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.