MASK awards to promote creativity in rural schools
By Margaretta Wa Gacheru
Posted
Thursday, May 29
2014 at
15:44
In Summary
Kenya’s education system needs to change fast to
offer training in creativity and teach youth how to think innovatively
so as to generate new ideas and enterprises of their own.
Drawing a direct line between art, innovation
and entrepreneurship, Dr Manu Chandaria was the perfect guest speaker to
launch the 2014 Mask Awards ceremony.
Only the second set of awards given since Alla
Tkachuk founded her Mobile Arts School in Kenya (MASK) seven years ago.
Dr Chandaria spoke with a passion and sense of urgency that was
refreshing but disturbing at the same time at the ceremony held last
week at the University of Nairobi’s School of Art and Design.
Referring to the “six million” youth who have left
school with no clear career path, he said Kenya’s education system
needed to change fast to offer training in creativity, to teach youth
how to think innovatively in order to generate new ideas and enterprises
of their own.
In her opening remarks, Ms Tkachuk said creativity
was defined as “the ability to generate new ideas”. She has been
teaching that skill to rural youth through the arts since 2007.
Calling her program a mobile arts school since her
‘school’ has no fixed abode. Ms Tkachuk started her painting project
out of appreciation for the Kenyans who were so hospitable to her.
Teaching art was the one thing she felt she could to give.
The response to her teaching was overwhelming,
especially as the Kenyan school curriculum has no room for the arts.
Teachers advised her how best to stir public awareness on the value of
visual arts and creativity with a national art competition that offered
cash prizes.
The success of her project was manifest last week
when she and Dr Chandaria handed out awards to young people and rural
schools, which had impressed the judges, with their paintings and
videos.
The first prize of Sh50,000 went to 23-year-old
Louis Nderi for his photograph inspired by Lupita Nyongo’s statement at
the Oscars, “Your dreams are valid”. “I took her words to mean there are
no boundaries, no limits to what we can do if we hold to our dreams,”
said Nderi.
Nine-year-old orphan, Clement Murithi, who created
a mixed media ‘painting’ of a fish made out of metal bottle tops took
home the second prize of Sh30,000.
Onesmus Okamar, a 19-year-old, from Amagoro,
Busia, took home the third prize of Sh25,000. A form two drop out due to
lack of school fees Okmar said he’d been inspired by Michelangelo and
Leonardo di Vinci to want to create art that would one day be in history
books.
Two schools won Sh50,000, each, for their students
producing innovative works of art. Darubini Talent Academy, which was
started in 2011 in Kiserian by former GoDown artist Esther Makuhi, and
Nyumbani Lawson Secondary.
Each winner had a touching story including 16-year-old Joel Gatua who dropped out of school due to lack of fees.
An opportunity to start painting with Tkuchur has seen him speak about creativity and entrepreneurship at UNESCO, in Paris.
With two successful businesses he is living proof
of the value of teaching the youth about art and creativity. He also
teaches art privately in Laikipia West and often talks to parents
advocating teaching of art and creativity in schools.
The MASK awards this year introduced a new
category of creative expression. The award called on people to send in
videos with rappers Cr3w Teflon, dubbed The Children’s Anthem, being
awarded Sh50,000. The rap group, made up of Ben Vic and Timmy Tim tells
the of a little girl who’d lost both parents and had no one to look
after her.
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