Exhibition: Remains, Waste & Metonymy III – KIKULACHO, Sept. 3-30 2018 @ National Museums of Kenya


Dates: September 3-30, 2018
Venue: National Museums of Kenya
Launch: September 6, 2018 at 6.00pm

About
Kikulacho Nairobi brings together a diversity of thinkers, artists and cultural producers in an artistic process which seeks to absorb, engage with and reflect upon people’s complex relationships with, and experiences of, food and the ‘stuff’ of food. This project follows on from the success of Remains, Waste and Metonymy in 2015/16, and Remains, Waste and Metonymy II: Sensing Nairobi in 2017.
Food, and the nourishment it provides is vital in multiple and diverse ways; and it becomes central to people’s everyday experiences. Our relationship with and experience of food, its associated practices and the ‘stuff’ of food, is intriguingly complex, diverse, and ephemeral.
Kikulacho Nairobi explores the ways that food – in all its diversity of material forms, practices, meanings, symbolic association and values – has, and continues, to form, and give shape to multiple, contradictory, sensorial experiences of and insights into urban living.
Using this as our central unifying theme, Remains, Waste and Metonymy III: Kikulacho Nairobi considers the ephemeral and material significance of food; the multiple functions and interplay between food, performance, ritual and identity; the spaces for food’s production, distribution and consumption; and the multiplicity of physical, social and political networks and relations in which food is embedded…

Exhibition: Bare Knuckle by Richard Kimathi, Aug. 25 – Sept. 25 2018 @ One Off Contemporary


Opening: August 25, 2018
Venue: One Off Contemporary
Time: Noon – 5 pm

Until September 25, 2018

Bare Knuckle
One Off Contemporary Art Gallery is enormously honoured to present ‘Bare Knuckle’, the latest series of intriguing works by Richard Kimathi. One of the most eagerly awaited exhibitions of the year, this series will not disappoint. Male sexuality is the focus of his extensive inquiry. As ever, his interpretation of complex concepts common throughout humanity is highly original and beautifully executed.