Globalizing Kenyan culture: Jua Kali and the transformation of contemporary Kenyan Art: 1960-2010.
Swigert, Margaretta
In an age of globalization, when as a result of enhanced
telecommunication and global media, the world's population is more
interconnected than ever, the public at large still tends to associate
Africa with poverty, disease and political instability. Yet keen
observers of the social landscape have observed that despite
Africa's legacy of woes, cultural productivity in the region is on
the rise, leading scholars to refer to the phenomenon as an African
Renaissance. This is particularly the case in Kenya where a contemporary
art movement is flourishing through both local and global art networks.
But the question remains: how in the midst of poverty and political
instability can there be so much cultural productivity? Based on field
research involving participant observation and interviews with more than
200 artists and cultural workers in Kenya's capital city, I argue
that it is due largely to an 'emergent cultural practice'
given the Kiswahili term jua kali. By virtue of jua kali artists
'making do' with minimal resources and maximum ingenuity,
imagination, originality and entrepreneurial acumen, they are creating
new art forms or bricolage, the clearest evidence of which is what
Kenyan artists call 'junk art'; which is made from global
garbage garnered from dump sites, then recycled into original artworks,
and finally shown/sold in local and transnational art markets, thus
reflecting global flows. This genre of contemporary Kenyan art defies
stereotypical myths of "tribal art" and "the primitive
other." These hegemonic myths still pervade most Western art
markets, but jua kali artists--working through both local and
transnational networks-are striving to debunk them by their works with
increasing success.
Margaretta Swigert, Ph.D., Loyola University Chicago, 2011, 378
pages; AAT 3454970.