My first
experiences with cameras was... Special!
So special.
I can still
hear the bicycle bell ring from half a mile. Then the visual of Dominic on his pimped Black Mamba bike with his camera hanging
around his neck. Dominic was probably the most powerful fella in my hood in the eighties. While our parents
needed blackmail and spanking for us to sit down at the homework table, and the
house help (auntie) cajoled and
pleaded with us to ditch playing for lunch, Dominic would get it done in record
time. It took 10 minutes to switch from dusty-football-playing brats to smiling
well fed, showered and glossy from Vaseline
petroleum jelly ready-for-the-shoot boys. No birthday or Christmas party
was complete without Dominic. He was the only person who would make fighting brothers/friends embrace and
smile as they posed for a photo. He was Superman!
That is how
I grew up respecting the power of that black box with the name Yashica on it. Cameras were rare on my
side of town and adolescence and peer pressure took my mind off photography
till I met one Ashikoye Okoko in my
professional life. This was before
the digital photography era. The darkroom experience and the pretty young intern
rekindled my interest in photography... long
story!
Fast forward
15ish years later and digital photography has taken over. Everyone has a
camera! The average urban Kenyan youth has three, maybe four cameras (or hand
held devices with cameras). Add to this the fact that new technology has
recently been embraced into the mainstream contemporary art practice and you
get a whole movement of young gunz
with titles like media/digital artist, photographer, blogger (a term I consider derogatory) etc. This
is nice. Not good. Nice, because you
have young idle Kenyans roving all over the place with high end Nikon &
Canon DSLRs they know not how to use
and when they do, is to take photos of disasters for social media... and
recently getting naïve damsels to pose naked for all and sundry to access on
similar platforms.
The problem
is, my photographer's bar is pegged very high. Thanks to Dominic. And recently,
interacting with young African photographers who are using photography to tell
their stories and change/positively influence their societies.
In Nigeria
for instance, Depth of Field and Black Box collectives have churned out
some of Africa's most prolific photographers. It's difficult to talk about Contemporary
African photography without mentioning Emeka
Okereke, Uche Okpa-Iroha, George Osodi, Uche James-Iroha & Andrew
Esiebo. Others like Sabelo Mlangeni
(South Africa) and Baudouin Mouanda (Congo) are young artists who against the odds
have taken photography to new levels with mundane stories. A handful of award
winning African photographers have visited Nairobi through CCAEA's Amnesia Platform;
Ananias Leki Dago, Aida Muluneh, Andrew Tshabangu and Billy
Bidjocka went on to host very insightful conversations on their technical approach
to photography with emphasis on their artist statements. This has been in the
hope that the whole peer to peer sharing
would benefit Kenyan photographers by exposing them to possibilities that exist
for them as camera handlers while helping
them develop their narrative.
Irony is,
it's always the (same) small group of artists who make the audience. The new
breed of Kenyan photographer seems content with attending social events where
their discourse revolves around their toys
- make, model, capabilities & cost. Not
what they actually do with their gadgets!
I had given
up all hope until a couple of weeks ago! James
Mweu (aka Sir James) put up a
photography exhibition at the One-Off
Contemporary Art Gallery in Nairobi. It was a good show. It was simple. Not
in technical ability or content, but subject. His artist statement resonated
with the work and everyone who attended the show had that flashback moment and just smiled. Everyone had a favorite piece. Except me. The whole show was my favorite work. It
reminded me of Dominic. Of how the living room would be laid out to look good
in the photos. Of how it was a living room during the day, and a sleeping room
at night. A genuine story. Unlike the
peculiar Kenyan photographer, Sir James neither mentioned the make/model of his
camera nor the editing suite he used. His photographs were genuine and had no
absurd rhetoric to support them. They were photographs I can see again. And
again.
When I got
home and settled for the football match on TV, I remembered, Sir James was a
contemporary dancer! How does a dancer (temporarily) trade the dance studio to
create such a coherent body of work?
Then I recalled. Interest. When
Tshabangu, Ananias and any photographers with something to offer are in town,
one of the permanent faces in the talks/presentations
is Jamo. The informal whiskey sessions are also not complete without Jamo. It
may just be the typical case of going to (an informal) school and putting to
practice what you got from it. I hoped other photographers would go see his
exhibition, and even tried to circulate the info to anyone I thought would have
benefitted from seeing it. Or meeting him in the hope this would spur them to
follow suit.
I know it's
an individual choice on what pictures to
take and what to do with them but some of the guys with cameras don't know
where to start. Their reference may be wedding or celebrity photography. Blankets & Wine or the occasional sevens rugby. And the debauchery that
accompanies these cool events. If only they came to the table and shared,
they'd be shocked by how easy it is!
Photo blogs are okay but it's not the same as a well exhibited photo in a good
space. Maybe it's time Kenyan photographers changed their narratives.
Temporarily forget the digits embedded/embossed on your camera and just take
photos. Some of the photographers I really admire; those whose photographs
raise the hairs behind your neck - Rosangella
Renno, Ananias, Akinbode Akinbiyi, Jide Adeniyi-Jones
use cameras you'd consider are from the Flintstones' era.
My love for
photographs continued long after my crush for the intern's faded and...
Every once
in a while, I meet friends with cameras and talk
photography. Go through the motions but deep down I wish their photos made
sense (to me). That they'd accept
adjectives other than amazing to
describe their work. That they'd occasionally move their works from blogs to
art spaces.
The last photo
exhibition I mentioned was Kenya Burning
(which ironically showed for 5 years)
and am glad it's no longer burning and I hope it stays that way! What happened
to simple stories about our spaces. Our
culture. Our architecture. Our transport.
Our food. Our lifestyles.
As I type away,
a collective of (not so) young Kenyan photographers, One Touch, are on a road trip around Africa on a mission that has
parallels to Invisible Borders.
Through the internet, I may know what they are up to because I make it my
business to. It’s a step in the right direction methinks. And I hope that upon
their return, they shall offer us something to see. Enjoy. Consume. Talk about.
I also hope…
(am not gonna use the word “hope” again)
alongside them and folks like Joe
Lukhovi, Sir James and a few young photographers (I think may be promising with some direction) we may be able to raise the profile of Kenyan
photography from generic, cool &
elite to serious, able to stand alongside serious contemporary African
photography. Otherwise, our memories of influential Kenyan photographers will
remain Dominic. And Karis.
While this is a good read by all means, I do not see why the writer finds the need to bash and undermine the young photographer/blogger et al Who is bold enough to chase their dream and find themselves. Not everyone starts out as "Dominic". We can't all have one form of "art". Even the best of them all started out blank and confused. My point is , let people dream, let them find themselves. Atleast they had the courage to do so. Along the way they will refine their art or drop it entirely depending on how it churns. Moral of my long comment ; we don't need such posts. Such posts are just the same as those close minded teachers who killed so many dreams back in the day because of their shallow reasoning
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