By Margaretta wa Gacheru
Thousands of
children, artists, and other adults flocked to Mukuru Lunga Lunga to attend the
Wajukuu Slum Art Festival over the pre-New Year’s weekend.
The thriving
informal settlement, nestled deep in the heart of Nairobi’s Industrial Area is
where one of Kenya’s most world-renowned artists, Shabu Mwangi, chose to
establish the Wajukuu Art Centre back in 2003.
Shabu wasn’t
working alone. He was with fellow artists Ngugi Waweru and Joseph Weche Waweru
among others who had attended art colleges established all around the slums by
a Catholic nun, Sister Mary.
Initially,
Wajukuu was set up especially for up-and-coming local artists so they could
share their knowledge and experience to grow artistically together. But then,
they found more interest among the neighborhood children who initially were
kept away.
But the
children persisted, and finally Shabu and his crew decided to start the Wajukuu
Art Club for little ones to come draw and paint. Then came the music, dancing,
and even teaching the kids to create their own instruments, some of which
appeared on stage with Art Club kids performing at the Fete.
But that was
only when there was a pause in performances by the scores of other musicians
who came from all around local informal settlements to get up on stage and
entertain the largest audiences ever gathered at Mukuru Lunga Lunga.
When BDLife
arrived on day three of the Fete, we counted at least a thousand mainly
children just as enthusiastic as they must have been when the festival began.
“We left the
musical side of the program to Majeshi, [two rappers] who invited musicians,
dancers, and acrobats to perform at the festival,” says Shabu.
But besides
music and dance, he says there was feasting as a dozen sets of neighborhood
parents helped cook up a storm of chapati and rice served with a mix of
potatoes, green peas, and a bit of meat. Asked how they could feed all those
kids, he simply said it happened, rather like Jesus having five loaves and two
fishes, but somehow, he miraculously was able to feed 5000 men plus women and
children.
“But the
Festival wasn’t only about food and having fun;” says Shabu as he takes a brief
moment to discuss events of the weekend with BDLife. “We also planted trees and
taught children the importance of tree planting to reduce climate change and
save the planet,” he adds.
“We also
showed them how to prepare the soil,” he adds, not mentioning the obvious point
that the soil in their area is mixed with rocks and other debris, so there’s a
lot involved in soil preparation.
The day we
attended the Festival the next act was Warembo Wasanii, the girls collective
started by Joan Otieno to rehabilitate young women and girls off the streets
and into art. “We collect and recycle garbage from the Dandora dump and
transform it into fashionable art,” she says right after escorting a dozen girl
models, ages eight to fifteen, up onto the stage where they showed off their
handmade outfits made from the packaging of everything from Colgate tooth paste
to Ketepa tea.
Warembo’s
fashion show was one more revelation of the creativity tucked away in the
so-called slums that Wajukuu taps. More evidence of it was to be found in
Wajukuu’s new and capacious art centre where there was an exhibition of recent
works a half dozen Wajukuu artists. They included Shabu, Ngugi Wawere and
Joseph Waweru as well as Fresha Njeri, Lazarus Thumbi and Muturi Mutugi.
This was
already the third exhibition curated by Shabu at Wajukuu’s new art centre and
he hopes in future it will become a venue for exhibiting other young Kenyan
artists.
In the
meantime, during the festival, the art centre became a space where children
were invited to come and create graffiti murals on the walls, which was one
more interactive aspect of the Fete the kids enthusiastically embraced.
But where
one could most easily see the success for Wajukuu’s art festival was by just
standing a moment in the middle of the tents, loud speakers booming hip hop
tunes, and seeing limitless white plastic chairs occupied by happy local kids.
From there, one could pick up the children’s infectious enthusiasm instantly.
Even on the
last day of the festivities, the kids are still ebullient, infatuated with the
feeling of their importance. That, of course is a mission of Wajukuu, to nurture
the children and educate them upwards through art.
The Festival
had support from the German Embassy, Goethe Institute, and Documenta another
German arts organization.
\
No comments:
Post a Comment