Magazine

Renaissance reborn

Share Bookmark Print Email
Email this article to a friend

Submit Cancel
Rating
Blue Mountains by Camille Wekesa

Blue Mountains by Camille Wekesa 

By FRANK WHALLEY  (email the author)
Email this article to a friend

Submit Cancel


Posted  Monday, November 9  2009 at  00:00

This, the most loosely painted of all the works on show, gave off a sense of heat and the dry tang of vegetation.

Oddly enough in the smaller higher key, paintings that start the show (each around 14cm by 18cm) the artist’s obsession with detail appears almost finicky.

Because the scenes are slight — a tree, a hut, a field — one becomes more interested in the How than the What.

They are charming but somewhat stiff and artificial compared with the larger paintings, in which that same attention to detail is subsumed, quite literally, by the bigger picture — it becomes subservient to the whole.

Far from home, Wekesa learnt her craft in Italy almost by accident.

She had made friends with some Italians while a pupil at the cosmopolitan Hillcrest School in Nairobi and that was enough to tip her towards the art conservatories of Rome, Florence and Milan.

Share This Story
Share

It is not a decision she regrets.

As well as being exposed at first hand to some of the world’s finest art, and the architectural glories of the European Renaissance, she also enjoyed some of the country’s superb food.

“We had a Sicilian cook and I loved her pastas and soups. Sicilian cooking is richer and they use more oil in their cooking than in the north,” she told me.

But even while tucking in to these hearty meals, Wekesa did not forget she was an African woman.

On the contrary, a part of her studies focused on the history, development and styles of tribal art.

Indeed, for one corporate client, Coca Cola, she organised the purchase and documentation of more than 180 paintings and sculptures, including tribal pieces.

In Italy she learnt about mural painting, with some fine examples to hand – the Sistine Chapel by Michelangelo in Rome, and Leonardo’s Last Supper in a convent in Milan — to name but two.

It is as a muralist that Wekesa first became known.

Two notable commissions included a boardroom wall at the Coca Cola Africa headquarters, in the UK, where she painted sand dunes, and the ranch house of the Wildensteins in Nanyuki.

« Previous Page 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 Next Page »

Add a comment (0 comments so far)

.

IN PICTURES: Egyptians protest military rule

Pope Benedict XVI blesses children at St. Gall Seminary in Ouidah on November 19, 2011. Pope Benedict XVI arrived in Benin on November 18, marking his second visit to Africa in a heartland of voodoo and warning against "unconditional submission" to the laws of the market and finance.    AFP PHOTO /VINCENZO PINTO

IN PICTURES: Pope Benedict XVI in Benin

For the first time in over three years, Somalis venture out to their beaches November 19, 2011showing a new sense of security since the militant group al-Shabaab, aligned with al-Qaeda, retreated from Mogadishu in August. Photo/XINHUA

IN PICTURES: Somalis return to beaches

Somali Prime Minister Abdiweli Mohamed Ali, talks to a famine victim at Mogadishu's largest camp on November 19, 2011. Photo/XINHUA

IN PICTURES: Somali PM visits largest IDP camp