Saturday Nation
Saturday, May 9, 2015
Mukabi now has space of his own
Kenyan artists have been clamouring for more
space — to set up studios, hold art exhibitions, congregate with fellow
"creatives" and occasionally find mentors to guide them, given we don’t
have a proper National Art Academy as yet.
So
they were pleased to hear the minister for Culture, Hassan Wario, tell a
contingent of artists (who had come to discuss the Venice Biennale)
that he expected a Kenya Art Centre to be built next to the newly
renovated Kenya National Theatre in the near future.
There’s
no telling when that will be, so even better news just came in —
Kenya’s best-known artist (for his role as Baba Supaa, the children’s
art instructor on the TV show "Know Zone" segment of Makutano Junction),
Patrick Mukabi, moved his art studio to the former Kenya Railways
Museum Art Gallery on April 1st.
It is
especially good news for young artists who frequented his studio when it
was at GoDown Art Centre, some of whom have since made names for
themselves in Nairobi’s thriving art world. Among them are Dickson
Kaloki, Mike Kyalo, Nadia Wamunyu, Alex Mbevu, Florence Wanjui and
Andrew Otieno.
Mukabi rarely, if
ever, turned an aspiring artist away while at the GoDown, but clearly,
as a prolific painter in his own right, he needed more space, especially
as he encouraged his students to hang their finished art works for the
public to see. In fact, many people used to go to GoDown just to see
Mukabi and his mentees at work.
PROLIFIC PAINTER
Now they’ll have to find their way to the Railway Museum, where Mukabi’s new Dust Depo Artist Studio is a much larger space.
Following
a precedent set by his secondary school art teacher, Mr Musumbi, who
always welcomed students to his studio at any time of day, Mukabi also
welcomes prospective students of all ages to come visit his studio.
Currently, those he instructs range from age five up to over 50.
“I
also teach all over Nairobi,” says the artist, who travels from art
centres in Kayole and Mukuru in Eastlands to more academic centres like
Brookhouse, Braeburn, ISK and Hillcrest schools.
Yet
as indefatigable an art instructor as he is, Mukabi is also a prolific
painter whose latest work is a monumental wall mural (2.5 metres by 7
metres) permanently resident at the new terminal at Jomo Kenyatta
International Airport.
“Its theme is
‘Lamu Old and New,’ highlighting both the people and the potential
changes likely to come with construction of the new Lamu port,” said
Mukabi whose students helped him to mount the mural at JKIA.
“But
all the artwork is mine. I first did sketches, then painted (in
acrylic) on canvas and then my students helped me attach the canvas onto
wooden boards, which then went up at the airport.”
COUNTRY TRAVELLER
Mukabi
was born in Nairobi, but he’s familiar with all parts of the country,
including the Coast, where he frequently went by rail, accompanying his
father, who, like his father before him, was employed by railways.
“My
grandfather was a ticket inspector so he always travelled from Mombasa
to Kampala and back,” recalled Mukabi, who admits it’s rather remarkable
the way he’s found his way back to the Railways, which is essentially
where he grew up!
“My father was an
executive with the Railways so we often travelled with him (always in
first class) as a family. It was similar to what his father did after
his mother passed on.
“That meant my
father grew up learning all the local languages of people who lived
along the railway line, from Kiswahili and Kikamba to Kiganda and
Hindi,” he said.
Knowing that background makes it easy to understand how Mukabi is such a genial and gracious man who can fraternize with anyone.
Starting
the study and practice of art in primary school at the Coast, he’s been
fortunate to have excellent art teachers all the way through his years
at Eastleigh Secondary, the Creative Art Centre and finally at the Kenya
Polytechnic, where he studied graphic design.
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