Soi and Ogonga after hours in
Nairobi’s ‘Gentleman’s Clubs’
Posted July 18, 2012
By margaretta wa gacheru
If Thom Ogonga and Michael Soi
were a comedic team, Ogongo would certainly be the ‘straight man’ and Michael
the loose cannon pushing what’s the socially acceptable to its absolute limit!
But the two are not actors; they
are visual artists who have been buddies since the 1990s when they both began
working at Kuona Trust, first as artists, then as staff.
Only once before their current
exhibition at OneOff Gallery (through July 25) did the two mount a two man
show. But now that they both shifted to a studio at The GoDown, it seems
fitting for them to jointly share their most recent work in an exhibition
ironically entitled “The Gentleman’s Club’!
Both committed to visual story
telling with their palette, acrylic paints and canvas, the two seemingly share
similar subject matter in their art—namely, intimate relations between
consenting adults seen in public spaces.
Yet beyond that basic theme,
their work is strikingly dissimilar, both technically and content-wise. Ogonga
has a talent for blending subtle hues and creating fine-lined elongated forms;
meanwhile Soi works with ‘flat color’ which he uses straight from the can. One
paints moody human beings, the other social commentary taking a broad cast of
characters who he’s personally seen cavorting around Kenya in the night.
Ogonga’s adults are apparently
modest and fully clothed; meanwhile, Soi’s immodest characters seem to practice
the mantra “less is more”—less clothing, less inhibitions and less shame
associated with a public display of their sexual preferences!
But one commonality they share
is their insistence they aren’t simply painting from their imagination. Their
sources of inspiration are the everyday (and night) life in Nairobi’s local bars,
hotels and strip clubs they confess to frequenting occasionally.
“Kenyans are good at passing
judgment on others,” says Soi who has gotten a bit of flak from pious church
people who don’t approve of his night life scenes. “But I merely paint things I
see.”
Adding that information about
local strip clubs and bars are plastered in poster form in many conspicuous
sites of the city, Soi says this side of Nairobi life isn’t really a secret.
But that doesn’t prevent his critics from claiming he paints ‘perverts’ and
calling his art decadent and disturbing.
But the artist doesn’t mind. He
sees himself as more of a visual chronicler of the times than a frivolous
fabricator of sensational urban fiction. His current work at OneOff is part of
his latest body of provocative paintings, including uncensored scenes from Nairobi
night life.
Soi’s previous works have also
been thematic, if not equally thought-provoking, unorthodox and some would say
‘outrageous witty’ and spot-on. One series (of 16) highlighted the ‘Hague
Express’ and was surprisingly prescient in its foreshadowing the fate of the
Ocampo Four many months before the ICC pressed charges. Another was on one of Kenya’s recent
financial fiasco, that of the disappearing millions from the Free Primary Education
Program. So anyone who’d dismiss Soi’s art as either frivolous or far-fetched
needs to see his current show within the larger context of his complete works.
Meanwhile, Ogonga’s art is far
more tame and non-controversial. He’s got no kinky cavorting in his paintings.
Instead, his couples, troikas and lonely solo souls all are fashionable
dresses. But they’re imbued with an air of urban alienation. His characters
look like ‘beautiful people’ apparently involved in a ritualized game of
courting. But there’s a feeling of detachment and lonely isolation in his art
which reveals yet another facet of Nairobi’s night life.
Both Ogonga and Soi’s prices are
far more affordable than some Kenyan artists are currently asking. “I would
rather see my art on people’s walls in their homes than in the galleries,” says
Soi who believes the galleries are important venues of exhibiting Kenyan art. At
the same time, he sells quite a bit of his work on Facebook where he often
features his paintings as works in progress.
So while Thom may look like the
‘straight’ and sober half of their two man team, and Soi seems like the wild
card who’s both provocative and unpredictable, in fact, both artists share
similar social concerns, especially those related to corruption, both political
and personal.
‘The Gentleman’s Club’ aims to
expose some of that corruption as it manifests itself in myriad aspects of
interpersonal affairs. Both artists claim there’s a definite linkage between
the personal and political. Their art challenges their public to examine those
connections and see how ‘impunity’ isn’t only a term to describe the conduct of
politicians. According to Soi, it can apply equally to ordinary Kenyans who
fain respectability but also can be found at odd hours in the ‘gentleman’s
clubs’ that Soi and Ogonga chronicle in their art.
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