By
Margaretta wa Gacheru 18.june 2022
There were
good vibrations had by all who had come to Banana Hill Art Gallery last weekend
to celebrate 30 years since the Gallery was founded.
It has risen
out of ashes wrought by feuding artists in a tussle for power and assumed sums
of cash that actually didn’t exist. But isn’t that what wars are often fought over,
namely imagined riches that narcissists believe must belong to themselves, but
in fact, are only delusions in mad men’s mortal minds.
In any case,
the Banana Hill Gallery came into being after the dust settled, and the
children ran away. These were the young men who believed they were entitled to
names and numbers that others had earned but which they felt entitled to as
well.
The one who
founded Banana Hill Art Studio was Shine Tani, a former street acrobat who
learned to paint from an older brother and discovered Watatu Gallery while
doing somersaults in City Centre.
Shine had
the guts to walk into Watatu one day with a few scraps of paper on which he had
made his first marks as an aspiring painter. They were rejected by Ruth
Schaffner, the new owner of Watatu. But as she was interested in meeting more
aspirants, she gave him pens, paint, and a brush for him to go home with.
“After a
year and a half, my first painting sold,” Shine told BDLife a few days
after the Saturday celebrations.
It was after
he had made a few sales and attracted several relatives to follow his lead that
he met Rahab of Lari village, who fell madly for her new artist friend. The two
of them would romantically run away together (she was just 15) and then build
their new home, a tiny house in Banana Hill.
In those
early years, their house turned into a commune where would-be artists came to
learn how to become real-life painters like Shine. Being a generous and humble
man, this patient patriarch had no problem sharing his skills and introducing a
few of them to Mrs Schaffner, the German economist and Los Angeles gallerist
who aimed to ‘invent’ East African art in her own image and likeness.
But as soon
as Shine’s studio gained a bit of attention from the media, donors announced
they might consider giving Shine funds to engage in this social project or that
one.
That is when
the trouble began. Funds in Shine’s pockets were only a rumor, nothing more.
But the youngsters sought it, sight unseen. That is when Shine decided to pull
out of the commotion. Rahab and he would do their own thing and leave the
others to war as they wished.
Thereafter,
the commotion died. So did the artworks as the other young men couldn’t yet
stand on their own. This is when the goats and the sheep got sorted, and the
better half went back to Shine and asked him to start his own gallery. They would
like to join.
And so those
who were disgruntled had no choice. Left alone, they were soon to recall that
the one who had given them their first paint brush was Shine at the Studio.
By then, the
Banana Hill Gallery was born with Shine the manager and CEO, and Rahab his
Deputy.
And so, it
has been up to now. It was a celebration of them last weekend that brought
together in Kenyan artists from all over town. They came from Ngecha and Kuona
Trust, Karen Village and the GoDown, Alliance Francaise, Dust Depot, and Paa ya
Paa. Even the chief curator from Nairobi National Gallery, Lydia Galavu, showed
up to share the good will.
And the day
wouldn’t have been complete without representation from the Sane Wadu
Foundation. Sane and Eunice were among the first to arrive, having come all the
way from Naivasha. And even the new Nairobi Contemporary Art Institute (NCAI) gave
the Gallery a nod.
But the day
was historic not just because it brought so many Kenyan artists together. It
was also the moment when Elimo Njau and Shine Tani met.
“I’ve never
been to Banana Hill Gallery before,” confessed Elimo, 89. He also didn’t know
how much he had inspired Shine and so many other Kenyan artists who respected
Elimo for being among the first Africans to co-found an art gallery. Paa ya Paa
was started in 1965 by six men and women, among them Jonathan Kariara, Terry
Hirst and Elimo. Shine was only the second African to start an art gallery of his
own.
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