Lupita by Bankslave
By
Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted 3 August 2018)
Graffiti art
is changing the way Kenyans think and view the visual arts. It’s also changing
the way they look at walls, be they walls outside Muthurwa Market, walls
scattered all around Eastlands, from Jericho and Eastleigh to Kibera and
Kariobangi, or even wall that individuals commission to have painted by
graffiti artists in and outside their private homes.
Perhaps the
most notable event that confirms the arrival of graffiti art as the new visual aesthetic
appreciated especially by a younger generation of Kenyans is the recent art
exhibition at the Nairobi National Museum.
By BSQ
But it wasn’t
just that the exhibition by the popular trio team of graffiti artists best
known as BSQ was given the entire Creativity Gallery to exhibit their artwork.
It wasn’t even that the show seemed to suggest the art form most often equated
in the West with vandalism and defacing of public or private property now had
gained a sort of respectability in Kenya.
What was
more significant was the large audience of youth, most of whom had never been
inside the National Museum before (except perhaps during a primary school bus
tour), who appeared at the exhibition. The opening day of the show, the Museum
curator, Lydia Galavu, had provided a huge sheet of hessian cloth to cover one
section of the Gallery wall specifically for the youth to also try their hand
at creating graffiti. And this they did in droves. Which is one reason why I am
suggesting that graffiti art is offering Kenyan youth a whole new way of
understanding visual art. Indeed, it’s apparently becoming the aesthetic they
can most easily relate to.
BSQ with Creativity Gallery curator Lydia Galavu at Nairobi National Museum at BSQ's exhibition
Another
recent exhibition held in Nairobi also seems to reflect that same insight, that
Kenyan youth who may not have felt any connection with the visual arts before (especially
since the subject was removed from the national syllabus) now feel fully
identified with graffiti.
It was
several months after the National Museum show, at the Alliance Francaise in the
CBD. This exhibition sought to integrate reggae music, spoken word poetry and
graffiti art in one show. The opening night was packed to overflowing with
young people who clearly felt at ease with their senses being bombarded with
bright colors, blaring rap music and rasta-men blending in as if they were an
integral part of the sights and sounds.
By Eljah Mutua
But these
are not the first places where graffiti art has played a positive rather than
transgressive role on the Nairobi youth scene. In fact, it was the British
Council in the first years of the new Millennium who invited Kenyan youth to come
to their car park and paint preferably in a graffiti style. The event was
called WAPI! And it didn’t last that long but it was long enough to initiate
any number of young aspiring artists into the scene where painting walls with
powerful colors and creative ideas was not just acceptable but highly
encouraged.By Eljah Mutua
Among the
young artists who came out of WAPI! were mostly guys. The few girls who had
made their way there didn’t follow up apparently. It would take several years
before we would see young Kenyan women like Joan Otieno, Chela, and Sebawali
Sio come on the scene and allow themselves to be known as not only graffiti
artists but artists who worked in recyclable and ‘junk’ art.
As for the
young men who made friends during WAPI! were guys who quickly got nick-names.
There was Bank Slave, Swift, Uhuru B, Smokey and many more. The four of them
started creating graffiti art right away. They seemed to spray-paint everywhere
they could find a wall or slab of cement that hadn’t been branded by Safaricom
or Fresha milk or Omo soap. They were also quite irreverent given that there
were some churches whose walls got spray painted as well.
Swift Elegwa spray-painting the old Kenya railway car which is now BSQ's studio
The venue
that took up the slack once the British Council closed WAPI! was The GoDown Art
Centre. Like the BC, they encouraged graffiti artists to get to work, but not
just to paint any abstract idea or design, but rather to paint iconic figures
from African and African American history and culture.
That is how
Lupita Nyong’o got to be painted by Bank Slave on the front entrance of The
GoDown. It is also how Miriam Makeba, Michael Jackson, Barack Obama and many
other icons got there as well.
