KOBO ARTISTS COLLABORATE WITH EMERGING TALENTS
Onyis MartinBy Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted 14 October 2021)
David Thuku
describes Kobo Trust as ‘not a gallery or an artists’ collective, but a space
where interesting young artists are welcome to come and collaborate with us.”
The ‘us’ includes established artists like Thuku, Onyis Martin, Paul Njihia, Nadia Wamunyu, Lemek Sompoika, and Deng Chol who have been based at Kobo Trust for donkey’s years. The ‘interesting young artists’ with whom they have been collaborating in recent times include Onesmus Okamar, Taabu Munyoki, Timothy Ochola, Rasto Cyprian, and ‘guest artist’ Sheila Bayley who was invited to take part in the Open Studio and group Exhibition currently running in the Trust’s vast assembly hall.
Onesmus OkamarAll eleven artists have one or more of their latest creations in the hall until early next month. And while the ‘open studio’ idea was only a day-long event, the hall is just a few steps away from the artists’ studios where you’ll find more artistic works in progress. For what is clear about Kobo artists is that their creativity is an ongoing flow of energy and non-stop ideas.
In the
exhibition hall, it’s Onesmus’s painted ladies that greet you in the foyer.
Wrapped in colorful cloaks, blankets, and scarves, these sweet-looking sisters are,
according to the title, “Solving [problems] together’’. All of Onesmus’ young
women look like feminists in the making, girls likely to stick together through
thick and thin.
Inside the
hall, each artist has their own space where they reveal their contrasting
characters. They all may be painters, but each have his or her individual style,
unique subject of focus, medium of expression, and media mix.
For
instance, Njihia fills one exquisite oil painting with faces of young school
boys. They’re children packed together in a single clan, filled with limitless
energy and apparent enthusiasm for moving as quickly as they can.
Children are
also featured in the paintings by Cyprian Rasto, a gifted young artist who
found his way to Kobo while still in secondary school.
Adults are
also interrogated in many of the remaining works. Their forms are scattered all
over the hall, often as familiar images that have been re-imagined in fresh,
new forms. Possibly the freshest is the cheeky painting of an ‘African
Astronaut’ by Kobo newcomer, Timothy Ochola. In contrast, Thuku’s three figures
remind us of beings he’d introduced in earlier shows, only now they are in new
circumstances. They’re having to cope with COVID protocols and the issue of masks.
Onyis Martin
also modifies images of men who have previously served as his iconic visual
storytellers. Now he’s more focused on faces and flashy suits, as if he’s
embarking on a new visual chapter in his storytelling strategy.
Lemek Sompoika
still has his one-man exhibition of mainly abstract artworks at Red Hill
Gallery. But the one figurative painting in that show sparked so much
attention, it inspired Lemok to create more agile Maasai morans, each leaping
at Kobo to phenomenal aerial heights.
Meanwhile, Nadia’s
focus is naturally more on women than men. But she has modified her black and
white nudes, re-shaping them into intriguingly angular shapes and lines that
rouse more curiosity than self-consciousness. No longer can they be seen as
nudes. Instead, they feel semi-abstract and startling for their newness and their
suggestion that Nadia is also on a new track of artistic discovery.
Rasto
Abstract art
also finds a home at Kobo, first and foremost in the artworks of the Sudan-born
painter Deng Chol. He creates colorful pieces that appear to be complex puzzles
of intersecting lines and hot wires that seem to have special powers of their
own.
Two other
semi-abstract artists in the show are Taabu Munyoki who works closely with
Thuku, experimenting with paper-cuts as well as pen and ink, and guest artist Sheila
Bayley whose dense line drawings create intense focal points that keep one
wondering: what’s inside these hot spots of grid-like designs? Are the doodles
or high-rise living spaces? It’s interesting works either way.
Taabu was a
Kenyatta University fine arts graduate when she was drawn to work with Thuku
whose experimental approach to art had a special appeal for her. It differed
greatly from what she’d been taught at KU and she appreciated that.
That
experimental edge of Thuku pops up in a second phase of his presence in the Kobo
show. This time he’s trying out a new cut-paper technique that he’s shy to talk
about. He simply says he’s still working out how to create negative space in
his art. So his experimental alchemy carries on.
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