Sometimes I will look for art and sometimes art will find
me. Yesterday was the former (yes I know, I need to write it up) and today was
the latter. I was going to my usual lunch place and the small gallery nearby caught my eye. So I went in to investigate.
The name of the show is ‘Rwanda: A group show by 8contemporary Rwandan artists’ at the Charlie Dutton Gallery. According to the
notes, this is the first occasion that Rwandan art has been shown in the UK . They
continue, saying that 'in the context of the pressures that the country has
faced, the formal teaching of visual art has taken a back seat so it is
extraordinary that artists are working and practising to produce art that
challenges their understood conventions, represents their own expression and
that of their countrymen’.
A long winded way of saying that heartfelt, honest art
flourishes regardless of schools.
A number of works immediately grabbed me and others
made me think. The first was Innocent Nkuruinziza’s Untitled (Stripes and
Circles) which is a striking piece, with paint thickly rendered in bright exuberant
colours in a pattern. It made my eyes dance with the rhythm of the pattern and is
just the thing for warming up a cold grey day.
The other pairing was Tony Cyizanye’s Crowd 1 and Crowd 2 which captivated with its chaotic repetition of colours, representing a churning mass of people. Depending on your disposition this could be the busy moving mass of a market place or perhaps something darker. For me the brightness suggests only positives.
I found the smaller naïve art harder to engage with, which
probably says more about me and my taste rather than anything inherently wrong
with it. Munezero’s House and Wedding Dance have a darkness in them that I
find troubling. There is a menacing quality about the impressionistic
confrontational figure outside his pink and brown house - a direct effect of a
community which has experienced civil war?
The naïve Road by Amini Muhire in particular has a fleeting
quality; a shouting face by the roadside which the artist has captured quickly
as he drove past. What was the figure saying? Why was she running along side
the vehicle? Who was her pale companion? It’s a startling, unsettling piece
which cannot answer any questions.
The piece which made me think most of all was Bruce Niyonkuru’s
Hospital; full beds crammed close together, reddish pink snakelike drips and
an anxious visitor clutching a child sat next to the bed in the centre of the
painting. The lack of precision and perspective gives the picture a noisy chaos,
in contrast to the peaceful faces of the patients. Overall, another interesting
and thought provoking picture.
I’m glad I ignored the hunger pangs and went in to investigate these unusual paintings. It provided an excursion into another world and opened my eyes to artists working in less than ideal conditions, shouting their brilliant ideas out into the world. I’m glad I was there to listen.
Further information on some of the artists here.
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