SEBAWALI GOES SOLO AT NEW ART VENUE, LIFESTYLE
By
Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted August 20, 2021)
Sebawali Sio
had been quietly keeping a secret light deep inside her heart ever since she
joined Loreto Convent Valley Road and saw her first painting by the acclaimed Kenyan
artist, Peter Elungat.
“I thought I
wanted to do something similar to what he does,” says the painter who is
currently holding her first solo exhibition at the new arts venue, LifeStyle.
But for years, Seba wasn’t prepared to pursue a career in the arts.
“I did go to
the State University of New York as a fine arts major,” she says, “but I only
stuck with it for a year and a half. What happened? I guess I got scared,” she
concedes.
Her next
step was to pick up a scholarship and go study International Relations in
Spain. It was another leap of faith to attend Schiller International University
for two years where she got a Bachelor’s degree.
“All that
time I was sketching on the side, but never taking my art seriously,” says Seba
who continued to keep that secret light burning in her heart.
Her good
grades and another scholarship got her into the London School of Economics
where she got a master’s degree in the odd combination of law and accounting.
“I joined a
law firm for a time, but then shifted over to investment banking which is what
I initially did when I finally came back to Kenya.”
Working in
private equity for a time, Seba finally realized she couldn’t keep her heart’s
desire a secret any longer. She had always wanted to be an artist, and at last,
she decided to do what had been in her heart all this time.
On the day
BDLife went to see Sebawali’s first solo show at Lisa Christoffersen’s new art
and culture space, Lifestyle, Seba was almost reverential when she told us that
Elungat had just come to see her show.
Hers is not
the first art exhibition Lisa has had since this stylish, eclectic gallery
opened up just a year ago. “We had a group show featuring Agnew Waruinge, Onyis
Martin, Mary Collis, Coster Ogwang, and Anthony Russell,” Lisa recalls.
But Seba’s
is Lifestyle’s first solo exhibition, an event where more than 50 mixed media
paintings are hanging not just on the first and second floor walls of this
former domestic abode. Seba’s art is also hanging gracefully from several trees
around Lifestyle’s acre compound.
“I painted
these [outdoor pieces] on watercolor paper and then encased them in two plates
of transparent glass,” Seba says, noting they are essentially waterproof since
the frames and the glass are sealed tight.
Entitled
‘Dedication: The Freedom Series’, Seba says she has been working on this series
since early 2020. “But it wasn’t until Lisa encouraged me to have an exhibition
here that I started preparing for this show,” she says.
Focusing on
the theme of women, as were her previous exhibitions held with her fellow
artists at Brush tu Artists Collective, Seba’s art has undergone several subtle
yet significant changes over the last two years.
But now,
most of her portraits have clearly come out from the rainbow array, and we can
see their feminine features clearly defined.
“They are
actually part of a new series I am currently working on,” says Seba who is not
about to rest on her laurels. “It’s called ‘Your mind is like a prism,” she
adds, noting that a prism separates white light into a wide spectrum of colors.
But the
overall theme of this show is freedom, Seba explains as she stands beside her
series of butterflies which have just emerged from their cocoons. They seem
reflective of Seba’s own free spirit and emergence into the light.
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