The GoDown
also had a hand in organizing one of the first Graffiti workshops held at the
Kenya Cultural Centre and run by Uhuru ‘B’ Brown. And like the graffiti that
continues to cover the walls at the GoDown, the paint that was sprayed on the
wall separating KCC (formerly owned by the British Council) from the University
of Nairobi is still there.
Next Gen graffiti by Swift Elegwa
Since then,
one of the most revolutionary graffiti murals to be painted in Nairobi was on
Mwindi Mbingu Street in the dead of night by four graffiti artists who were
advised at the time not to let their identities be known. Their advisor was the
activist Boniface Mwangi who was probably right in believing that the foursome
could get in serious trouble for spray-painting their intended imagery in so
strategic a location as the entire wall situated right next door to Nairobi
City Market and kitty-corner from the popular Tusky’s Chap Chap grocery store.
The times
were ripe for political unrest since it was a few months before the 2013
General Election for President of Kenya. The country had not yet recovered from
the Post-Election Violence of 2007-2008 so the artists’ plan to paint a Vulture
version of corruption in Kenya could have destabilized the country (it was
feared) more than it was already feeling.
By Swift
So Bank
Slave, Swift, Smokey and Uhuru B agreed to remain anonymous, even when the
international media came to film and photograph the event as well as the
aftermath of the graffiti mural-making. Mwangi had agreed to be the Fall Guy,
but nobody seem to know that he’d also be the one to claim all the credit for
creating the graffiti.
None of the
artists have subsequently complained publicly that they were overlooked or
neglected for their creative genius. Nor was much made about the fact that
neither the Kenya government nor the politicians made a stink about the mural. They
all seemed to ignore it and several months later, the Asian owner of that wall
painted over the mural and constructed a new building just there. So only the
photos, films, international news stories and memories remain of that historic
graffiti mural.
But graffiti
art, which is sometimes known as Street Art, continues to flourish. Virtually
all those graffiti artists have had opportunities to travel abroad and attend
workshops and artist residencies elsewhere in the world. Many have become
globetrotters since graffiti is indeed an international phenomenon. So much so
that a team of German artists came to Kenya several years back and conducted a
graffiti workshop with local artists even as they spray-painted interiors of
the Village Market with graffiti art which is still there.
One venue
where graffiti art has been warmly welcomed in recent times is Uhuru Garden. It’s
specifically where the NGO, The Trust for Indigenous Culture and Health
(TICAH), has carved out a niche called Dream Kona and invited graffiti artists
and aspiring ones to come and paint all day on the 8 foot tall wall
specifically built for such occasions. BSQ have been the most consistent
graffiti artists on that scene, and their emblematic style is visible in every
edition of the mural-making that TICAH regularly conducts.
“BSQ stands
for Bomb Squad,” says Brian Masale (Msale), one of the three members of
BSQ. The other two are Bebuto Thufu and
Kaymist (Ken Otieno). The three artists had met at Dust Depo Studio which was
established by Patrick Mukabi, one of Kenya’s leading mentors of young aspiring
visual artists. It was Patrick in fact who organized the first and second
edition of ‘Nairobi Street Diaries’ which were spray-painted along the very
long wall of the Railway Museum.
Latest Dream Kona graffiti mural at Uhuru Garden
The one great misfortune about graffiti art is that it may never be recognized at world-class art specifically because it usually follows the same fate as the Vulture mural that briefly occupied the minds and hearts of many Kenyans.
The one great misfortune about graffiti art is that it may never be recognized at world-class art specifically because it usually follows the same fate as the Vulture mural that briefly occupied the minds and hearts of many Kenyans.
But whether
graffiti art is short-lived or indelible like the murals and portraits painted
at the GoDown, it’s unlikely that graffiti is soon going to lose its appeal to
young Kenyans. What’s more, graffiti is likely to continue bringing Kenyans
around to a greater appreciation of the visual arts and the beauty and artistic
expression that they have the capacity to create themselves.
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