Summary
- TICAH is best known for its instructive and colourful calendars that its executive director, Mary Ann Burris and her team have produced annually since 2010.
- This year, TICAH’s brought together many of the Kenyan artists who’ve contributed to beautifying the calendar with mosaic artist Eric Manya who has curated their art together with Kenyan material culture from the Museum’s permanent collection.
- Having secured all the necessary permits and papers to utilize the acreage at Uhuru Gardens, Mary Ann said the aim of the whole monumental project is to open up more public space for Kenyans to come enjoy themselves and if they wish, to get involved in the creative process.
The Urembo exhibition and Hekima performances concurrently
running at the Nairobi National Museum through January next year are
just the tip of the iceberg of all that TICAH (Trust for Indigenous
Culture and Health) is doing in Nairobi this holiday season.
TICAH
is best known for its instructive and colourful calendars that its
executive director, Mary Ann Burris and her team have produced annually
since 2010.
But this year, TICAH’s
brought together many of the Kenyan artists who’ve contributed to
beautifying the calendar with mosaic artist Eric Manya who has curated
their art together with Kenyan material culture from the Museum’s
permanent collection. That exhibition plus a series of workshops and art
talks are what constitute the ongoing Urembo show.
Mary
Ann also asked the former director of Kenya Cultural Centre Aghan Odero
to assist with working among indigenous elders and contemporary
storytellers to coordinate in several ceremonies and performances during
Hekima.
But where TICAH has been
putting a major portion of its resources and energies this past year is
into a major public art project based inside Uhuru Gardens on Langata
Road.
Calling it ‘Dream Cona’, the
project received a ‘soft opening‘ this past weekend when a team of
Kenyan artists spent all day covering the 30 feet-long (and nine-feet
tall) wall that TICAH constructed with a blend of colourful images,
symbols and spray-painted graffiti art. The artists were assisted by
students from Brookhouse School who helped paint the wall. They also
took part in art workshops, one run by Kenyan sculptor Morris Foit,
another run by Billy Mutua on linocut printmaking.
Patrick Mukabi painting wall at Dream Cona. PHOTO | MARGARETTA WA GACHERU | NMG
But the substantial part of the
wall mural was created by the team of local artists including Patrick
Mukabi, Mary Ogembo, Nadia Wamunyu, Charles Ngatia, Billy Mutua and BSQ
members Bebetu Thufu and Ken Otieno among others.
“We
call it a soft launch because we don’t care to make a big splash,” said
Mary Ann. “We just want to create more spaces in Nairobi where Kenyans
can come and express themselves freely,” she added.
In
fact, the wall had already been painted once. “We actually intend to
paint it over several more times. But then we’ll take photographs of
each mural and transpose it onto big banners that we’ll keep as part of
our Dream Cona collection,” said Mary Ann as she pointed to the first
banner reflecting the colourful creativity of the first wall mural.
But
the wall is only one structure that TICAH’s constructed on the
acre-square-sized plot at one end of Uhuru Gardens. The other is a good
sized (40 feet by 40 feet) tented performance space that will be used as
everything from a theatre stage to a dance and DJ arena to a site where
workshops and ceremonies can take place.
All Kenyan artists who painted Dream Cona wall. PHOTO | MARGARETTA WA GACHERU | NMG
Over this past weekend it was
used as a storytelling site where the Sigana storytellers performed
throughout Saturday. Music was also provided by the popular band, Kenge
Kenge.
But Dream Cona is not TICAH’s
first foray into Uhuru Gardens. More than a year ago, Mary Ann together
with a number of artists constructed a stone labyrinth they call ‘Mahali
pa Umoja’ which is similar to the ‘Peace Path’ labyrinth that TICAH
built at the Nairobi Museum two years ago with stones from all over
Kenya, including Kisii stone sculptures carved by the esteemed Kenyan
sculptor Elkana Ong’esa.
This time
the labyrinth was conceived with mainly ‘njiru’ building stones while
Eric Manya created a multifaceted mosaic at its centre. But the concept
behind both labyrinths is similar. Both are sites for meditation and for
drawing together peace-making energies from all over Kenya.
“We
have had elders come from all over Kenya this year to bless Mahali pa
Umoja,” said Mary Ann. They have come from the Samburu, Maasai, Turkana,
Giriama, Kamba, Luo, Kikuyu, Kisii, Luhya, and Digo among others. “But
the majority of elders have been Maasai since we feel that historically
this has been their land,” she added.
Having
secured all the necessary permits and papers to utilize the acreage at
Uhuru Gardens, Mary Ann said the aim of the whole monumental project is
to open up more public space for Kenyans to come enjoy themselves and if
they wish, to get involved in the creative process.
Dr Mary Ann Burris, founder of TICAH and Dream Cona. PHOTO | MARGARETTA WA GACHERU | NMG
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