MORE WOMEN ARTISTS COMING OUT FROM THE SHADOWS
By
Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted June 13, 2022)
2022 is
shaping up to be the year of Kenyan women artists. For so long, we wondered
where they were, since we knew they were there somewhere. And finally, this
year, they have come forth to reveal some of their finest works.
First came
the troika of Yony Waite, Tabitha wa Thuku, and Theresa Musoke at Circle Art
Gallery.
Then came
Caroline Mbirua, Esther Mukuhi, and Nayia Sitonik at the Karen Blixen Museum,
followed by a show of the same trio at Banana Hill Art Gallery.
And now,
coincidentally with the 30th anniversary celebration of Banana Hill
Gallery is the show entitled “Women’s Touch’ with another triad of brilliant
pioneering Kenyan women artists, Rahab Shine, Eunice Wadu, and Maggie Otieno.
All three
have been working in their respective fields for years. But like so many talented
women, they haven’t aggressive sought the limelight. Instead, Eunice has been
teaching art to children in Naivasha with her illustrious hubby, Sane Wadu.
Rahab has been managing Banana Hill Gallery with hers, the equally important artist-gallerist
Shine Tani. And Maggie has been based in Langata, sculpting mainly in metals
and wood, and occasionally creating massive murals in various railway stations.
It was during
the launch of Nairobi Contemporary Art Institute that Rahab and Eunice got to
chatting about the need for an all-women’s exhibition.
“We talked
about how women are the carriers of culture, yet our role seems to be
forgotten,” Rahab told BDLife shortly after the exhibition opened. “As
of now, we’re committed to claiming our rightful place side by side the men. We
won’t be forgotten anymore,” she added.
Agreeing to
work together for such a women’s show, the two went back to their home studios
and shifted into high gear preparing for their exhibition.
Shortly
thereafter, Maggie Otieno arrived at Banana Hill Gallery with the Dream Kona
Women’s Rika Art Project, and Rahab suggested she join the exhibition since she’s
a veteran female sculptor.
It was
serendipity that got the trio together. But it’s currently working beautifully
on the ground at Banana Hill where there’s room enough for Rahab’s luscious landscapes,
Eunice’s paintings and prints, and Maggie’s scrap-metal sculptures.
At first
glance, one might think that Rahab’s paintings are repetitive since she
frequently sticks with similar hues, with pastel blues matching Kenyan skies, pearl
white for her fluffy white clouds, ochre brown matching the color of volcanic
soil, and touches of yellow like the tips of acacia trees around Naivasha
(renamed ‘Delamere’ in her art).
Maggie Otieno's scrap-metal sculpture
But if you
take a second look, you will see that each painting is distinctive,
deliberately expressive of Rahab’s photographic memory of myriad villages that
have grown up between Banana Hill and Shine’s home village of Kiptanguanyi in
Nakuru.
But even
more interesting than the subtle differences between Rahab’s landscapes is first,
the way she blends those colors into impressionistic fantasy lands filled with
hills, valleys, and homesteads that leave you wondering what goes on inside
them.
Eunice, like
Rahab, has grown up around male painters from whom she’s gained inspiration to
develop her own artistic skills. For Rahab, her evolution has been as an
impressionistic landscape painter. For Eunice, it’s her woodcut prints that
stand out in ‘Women’s Touch’. For whether her prints are of birds, beggars, or
babies with doting mothers, each one clearly reveals her development as a
printmaker having real appeal.
And as for
Maggie, her career as a sculptor took off in the early 2000s after coming under
the influence of Elijah Ogira, one of Kenya’s finest sculptors. Initially, she
worked in wood. But where she’s been a pioneering female is in her work welding
metal scraps and shaping them into remarkable forms of metallic art.
One of her
most stunning welded works in ‘Women’s Touch’ is entitled ‘Comfort’.
“I was asked
by a friend to create a piece that might console someone who had lost a loved
one, so I created ‘Comfort’,” Maggie told BDLife, referring to a sculpture
that reminds me somewhat of sculptures by the renowned Romanian modernist
sculptor, Constantin Brancusi. His name might also come to mind if one sees the
eight tall, slender, and shapely metallic totems that Maggie made specially
after winning a commission to create sculptures for Garden City Mall’s front
lawn. They are all uniquely her own, yet they echo the spirit of that great
master sculptor.
The works of
Maggie, Rahab, and Eunice are playing an essential role in the Gallery’s 30th
anniversary celebrations which began last weekend and runs through to the end of June.
No comments:
Post a Comment