Mixed media drawings that explode into clouds of colour theeastafrican.co.ke - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theeastafrican.co.ke Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
GALLERIES: A second chance to lift the lid on a well-kept secret…
Monday May 10 2021
Advertisement
Gor Soudan is another of those artists who shun publicity, avoid interviews and work quietly away in their studios achieving what they came into this world to do create art.
Little can be heard of him for months if not years before he suddenly pops back into our consciousness with sometimes complex, occasionally deceptively simple, paintings, drawings, prints and sculptures that take our breath away.
Forever foraging among political and social issues, his reputation was built by a series of collages and paintings (often on newspaper) of threatening Indian crows which he used to symbolise messengers from another culture.
Rosemary Karuga, Untitled, 1998. (Images courtesy of Red Hill Art Gallery)
A vast chapter of the still mostly untold story of women’s art in Kenya starts with Rosemary Namuli Karuga. Karuga passed away on 9 February 2021 at the age of 93. She was one of the pioneers who made major contributions to contemporary art on the continent and is recognised as one of the finest East African artists of her generation.
Karuga is known for her collage works depicting pastoral and domestic African scenes, commonly villagers and farmers and animals. They would go on to be shown internationally, but she only began to produce commercial art in her 60s, once she had retired from teaching.
Remembering Rosemary Karuga: Artworks of alluring simplicity and extraordinary detail
A vast chapter of the still mostly untold story of women’s art in Kenya starts with Rosemary Namuli Karuga. Karuga passed away on 9 February 2021 at the age of 93. She was one of the pioneers who made major contributions to contemporary art on the continent and is recognised as one of the finest East African artists of her generation.
Karuga is known for her collage works depicting pastoral and domestic African scenes, commonly villagers, farmers and animals. They would go on to be shown internationally, but she began to produce commercial art only in her 60s, when she had retired from teaching.