I never met Ruth Schaffner!
I must also admit my work has never found its way into Gallery Watatu with the exception of it
passing through for framing by Owino
- the late resident framer, en route to other spaces for exhibitions. Most of
the (not so) young artists probably
sail the same boat as I in that they also have never exhibited there; whether it’s
by choice or by being locked out is a story for another day! From
Kyalo, Mukabi, Michael Soi, Jimmah Kimani, Peterson Kamwathi, Beatrice Wanjiku, Anthony Okello, Peter Walala,
Jimmy Ogonga... a large percentage of those referred to as 2nd generation Kenyan artists.
So, when last week a local daily carried the story of the “major auction and final closure"
not many tears were shed! It was comparable to this week when 2 politicians
died and the political class are busy turning well known villains into instant
heroes.
Flashback... A little over 40 years ago three artistic friends -Jony Waite, Robin Anderson and David
Hart - created a privately-owned space they named "Watatu" - Swahili for 3 people. It is not very clear (or well documented) when it changed hands but the new owner became Ruth Schaffner, a German-born American
collector of post-war art.
With Ruth at the helm, Watatu was an instant 'hit' and was home of what was loosely referred to as créme de la créme of indigenous Kenyan (read naive) art. Artists
like Jak Katarikawe, Ancent Soi, Sane + Eunice Wadu, Wanyu Brush, Elijah
Ooko, Kivuthi Mbuno, Samuel + Jackson Wanjau
& Chain Muhandi among others
soon became overnight celebrities.
One thing everyone agrees with is that Ruth Schaffner was an art dealer extraordinaire!
Urban legend has it that artist villages, Ngecha and Banana Hill
sprouted as a result of Ruth's patronage. Young and ambitious guys out of
college would walk into the gallery, head held high armed with a diploma/degree
and they would leave crestfallen as they'd be told, "They weren't good enough unless they painted like Sane, or Brush, or
Muhandi..."
The strong and maybe too proud, never came back and carried on
with their practice minus Watatu. The weak, tried to be like Sane! like Meek
Gichugu... and even got cool names to
boot!
People 'got rich' and
for once Kenyan art 'was on the world
map' and then it happened in 1996!
Ruth Schaffner died! There was pandemonium in the art scene. Grown
men cried! They did not sob. They wailed.
This was around the same time Kuona
Trust and One Off Gallery were
starting and all those who never got into
Watatu were having alternative spaces to show (and sell). For most of us, Watatu was never an option. It simply wasn't there. For most, the connection
was Owino, the framer.
Fast forward and we heard rumours of watatu being broke and some
staff hawking artworks to make ends meet but that was private property, and we weren't supposed to trespass!
Then this year - I guess shit hit the fan! Watatu crumbled, and is
now falling.
That Watatu is obsolete and going under was never the issue. It
was HOW this was happening that most had a problem with. An auction had allegedly taken place and
another one was scheduled yet no information was forthcoming. It felt like
someone was keen to tie up a good deal in
a hush. Fate had it that through social media, information leaked and was
shared.
On the day of the second auction, two dozen people in the arts were there, some to claim what was
rightfully theirs, some for curiosity, maybe a handful for moral support, some to buy expensive work cheaply and
some to just heckle. The gods of creativity got us a reprieve and the auction
was postponed to 16th June.
We have accepted that closure is inevitable but does it really
matter?
Our beloved RaMoMa 'died' recently. We never mourned and
moved on like it never was. Today, Watatu is in High Dependency Unit and we're already shopping for a coffin! A glimpse
at www.gallerywatatu.com gives an
indicator on who the gallery represented. You
won't find the names of the young, prolific award winning Kenyan artists
shifting the dynamics of the local art scene. Why? We may never know.
Maybe, before we get all emotional and use words like History, Heritage
etcetera, we should define the relationship we had with Watatu, with the
institution, with they that ran (down) the space. And when I personally do
that, I can say with my head held high that, "I'm not gonna lack sleep over Gallery Watatu's closure."
We have other art spaces/institutions that have gone the same way.
We get all mushy when they are in the
red then amnesia creeps in
immediately they're unable to stay afloat. Is it lack of strategy? Are our
institutions too elite? Could it be the personnel? Or is it that we don't
support each other? Maybe one day we'll find out. Maybe.
I love quoting strange artists that I meet and a wise one summed
it up well... "The old order empires
built on quicksand and sustained by hype, are finally crumbling.”
And as this happens, another one inhales on his ciggy, reflects, and as he exhales, with the smoke
comes the words, "Nothing, I feel
absolutely nothing."
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