Tuesday, November 6, 2018

Mourning A Memory A Review

Life is rarely what it seems, and to enter the current exhibition of paintings by Beatrice Wanjiku is to stand both at the entrance to the womb and on the edge of the grave...... 

In fact, the artist shrugs off the dystopian aspects of her paintings not as dread thoughts in the dead of night but simply as reflections of our times and their complexity. Read more here.. 

Tuesday, October 30, 2018

Mourning A Memory

Released in the ending of craving Acrylic/Oil Pastel/inl on canvas 66cm x 99cm 




Death.Love.Time Mixed Media on Watercolour Paper 55cmx76cm 




Death.Love.Time Mixed Media on Watercolour Paper 55cm x76cm

Friday, October 19, 2018

Mourning A Memory (A Review)

About the exhibition By Peterson Kamwathi


Beatrice is a painter. In her works, the possibilities inherent in the medium of painting are obvious. The visual quality of her artworks is comprised of a multitude of very diverse marks. Dripping, stark masking, deep layering, fluid-like gradations, under-drawings, stippling; these, and many more, are all marks and techniques that she wields in the making of her paintings. In her paintings, the seeable qualities of this medium are explicitly revealed; and maybe even celebrated. In her hand, these marks create an impression that can be likened to the swirls in the rivers that break the flow of the currents, trapping and churning the viewer- even if only for a time. And yet in all this frenzy the work is still able to channel us towards encounters within our individual states. 

A precarious awareness now challenges the values that have, in different forms and times steered global societal structures. Our humanity now has to come face to face with the fall out resulting from fragmented systems. This is happening on all fronts of the Social agitation spectrum; MeTooMovement, BlackLivesMatter, UngaRevolution, StopTheseThieves, ArabSpring, BorderFences, Occupy. While this is one of the ways of confronting the dysfunctionality rooted in our Social structures, the intensity of these times is also giving rise to a climate of over-legislation, militarization and intolerance. Artists are not immune to the times. 

The gaze of Beatrice’s work is directed inwards, yet, it also continues on towards the expression of our individual resistance; projecting a semblance of breaking out from the exoskeleton of collective formatting and expectations. Looking at Beatrice’s painting makes me wonder then whether the only spaces left for uninhibited expression in this age might be our inner-scapes. 

One of the phrases that continually comes to mind whenever I look at her paintings is that “There is more than meets the eye”. While that may be true for most works in creative expression, I feel that encountering Beatrice’s paintings becomes an act of looking into the self; baring self, isolated self or maybe even self-looking back. There is a constant oscillation of identities expressed in these paintings, that triggers a state of uneasiness between I - the viewer and Beatrice’s work. As Beatrice puts it “The act of disentangling is an act of re-invention.” And there is some form of brutality involved. The work then has the potential to become an expression of the contortions one has to adopt during this process. 

This is embodied in one of the paintings that has stood out for me in this exhibition “resume your flesh and form v”. In this particular painting, two distinct forms are, to some degree, of half-way enmeshed together. One of the forms is darker and of a denser constitution whereas the other is white - almost phantom-like. There is a pronounced expression of a relationship between them. An association that seems layered under the weight that runs through most human relationships, maybe even those of a more intimate nature. So far, I have not worked out if these forms are engaged in the bond of coupling or some form of violent separation. The ghostly figure in this painting is a departure from the dense screaming or gap jawed form that has periodically featured in Beatrices’ past body of paintings. The torso has for some time been the landscape by which she frames and presents these confrontations. 

In a recent conversation, Beatrice highlighted that she does not perceive the parameters of stretched canvas as being a prison for her subjects but rather as the window or viewfinder through which we gain a glimpse into a fraction of her subjects’ existence. Fundamentally we get acquainted with only that which is revealed by the artist. The rest is either left for another day, to our imagination or maybe it holds no relevance at that respective time. What more can I ask for? 

One of the challenges in writing this short text is the sense that my thoughts and perspectives are informed by the filters of all the times that I looked at and engaged with her work over the course of that time. I find it difficult to compartmentalize each body of work to its period because the experience of looking at a specific painting or exhibition is also informed all the other artworks that I have seen. 




Thursday, October 11, 2018

Tuesday, August 28, 2018

Living Studio - Lamu Series

Nothing quite like a residency to make one want to take some time off for some RnR. The rigorous critic sessions and studio visits from curators, to production of work and prepping for an open studio. I felt done, exhausted and in need for some well deserved break by taking some time off on an invitation which had been extended to me. Funny how while on break with some time to rejuvenate and rest I also managed to get some work done whilst having some interesting conversations. Such is the life of an artist, when you're doing what you love, it ceases to be work! 


The Living Studio 










Untitled

Monday, June 25, 2018

Artist in Residence

I am currently an Artist in residence at Art OMI in New York. Exploring new work; Playing with the different tones of red, exploring alienation to oneself and deconstructing the form, having truncated bodies the embodiment of humanity



work in Progress 




In Progress 


Resume your flesh and form 

Monday, May 7, 2018

Feedback Art Africa And The Eighties

"Let slip the reins", 2017-18, ( Triptych) 300cm x150cm Acrylic/Mixed Media on Canvas 


Feedback: Art, Africa, and the Eighties looks at the 1980s from both a historical and contemporary perspective, a time at which social change and political unrest was a major reference point also for artistic expression on the African continent. It examines the social, political, and economic realities in Africa of that decade through the creative visions of artists, then and now. Shaped by social uprisings, protests, civil conflicts, coups d'état, famine, and both military and civilian dictatorships, the 1980s marked the beginning of the formation of visions of political independences in Africa. It was also the last decade of the Cold War. Although many African countries tried to avoid taking sides, they became a sort of testing ground for the Western and Eastern blocs to conduct social, political and economical experiments. These experiments caused economic consequences across nations. However, the 1980s were also a time when new radical utopias began to take shape, such as Thomas Sankara’s revolutionary politics in Burkina Faso. In addition, the end of Apartheid in South Africa was finally appearing on the horizon. Thus, the African continent was at once the continent of “no future” and a space for the formulation of new visions - which impacted the post-Cold War times era after 1989.

Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Feedback Art africa and the 1980s

Feedback: Art, Africa, and the Eighties looks at the 1980s from both a historical and contemporary perspective, a time at which social change and political unrest was a major reference point also for artistic expression on the African continent.

Wednesday, February 28, 2018

A Studio Diary

exploring estrangement and reinvention of self 




The Artist at work 




Detail(from triptych)