
Date: February 10, 2016
Venue: BIEA Seminar Room
Time: 6 pm
Entry: Free
Lecture by Prof. Francis Nyamnjoh, Professor of Social Anthropology at University of Cape Town.

Spend your valentine’s weekend in Lamu, on legendary Peponi Beach, Shela Village.
Dates: February 13-14, 2016
Venue: Shela Village, Lamu
Programme
Saturday, 13 February: Shela Hat Contest (4th Edition)
Sunday, 14 February: The ‘Mad Hatters’ Dhow Race
Find more information, here http://www.shela-hat-contest.com/

Date: January 22, 2016
Venue: Inter-Continental Hotel, Nairobi
Time: from 5 pm
Entry: Free
Guest speaker is Albert Mugo, CEO of KenGen.

Remains, Waste and Metonymy: A critical intervention into art/scholarship. Curated by Neo Musangi and Joost Fontein.
Opening: January 22, 2016 from 6 pm
Dates: 18 January – 18 February 2016
Venue: National Museums of Kenya, Museum Hill Road
Entry: Museums Rates Apply
About
This exhibition carries the remnants of an event held at the BIEA in Nairobi on 24th October 2015, entitled Remains, Waste and Metonymy: A critical intervention into art/scholarship. That event sought to provoke new avenues of collaboration between artists, scholars and other cultural producers around the themes of waste, remains and metonymy.The unifying question bringing the interventions traced here together is how an approach to stuff as incomplete, open-ended and emergent can offer critical scrutiny to the assumed finality, stability and comfort of ‘objects’, ‘persons’ and landscapes. Always ‘in the making’ remains and waste often appear like unfinished biographies, metaphors, symbols or narrations that promise but rarely deliver entirely coherent meanings, bounded entities and stable wholes. Their indeterminacy can be creatively explored to reveal the excessive multiplicities of time, substance and space.
In exhibiting the remnants of these interventions here, we seek to reflect on how the traces of events outlive their particular moments, mirroring how our approach emphasizes process than product, emergence rather than finality, the subjunctive rather than the conditional, and the possible rather than the certain. In bringing together a diversity of critical intellectualisms we seek to provoke longer explorations of the uneasy yet creative analytical space between scholarship and the arts around the themes of materiality and temporality.
Sponsored by British Institute in Eastern Africa (BIEA)

Date: January 23, 2016
Venue: Caramel Lounge, ABC Place, Westlands
Time: Beginners Session: 6:00 pm- 7:00 pm; Intermediate Session: 7:00 pm-8:00 pm and Open dance floor: 8:00 pm
Entry Fee: Kshs 500
Advance registration for the class is Ksh 1000 via mpesa or airtel money to 0723325680 or pay Ksh 1500 at the door
Dress code: Afro Chic
For more information, call Marion Munga on 0723325680 or email mungamarion@gmail.com