Magazine

Meet the onion, it’s soft but can make you weep

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 22  2010 at  00:00

Peterson Kamwathi is showing prints; a series of woodcuts plus a couple of aquatints; a wonderfully grainy medium.

He learnt the technique in the UK, during a residency in Bath and London, and they feature two British icons — a pigeon and a postage stamp.

Drawn with a flourish yet retaining a high level of sensitivity, Kamwathi’s pigeons are witty creations, although I have to state (to save my head from being chopped off) that his portrait of Queen Elizabeth on the stamp shows Her Majesty looking uncharacteristically grim.

The woodcuts are even sterner stuff.

They are from a series entitled Nchi Yetu (our country), and those familiar with Kamwathi’s work would be entitled to conclude they offer a polemical view of the state of Kenya.

Each is of a bull, or maybe a cash cow, elegantly drawn, made up of coffins (representing death), barcodes (commerce, possibly plunder), and bank notes (perhaps corruption.)

Share This Story
Share

On one level these prints offer an objective look at common things we see around us; on another, symbols that provide a damning indictment of current affairs.

Other pictures on show include a set of small heads by Richard Kimathi.

Within the stylised faces of the oils, the eyes and mouths have been cut out from magazine photographs; in a group of acrylics the faces have been deliberately dehumanised to look almost like Avatars.

They are not pretty. They are even disturbing. Yet together, oddly compelling.

Frank Whalley runs Lenga Juu, a fine arts and media consultancy based in Nairobi. Email: fwhalley@gmail.com

« Previous Page 1 | 2

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