ONE OFF, CIRCLE ART, ALLIANCE FRANCAISE AND MANJANO WINS IN NAIROBI
Matatu by Dennis MuraguuriBy
Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted 7 May 2021)
COVID
protocols have compelled most art centres in Nairobi to either shut down or go
about their business quietly, without attracting much attention.
Yet there have been several outstanding group exhibitions underway in part of April and May that deserve wider recognition. Just one is ongoing, that of ‘Contemporary Reflections’ at One Off Gallery. Meanwhile, the works of the winners and finalists in the Manjano Art Competition were on display until early this week at Alliance Francaise.
Mike Kyalo's Garbage Collectors And the exhibition of 16 Ethiopian artists at Circle Art
Gallery also just came down in Lavington.
Fortunately,
galleries have gotten much better at putting their exhibitions online so one
can still see the artworks from the ‘Addis Contemporary Six Years On’ show at
the Circle Art website. One can also catch a portion of the eight Kenyan
artists’ works in ‘Contemporary Reflections’ at the OneOff website.
Not so with
Manjano which had none of even the winning artworks on the website which is too
bad. I was glad to see the show at Alliance Francaise just before it closed, although
only the more ‘established’ artists were on display, not the category of
students. Artworks by the three winning artists were hung, although there was
no catalogue or indication of who they were (apart from reading every painting’s
caption to figure it out).
Fortunately,
word had already gone round that Eddie Ochieng won the first prize of
Sh150,000, while Benson Gicharu was the first runner up winning Sh75,000 and
the second runner up, Mike Kyalo was awarded Sh37,500.
Dickson Nedia's Black Beauties
There were
many original pieces in Manjano this year, including an installation by Kevo
Stero paying homage to his dear friend and fellow member of Maasai Mbili
Artists Collective, known as Tola. The other installation that stood out
included six colorfully painted papier mache busts of beautiful women by
Dickson Nedia Were. The women all looked like chic young African beauties with
each bust perched on a metal pole as if each was an elegant trophy.
The other exhibition that just came down at Circle Art was a dazzling show curated by Mifta Zeleke who had brought an entirely different selection of artists’ works to Circle six years ago. I can’t compare the two shows. But what I must say is that these works exuded an air of aesthetic confidence, revealed in the artists’ use of color, their bold brush strokes, diverse subject matter, and even their use of various mixed media.
David Thuku's Papercut artOne might
not be surprised to find contemporary Ethiopian art being so advanced, given
the country has a history of religious painting that goes back centuries. Artists
also had government patronage from the time of Menelik in the 19th
century. And with 20th century Ethiopians going abroad and returning
home, the country has had fine art schools since the 1950s.
Personally,
I found the two women artists in the exhibition most appealing. Selome Muleta
painted young women veiled in green leafy curtains while Meron Hailu created
landscapes out of colorful yarns and textiles. But there were many more
stunning works in the show, such as Eyasu Tilayeneh’s ‘Reputations of Color’
and Amare Seifu’s Untitled black and white line game.
Meanwhile,
at One Off Gallery, the eight Kenyans had also been busy during the lockdown,
each delving more deeply into the subjects, styles, and techniques they are
best known for. For instance, Dennis Muraguri is renowned for his matatu
woodcut prints, but the one at One Off has a different face, hue and
monumentality to it. David Thuku’s paper cut paintings have also gotten more
colorful and narrative, while Alan Kioko’s ‘Monday Blues’ are more cartoonish
satiric than I had known him to be.
But I have
to say, the lockdown has given several artists the opportunity to discover more
of their latent creative resources, like Justus Kyalo whose abstract acrylics
on canvas have a muted tonality suggestive of a lovely sunrise and Xavier
Verhoest (a Kenya resident) also created an immortal Baobab tree that feels
timeless and fruitful.
Anthony
Wanjau is the only sculptor in the show, but he doesn’t disappoint with his
classic theme of Mother and child. Wanjohi Maina is still focused on street
venders. But just as the venders are ever changing in their sales items, so
Wanjohi manages to keep up with their newest street promotions, like the sale
of children’s guitars. And Elias Mung’ora, who is one of the rising stars on
the local arts scene (and who recently joined the OneOff clan of artists) also
shared Nairobi street scenes, his most unusual being his diptych portrait of Cattle grazing in the City.
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