Lennox Khatili

Joseph Murumbi: A Patron of Afrikan Culture and The Arts

A Patron of Afrikan Culture and The Arts To set out to accumulate a prodigious collection of craft items, jewels, textiles, artworks, documents and pre-colonial books with a team of one would seem the sheerest folly. But if the focus is African material culture and the collector is Joseph Murumbi, then it begins to look […]

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Joel Oswaggo

Joel Oswaggo 1944 – Present Documenting Luo Cultural Heritage: Joel Oswaggo’s Way To state that pre-colonial African traditions are absent from East Afrika’s contemporary manifestation of modernist art is to deny Joel Oswaggo a place in the annals of East Afrikan fine art. Witness the artist, in his interviews with Johanna Agthe, articulating his representation

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Jak Katarikawe

Jak Katarikawe 1940 – 2018 A Self-Taught Effortless Style of Dream-Infused Visual Story-Telling Jak Katarikawe at Gallery Watatu, 2006. Courtesy Margareta Wa Gacheru Jak Karatikawe was every expatriate’s African artist of interest, known for his pastoral storytelling and whimsical erotic compositions on canvas. Dubbed as the Africa’s Chargall for his artworks’ resemblance to Marc Chagall’s

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Elimo Njau

Elimo Njau 1932 – Present Elimo Njau painting outdoors To write about Elimo Njau is to appreciate the vision of Pan Afrikanism (consider for a moment visual art’s role in driving political discourse). The 2006 unveiling of his five legendary murals at the St. James Anglican Cathedral in Kiharu, Murang’a was particularly revealing of the

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John Njenga

John Njenga Kamau aka “Wanyu Brush” 1947 – Present Wanyu Brush Stored at the Journalism Department at California State University, Northridge are 10 paintings created by the legendary artist, John Njenga aka Wanyu Brush. Characterised as paintings that represent the time that he was most prolific, Prof David Blumencrantz from the institution revealed,    “Our

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Sane Wadu

Sane Wadu (Walter Njuguna Mbugua) 1954 – Present The Eloquence of a Self-Developed Visual Style – Invent and Play by Your Own Rules Sane Wadu. Courtesy OnArt Media Internationally, he is hailed as one of East Africa’s Big Three artists of the first-generation along with Jak Karatikawe and Wanyu Brush. Within Nairobi’s art circles of

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