
Date: March 27, 2026
Venue: The GoDown Arts Centre
About
An intimate, artist-led convening bringing together a cross-section of NBO-based practitioners to reflect on the city.

Date: March 17, 2026
Medium: Zoom (RSVP link)
Time: 3 PM London | 6 PM Nairobi
About
This webinar explores how artists, art collectives, creative studios, and informal exhibition spaces function as critical urban infrastructures across Nairobi, Dar es Salaam, Addis Ababa, Kampala, and UK allies in London and Liverpool. The session reflects on how visual mapping, illustration, and ethnographic encounters contribute to the collective efforts to centre the often-invisible systems that sustain cultural production in African cities and their diasporic connections.
Bringing together visual artists, curators, cartographers, and urban researchers, the discussion examines how studio practices operate as sites of learning, mutual aid, experimentation, and self-organisation, particularly in contexts where formal arts infrastructure remains limited or unevenly available. Connected to a current project Dunda Studio, Dunda Show developing an illustrated online publication, the conversation will also explore the methodological possibilities of illustrated urban research as a way of documenting bottom-up creative economies, spatial practices, and artistic imaginaries.
The session is open to artists, curators, cultural producers, urban practitioners, researchers, and students working across art, architecture, urban studies, geography, development, anthropology, and African studies. Contributors will share reflections from collaborative efforts to map and document artist studios across East Africa, alongside perspectives from interlocutors connected to curatorial and artistic networks in the UK.
Together, the discussion invites participants to consider the illustrated ecologies of artist studios and the wider infrastructures that sustain cultural production across African and diasporic urban contexts.

Date: March 17, 2026
Medium: Zoom (RSVP link)
Time: 3 PM London | 6 PM Nairobi
About
This webinar explores how artists, art collectives, creative studios, and informal exhibition spaces function as critical urban infrastructures across Nairobi, Dar es Salaam, Addis Ababa, Kampala, and UK allies in London and Liverpool. The session reflects on how visual mapping, illustration, and ethnographic encounters contribute to the collective efforts to centre the often-invisible systems that sustain cultural production in African cities and their diasporic connections.
Bringing together visual artists, curators, cartographers, and urban researchers, the discussion examines how studio practices operate as sites of learning, mutual aid, experimentation, and self-organisation, particularly in contexts where formal arts infrastructure remains limited or unevenly available. Connected to a current project Dunda Studio, Dunda Show developing an illustrated online publication, the conversation will also explore the methodological possibilities of illustrated urban research as a way of documenting bottom-up creative economies, spatial practices, and artistic imaginaries.
The session is open to artists, curators, cultural producers, urban practitioners, researchers, and students working across art, architecture, urban studies, geography, development, anthropology, and African studies. Contributors will share reflections from collaborative efforts to map and document artist studios across East Africa, alongside perspectives from interlocutors connected to curatorial and artistic networks in the UK.
Together, the discussion invites participants to consider the illustrated ecologies of artist studios and the wider infrastructures that sustain cultural production across African and diasporic urban contexts.
Dates: October 29 – November 1, 2025
Venues: Various
Entry: Free (RSVP, here)
About
Linearity is a contemporary dance performance that explores the fascinatingly endless task of imposing straightness on an irregular world. Incorporating a surprising mix of Dancehall, Parkour, and rhythmic gymnastics, this piece by Joshua Monten (Switzerland) raises surprisingly personal questions about just how ‘straight’ we all really want to be!
Find more information, here -> Upstage Limited.
Presented in Nairobi by: Upstage Limited. Supported by Pro-Helvetia.
Dates: October 29 – November 1, 2025
Venues: Various
Entry: Free (RSVP, here)
About
Linearity is a contemporary dance performance that explores the fascinatingly endless task of imposing straightness on an irregular world. Incorporating a surprising mix of Dancehall, Parkour, and rhythmic gymnastics, this piece by Joshua Monten (Switzerland) raises surprisingly personal questions about just how ‘straight’ we all really want to be!
Find more information, here -> Upstage Limited.
Presented in Nairobi by: Upstage Limited. Supported by Pro-Helvetia.
Opening: Tuesday, August 5 at 6:30 p.m.
Venue: Alliance Française Nairobi
Dates: Until August 31, 2025
About
This exhibition is an artistic dialogue between two generations of Kenyan artists: Joseph Bertiers, internationally recognized for his witty artworks, and Newton Eshivachi, a sharp-eyed emerging artist.
The two artists explore the complexities, aspirations, and contradictions of Kenyan society. Bertiers, known for his satirical and narrative style, offers a biting yet humorous critique of political and social absurdities. In contrast, Eshivachi presents a more introspective vision, shaped by identity quests and the cultural dynamics of a younger generation.
Between collective memory and contemporary realities, satire and visual poetry, this exhibition invites viewers to reflect—critically, ironically, and with engagement—on Kenya’s past and present.
Dates: Until August 31, 2024
Venue: The Nairobi Gallery – CBD
Time: 9 am – 5 pm
Entry: Museum Rates Apply
Opening: June 29, 2024
Venue: One Off Gallery
Time: 2-5 PM
Dates: Until July 21, 2024.
About #MassageSpa features two new series along w/ some old favourites.
Dates: June 29 – July 26, 2024
Venue: Creativity Gallery, National Museum of Kenya
Entry: Normal Museum Rates Apply