By EVELYN SITUMA, esituma@ke.nationmedia.com
Kioko Kisilu shelters under a hedge on Limuru Road at
the Redhill junction, chiselling away at fresh wood in his left hand.
He is carving a wooden lion.
Two metres away from where he is seated are his displayed
works. Across the road are life-size displays of gazelles, lions and
monkey mouldings made by his business partner, Philip Kaunda.
Every piece of their artwork attracts the eye. “I have always wanted to be creative to attract customers,” Kaunda says.
Kaunda ventured into carvings and moulding in 2008.
“I used to run a power-saw business. People would hire my services
whenever they needed a tree to be felled in their compound. I would then
buy the logs and sell them for firewood but the venture didn’t fetch me
enough money,” he says.
He then came up with the idea of using the logs to
make sculptures to supplement his income. He soon paired up with his
friend Kioko and the pair set up the roadside business.
Kaunda later went to incorporate moulding into his
carving business. He mostly makes animal sculptures and monkeys are
easily his favourite subject because then he can get really creative.
Mouldings
He says he recently sold a monkey moulding to a
client from Washington in the US. The Canadian Embassy has also bought
his work, but he declined to reveal how much he made.
His business depends largely on expatriates but
institutions running different campaigns also favour his animal
sculptures and other moulding since they are thematic. The pair also
makes decorated trees which they hire out to event planners.
Although Kaunda still runs the power-saw business, he says his new artistic venture is much more rewarding financially.
Along the same road is another creative designer,
Ayub Ngugi, who makes amazing giraffe, elephant, eagle and warthog
sculptures, among other animals. Ngugi uses fibre glass, wood and steel,
and his creations are humongous.
“If it’s big and visible, it attracts people from afar especially passers-by,” he explains.
He says his sculptures are ideal for gardens and institutions that want animals which represent the name or company symbols.
“Like for the eagle, someone with a hotel going by
the same name can buy and place it at the entrance or garden as their
symbol.”
Outdoor weather
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