Magazine

Viva Mexico! Miriam Kyambi’s celebration of space and culture

Share Bookmark Print Email
Email this article to a friend

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

Submit Cancel


Posted  Monday, February 8  2010 at  00:00

One by one the women came to sit in front of the mirror and do their make-up.

Some finished quickly; some took longer; all took great care.

And each of them, when finished, gave themselves a sideways look in the mirror, smacking their lips to spread the colour evenly, and checking the overall look beneath lowered lashes.

“That last look is something all women seem to do — I do it myself,” said artist Miriam Syowia Kyambi, who had set up the cosmetics table in Santa Rosa, hugging a mountainside above Mexico City,

Kyambi had invited her neighbours to try out the make-up while she filmed them — and the resulting split-screen video (it lasts nine minutes and is on a loop for continuous showing) can be seen as part of a startling and innovative exhibition that opened at the Kenya National Museum in Nairobi last week.

Kyambi has just returned from a two-month study tour of Mexico, generously sponsored by the Mexican government through its embassy in Nairobi.

Share This Story
Share

The artist, now aged 30 and born and raised in Nairobi, went first to Mexico City where she was taken under the wing of one of the country’s leading painters, Edmundo Aquino.

Kyambi stayed in Santa Rosa, with the city spread out in a haze below, and revelled in the old Spanish colonial architecture, the elegant decay of the crumbling walls and the warmth of the people.

From there she visited Oaxaca (pronounced Wah-haka) and devoted herself to what she calls “a research into identity and the exterior space as it relates to art.”

This exhibition is the result of that search.

Underpinning the show is a series of four linocuts of church cupolas that form its leitmotif.

Curator James Muriuki has massed some 40 of these prints on the wall that welcomes visitors.

It is a neat idea because firstly it proves that Kyambi can draw with economy and force — and therefore immediately win the respect and confidence of visitors — and secondly it prepares them for some of the rather more difficult installations on view.

But first there are a series of studies trapped between perspex sheeting to enjoy.

In these, Kyambi has combined scraps of paper, flakes of dried paint, stucco and other detritus taken from the walls of Santa Rosa, occasionally adding prints from the original four linocuts of the cupolas.

1 | 2 Next Page »

Add a comment (0 comments so far)

.

IN PICTURES: Congo clashes

In a hand-out photograph released by the African Union-United Nations Information Support Team May 2, 2012 outgoing African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) force commander Major General Fred Mugisha (left) prepares to hand over command to his successor, Ugandan Lt. General Andrew Gutti (right) at a ceremony at the mission's headquarters in the Somali capital, Mogadishu. Mugisha had commanded the AU force since early August 2011. Photo/AFP

AMISOM handover

Malawi's late president Bingu wa Mutharika's supporter wears a "Bingu rest in peace" tee-shirt as he stands in front of the Mpumulo wa Bata Mausoleum during his funeral at his Ndata farm residence in the district of Thyolo, southern Malawi, on April 23, 2012. Photo/AFP/Amos Gumulira

Final send off for Mutharika

Sudanese carry an Armed Forces officer as they gather outside the Defence Ministry in the capital Khartoum on April 20, 2012 to celebrate retaking the oil town of Heglig from South Sudanese forces. Border clashes between Sudan and South Sudan escalated last week with waves of air strikes hitting the South, and Juba seizing the north's Heglig oil hub on April 10.  PHOTO/AFP/ASHRAF SHAZLY

Sudan celebrates retaking Heglig