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Spate of thefts hits East African art world

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The stolen drawing. It is worth around $12,000, according to the artist’s UK dealer, Ed Cross.  Picture: Frank Whalley

The stolen drawing. It is worth around $12,000, according to the artist’s UK dealer, Ed Cross. Picture: Frank Whalley 

By Frank Whalley  (email the author)
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Posted  Saturday, September 3  2011 at  15:45

Take a long look at the drawing above… it might be your first and last chance to enjoy it.

For the picture — one of the highly regarded Queue Series by Peterson Kamwathi — is the latest work of art to be stolen in a spate of thefts that has dismayed artists, collectors, curators and dealers alike.

One of Africa’s leading young artists, Kamwathi left the drawing for exhibition at Nairobi’s National Museum.

It was snatched, still in its large cardboard carrying tube, before it was even put on the wall.

The theft was last week reported to Interpol by Kamwathi’s UK dealer, Ed Cross, who valued the picture at around $12,000.
He described the 8ft by 4ft drawing as “a masterpiece.”

The picture, in charcoal heightened with white chalk on paper rubbed with red earth, was taken from an upstairs gallery being arranged by guest curator Annabelle Hulbert.

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It was to have been the major attraction of her exhibition Sanctuary: Home, Away, the Common Ground, a collaboration between five Kenyan and five UK artists.

The show was aimed at raising awareness of the work of the Whitewell Metropolitan Sanctuary for Sick Children, in Nyeri.

Hulbert later explained she had placed the work in a corner of the gallery along with other pictures waiting to be hung, no doubt assuming that the museum was itself a place of safety.

Investigation launched

For the museum, Director Idle Farah said the Kamwathi drawing was stolen before the museum was given responsibility for it.

He added that museum staff had launched an investigation to try to find the drawing.

Kamwathi is currently in Switzerland, having won a Paul Klee Residency, and was not available for comment, but Carol Lees, of Nairobi’s One-Off Gallery, who represents him in East Africa, said:

“This is one of the finest works I have seen by Peterson and its theft is an absolute tragedy. From a commercial point of view, collectors would be rushing to acquire such an assured drawing and I could see it being sold on the international market for well over that quoted figure of $12,000.”

Lees added: “It represents a substantial loss for the artist – and for everyone who enjoys fine art.”

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