Kenyan sculptor Ong’esa is on a mission to elevate African art

Published Jan 1, 2024

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Tabaka, Kenya

Kenya’s most lauded sculptor, Elkana Ong’esa, has seen his gigantic stone creations displayed across the globe, but feels African art still deserves greater recognition at home and abroad.

“African art has influenced Western art heavily,” the 79-year-old sculptor said, pointing to Pablo Picasso’s early 20th-century masterpieces, such as “Les Demoiselles d’Avignon”, that he said drew inspiration from the continent.

Despite this, “African art has been left behind”, he told AFP in an interview at his home in Tabaka in western Kenya’s hilly Kisii county.

His work – much of it inspired by nature – has been showcased at the Unesco headquarters in Paris, the UN in New York, and respected galleries in cosmopolitan capitals.

But it still has not attracted the “very high” prices assigned to artworks produced in the West, he said, with neither African nor foreign collectors willing to shell out for pieces from the continent.

And that’s not the only obstacle.

“The Kenyan government does not give enough support to artists,” he said, recalling a 2014 fiasco that prevented his work from taking centre stage at the Smithsonian Folklore Festival in Washington.

Ong’esa had carved a monumental granite sculpture for the prestigious event, and was offered 1.2 billion Kenyan shillings (then equivalent to $13.8 million, or about R252m) by an interested buyer.

But Kenyan authorities, who insisted on handling transport requirements for the 13-tonne elephant – refusing foreign offers of help – eventually said it was too heavy to be airlifted.

Media reports said officials had demanded kickbacks in exchange for transporting the piece.

Ong’esa would not comment on the specific allegations, saying only that “some people in the Kenyan government, who were supposed to help, turned against the concept”.

If the sale had gone ahead, it would have entered the record books and “Kenyan art would be in a different league”, he added.

Born into a family of craftsmen, Ong’esa started making clay toys for himself as a toddler before learning to carve little animals out of waste stone shards.

His talent took him to Makerere University in neighbouring Uganda and onward to Canada’s McGill University for graduate studies.

He discovered artists whose work would influence his own, from the stone carvings produced by Inuit sculptors to the use of negative space by British icon Henry Moore.

“Their work was more (about) artistic expression than craft,” he said. “It was a very important turning point for me.”

Even so, there is no mistaking the African imprint on his creations.

Kisii stone, his favoured medium, is found only in western Kenya, unlike soapstone, a widely available rock it is often confused with.

Furthermore, his work often features symbols from African myths and songs.

The giant granite sculpture gracing the Unesco headquarters in Paris, “Enyamuchera” (“Bird of Peace” in the Kisii language), has its origins in the fiscal shrike, a black and white bird native to Sub-Saharan Africa.

The bird can be a harbinger of good luck or misfortune depending on the angle from which it is seen.

“That sculpture says something about me as a person,” he said. “It shows what is in me as an artist, as a Kisii.”

It also reflects his insistence on creating art that resonates at home, not only in global capitals.

His sculptures are displayed along Kisii’s streets, in his garden where he teaches stone carving to young artists and children, and in the museum he has built to host workshops and showcase African art.

His impact on the community was evident at his birthday party last month, with former students and artists paying tribute to their visibly moved mentor as his family cheered.

After ill health forced him to stop working for seven years, the grandfather of five is slowly picking up his tools again.

“I have a desire to do my art,” he said.

He has already begun carving smaller sculptures, because he is no longer able to stand for the long periods needed to make larger pieces.

“I am hoping and praying that my body will improve,” he said.

“When you cut a stone and see the inside, it is so beautiful, it is so exciting.”

AFP