NEW ART
INSTITUTE OPENING A MILESTONE FOR VISUAL ARTS
By
Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted 23 January 2022)
It’s only
February, but it doesn’t take a prophet to foresee that the most exciting fine
arts event of 2022 just took place late last week when the Nairobi Contemporary
Art Institute (NCAI) had its official three-day opening on the top floor of the
Roslyn Riviera Mall.
There are
many reasons for the excitement that surrounds the opening of NCAI, most
prominent of which is the person behind the initiative, an artist who returns
to Kenya, now world-renowned, literally. Locally, Michael Armitage is a name
that grabbed social media fans’ attention recently when one story disclosed
that he just sold a painting for Sh150 million!
What the story didn’t say is that he didn’t sell the painting. It was sold
at an art auction where the bidding can reach astronomical heights, yet the
artist him or herself often benefits very little in the process. Nonetheless, for
those who don’t believe art can be a serious profession, the story was still illuminating.
Few Kenyans
had seen Armitage’s art except for those who had sought it out online at Artsy
or the White Cube website where the London-based gallery displaces some of his paintings.
We locals had just heard that this Kenya-born artist was doing well overseas, and
wasn’t likely to return home soon.
So, word
that he is the force behind a new Art Institute in Kenya became big news in the
Nairobi art world. BDLife sat down with Armitage a few days after the opening
and found him surprisingly down-to-earth as well as keen to share his vision
for NCAI, which he says is to create a not-for-profit art institution that can
fill the gap between the early iterations of Kenyan art and the current contemporary
art scene.
“We’d like
to fill in that gap,” says Armitage who also hopes NCAI can build a permanent
collection of Kenyan art, something that people like the late Vice President
Joseph Murumbi wanted to see Parliament support back in the 1960s.
“Right now,
we don’t have a [historical] context for viewing Kenyan art. That’s one reason
we decided to feature Sane Wadu, [one of Kenya’s pioneering artists], as our
first major exhibition,” he adds.
Yet Armitage
explains that art exhibitions will only be one aspect of NCAI. “We will also
focus on [art] education, eventually to establish a post-graduate program. But
that is something we are now doing the ground work for.”
His Director
of NCAI, Ayako Bertolli adds, “We are starting small, holding artists’ talks
and possibly running monthly discussions of interest to artists. But we are
still developing those ideas as we grow the Institute.”
NCAI’s
Director of Programs, Rosie Olang Odhiambo adds that initially, NCAI will build
programming around the Sane Wadu exhibition. “In February, Sane will give an
artist’s talk, followed by a Children’s art workshop, comparable to what he
does at his studio in Naivasha. He also might do another workshop on documentation,
since he has been so good at keeping records of his art and art sales.”
The three
capacious galleries that NCAI occupies at the Mall are filled with three fascinating
dimensions of Wadu’s art. Beautifully curated by Mukami Kuria, the first
gallery contains Sane’s earliest paintings, some in water colors, others in
mixed media, and just one in oils. “We believe this was his first oil
painting,” says Armitage who identified 1984 as the year Sane says he began
painting. Yet that date has already been questioned by friends who think he’d
started painting earlier than that.
Works in
this first gallery are a revelation since they are largely figurative and even
reverential, given Sane was quite religious at that time. Yet most of what the
public has seen of his art is reflected in the second gallery, which contains works
from a 30-year period when his art had been influenced by Gallery Watatu’s Ruth
Schaffner. During those years, his painting became more abstract, less
figurative, and sometimes described as surrealistic.
It’s in the
third gallery that one sees Sane the archivist who kept photographs of all his
Watatu shows. These are displayed under glass for protection’s sake. The most
interesting feature of gallery three is Sane’s painted overalls, which he wore
in the late 1970s to Gallery Watatu. They are the clearest sign that Sane
started painting years before 1984.
But NCAI
quotes the artist’s recollection, aiming to build a credible basis for becoming
Kenya’s leading art institution, which we trust it will be. Their first show is
a tour de force!
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