Thursday 27 May 2021

MALISA MAKES WAVES ACROSS CONTINENTS

                                                     MALIZA GOES GLOBAL


By Margaretta wa Gacheru (published 28 May 2021)

Coincidentally, Maliza Kiasuwa has two solo exhibitions going on simultaneously, one in London, the other in Washington, DC. Meanwhile, she still has her art at Circle Art Gallery here in Nairobi where the curator of Morton Fine Art Gallery, Amy Morton is giving the Belgian-Congolese artist her first DC solo show from June 2nd to 22nd.



“Amy actually found my work first on Instagram, which led her to Circle Art,” recalls Malisa who has had shows at Circle and Alliance Francaise since she first came to Kenya with her family in early 2013.

Speaking from her farm in Naivasha where she has been fortunate to live through the COVID lockdown amidst the quiet of nature, Malisa says she has pondered many things this past year, everything from the virus of racism to pandemic fears. The result has been a rich outpouring of artworks, 16 of which are in London at her Ancestry exhibition at the Sulger-Buel Gallery, and 21 in the Morton Gallery in DC.

“Both are entitled ‘The Pride of Origin’ but the London show focuses more on our ‘Ancestry’, while the DC exhibition is slightly more abstract,” says the artist.


Both shows have a great deal in common. Both use materials that are either recycled, organic, or handmade like the Washi paper from Japan and the homemade paper that she’s made herself. And both reflect the issue of Identity in ways that compel us to consider how clashing cultures, customs, convictions, and even colors can be reconciled.

“Coming from a mixed background myself, I want my own children to be proud of their ancestry, their identity,” says Malisa who admits she doesn’t classify herself as either/or European or African, since she is both.

Seeing herself as essentially an embodiment of reconciliation, she hopes that by stitching, weaving, and blending contrasting elements together, her art can reveal the beauty of merger.

Yet her two exhibitions are quite different despite their shared theme, use of mixed media, and mutual forms given that most of the works are collages. Nonetheless, she also has several three-dimensional pieces in Washington. They include her kimono-like wall-hanging entitled ‘Imperfections’, made with Washi and handmade papers, gold threads, and assorted stitched fabrics.

Personally, I found the London show both ironic and amusing while her DC one is more cerebral, organic, and abstract. What is marvelous about many of the pieces up at Sulger-Buel until mid-June is the self-mockery of works like ‘The Proud of Origins Collection I and III’. Both pieces feature engraved portraits of her Swiss spouse’s distant relations that she found in a family attic and brought back to Africa like other ‘found objects’ she picks up during her walks around Lake Naivasha and then employs in her art.

It was on top of these 18th century images that Malisa superimposes West African masks. It’s as if she’s making good fun not just with her own people but with European colonial culture that she feels has to embrace or at least accept the reality of African culture, whether they like it or not.

The other evidence that Malisa intends for her art to make a power statement about the equal footing that African and European cultures share is contained in her two self-portraits, one in either show. Both blend black and white fabrics, although in London she weaves in more tweed while in DC she uses more hessian. But both use the same photograph, the artist’s mug shot, looking quite stern. The big difference is the crown worn by this dreadlocked lady on which is her regal logo, Z, short for Zaire, her original African homeland.

One might have expected Queen Z to be in the London exhibition. But after placing African masks (the kind Picasso and Matisse adored) over those European faces, the sensibility of her show might have shifted from being ironic and witty to abusive and easily misunderstood.

The London show actually has several self-portraits of Malisa although they are understated with Africanized ‘crowns’ made of animal skin or plastic fishnet mesh mixed with organic fabrics.

The handmade and the manufactured stand side by side in Malisa’s art. Be it black and white, realistic and abstract, dynastic and libertarian; or even bourgeois and peasant, in Malisa’s world, the time for reconciliation has come, not through wars but through art, imagination, and improvisation.

For her, it’s all about accepting and reconciling our differences since for her, there really is no other way for the world to survive and thrive.

 

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