed, stretched
canvas. She prefers cottons, citing the Kenyan lasso or kitenge as the
home-grown inspiration that reveals one of her ‘small things to consider’,
namely her affinity for her heritage and indigenous culture. It was during her
studies in California and Georgia that she realized she wanted her art to celebrate
Kenyan culture and not merely emulate Western traditions and techniques.
And while
she uses some acrylic paints and pastels in her art, Agnes also employs
traditional skills learned from childhood such as stitching, knitting,
embroidery and crocheting. At the same time, she experiments with everything
from charcoal, India ink and colorful dyes to grass! She is also inclined to
work with found objects, particularly the trashed netting that she found both
around Nairobi and in Lamu where she went on a six-week residency in 2019.
Agnes doesn’t
describe herself as an environmental artist. But her affinity with nature is
apparent in much of the semi-abstract artworks in her first solo show.
Consisting of paintings, drawings and a series of mono-prints that she produced
in Lamu, her show reflect a refreshing spontaneity, confidence and freedom which
has resulted in art that is fearlessly unconventional.
For
instance, the moment you step into the gallery (or even check out her show
online), you will see what looks like a clothes-line on which the artist hung
assorted fabrics that could be mistaken for either rags or representative flags.
Their significance is obscure yet evocative.
Much of her
exhibition seems to have been inspired by her time at the Coast. For instance,
it is in the first painting she created after arriving on Lamu island that she not
only reveals her elation at being at the ocean and under a brilliant yellow
sun. It is also in that first work that she felt compelled to paint not simply
with brushes, but also with grasses that surrounded her as she painted in the
open air, in ‘plein air’ style.
That same
sense of joy and spontaneity comes through in much of her work, her paintings being
at once atmospheric and translucent. Her colors are sun-kissed, but slightly
muted as they often blend in what feels like a cross between carnival- and rainbow-hues.
This is because her version of ‘priming’ her cotton consists of sequentially pouring
a mixture of water, acrylic paint and dye over her fabric. After that, she allows
that magical blend to take its time being absorbed and forming its own contours
and organic designs. And then one can see her love of nature coming through in
works like ‘On Paradise, Swamps and other lands’, ‘In reality, dreaming of
palms’ and ‘Luc Rose’.
Agnes’ delicate
mono-prints seem slightly too diminutive to be hung as they are on one of the
gallery’s vast white walls. Nonetheless, the miniature prints that she produced,
using acrylic paints on paper and pressed together with pieces of discarded industrial
mesh, create a fascinating effect. Observing that she used several kinds of netting
in her show, Agnes admits that her distress at seeing the trashed plastic bags
and the metallic industrial mesh, led her to experiment in ingenious ways and
ultimately to produce highly original art.
Meanwhile,
one still has time to get to One Off Art Gallery to see Michael Musyoka’s solo
exhibition entitled ‘Time and Other Constructs II’. The show carries on a
philosophical conversation begun the year before by the artist at Red Hill Art
Gallery where his first ‘Time and Other Constructs’ introduced his time-bound avatars.
Then on
September 26th, the show of Elias Mungora’s newest paintings opens
at One Off.
Finally, don’t
miss Camille Wekesa’s exhibition, ‘Lattices’ at Red Hill Art Gallery through
October 18.
No comments:
Post a Comment