AT 99 NJENGA IS STILL A BUSY MAN
At 99, pioneering Kenyan artist Edward Njenga is a busy man.
He’s been slowed down just a wee bit due to a leg problem that ultimately led
to a portion of it being removed.
But otherwise, Njenga is easily as robust, sharp, and
involved with the art that has occupied his life for many decades as a man half
his age.
Granted he has several artisans who help him carry out some of the more arduous aspects of his work. But his biggest helpers are his grandson, Edward Junior who assists with Ngenga’s online communications, and his lovely wife, Hannah.
Claiming that healthy living, nutritious foods, and Mungu are key factors in his longevity, it’s indisputable that the main force keeping him strong is his dedicated wife of 60 years.
It is Hannah who has seen him through his years in detention
for being deemed a Mau Mau as well as years when he was studying overseas, both
in UK and in Germany. She’s stood with him when they had little up until now
when they have retired comfortably in their Gigiri mansion where Njenga has
both his gallery and workshop-studio.
Today he is world-renowned as a sculptor whose art has been
inspired first and foremost by his mother and grandmother, both of whom were
potters working in clay. Growing up, he used to help his mother prepare her clay.
At the same time, he learned the material’s infinite possibilities. for not
just shaping pots, but also modeling stories about working people whose lives
he encountered every day as a social worker in Eastlands for many years.
It’s those people whose lives of struggle, hardship, and
endurance have provided the main subjects of his carefully crafted sculptures.
Everyone from the mkokoteni handcart driver and street boys digging into
dustbins for food to the sick mothers, babies and beggars are all portrayed in
his three-dimensional sculptures and social scenes.
It is these humble folks who preoccupied Ngenga’s artistry
for decades. What may be even more of a wonder is that the artist had the
foresight at the time not to sell the vast majority of his clay figurines
despite pressure from collectors over the years.
“I always knew I wanted to hold onto my sculptures so they
would remain in the country and so people would know it was I who had made
them,” Njenga told DN recently.
Nonetheless, he plans to have an exhibition of his art later
this year at the Nairobi National Museum. “I had donated several of my
sculptures to the Museum with the understanding I could have an exhibition
there whenever I wanted,” he says.
Nonetheless, not all of his art at the Museum will be made of
clay. In spite of his being best known as a clay master whose biographer,
Lynnette Kariuki even entitled her book on him, ‘Telling it in Clay’, Ngenga’s
upcoming exhibition is bound to cause a shift in public perception of the man
and his art.
For his latest museum exhibition, he plans to present few if
any clay pieces. Instead, his most formidable works will be made from wood, and
especially from giant tree roots.
Njenga doesn’t disclose when his graceful root sculptures
were made, but he does admit the roots were picked up some years back when road
construction was underway and giant trees had to be downed to make room for the
roadways.
“I used to find them laying on the side of the road. Then
their shapes would inspire me to create based on what I could see in them,” he
says. In one instance, Njenga ‘saw’ a
giant dragon; in another a wistful mermaid; and in another, a semi-abstract
being.
These are in radical contrast to the ensemble piece of Mau
Mau detainees that he agreed to sell to a British bidder who was keen to pay
for the installation, including the bullish British colonial ‘overlord’ and
several African homeguards.
These got shipped out of Kenya contrary to Njenga’s original
plan to keep his best works in the country for his own people to appreciate.
But as artists must also put food on the table, Njenga gracefully released his
Mau Mau collection, knowing it will be well cared for by the new owner.
In the meantime, Njenga plans to celebrate his centennial
birthday during his forthcoming show. We look forward to being there with him.
Lovely article. Where is his gallery? I'd love to visit.
ReplyDeleteLovely article. Where is his gallery? I'd love to visit.
ReplyDeleteGreat works even at old age. Very inspirational
ReplyDelete