Webinar: Studio Urbanism(s): Mapping Artist-Led Infrastructures Across Africa and the UK

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. 

Webinar: Studio Urbanism(s): Mapping Artist-Led Infrastructures Across Africa and the UK

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. 

Out of Town: Makadem Live at Bayimba, Sept. 22-24 2017 @ the National Theatre, Kampala – Uganda


Dates: September 22-24, 2017
Venue: the National Theatre, Kampala – Uganda

Makadem is one of the Kenyan acts that will be performing at this year’s Bayimba International Festival in Kampala, Uganda. Thereafter he will embark on a tour of the greater East Africa, in what is dubbed the Nyatiti East African Tour, that should see him perform in; Kigali, Kampala, Kisumu, Arusha ,Dar es Salaam, Zanzibar, Mombasa and finally end back in Nairobi.

https://bayimbafestival.com/

AKS in Dar es Salaam

Mindspeak Forum: Aly-Khan Satchu Hosts January Makamba – Dep. Minister Communication Science & Technology, Mar. 14 2015 @ Hyatt Regency Hotel – Dar es Salaam

AKS in Dar es Salaam
Aly-Khan Satchu will be hosting January Makamba, the Deputy Minister for Communication Science & Technology – Tanzania

Date: March 14, 2015
Venue: Hyatt Regency Hotel, Dar es Salaam
Time: 9 am – 1 pm
Entry: RSVP at info@rich.co.ke

January Makamba declared his intention to run for president almost eight months ago on BBC. A move that surprised many analysts and Tanzania watchers. Since January declared his intention to vie for Presidency under CCM, he has been receiving praise from unusual quarters such as;

Can January Makamba be the next president of Tanzania? – By Ben Taylor in African Arguments

Young leaders take on the old guard in Tanzania – By CHRISTOPHER KIDANKA in African Review

However, January has a long way to go since he has to convince CCM, the ruling party that he is the right man for the job in the scheduled party meeting later this year before the elections.

Join him as he speaks to Aly-Khan Satchu to find out why he announced his candidature and the vision he has for Tanzania.
Trailer

You are invited

Pop-Up Exhibition: East African Encounters by Circle Art Agency, Jun. 20-23 2014 in Nairobi

You are invited
Circle Art Agency is holding its third pop-up exhibition East African Encounters from Friday 20th to Monday 23rd June from 10am to 5pm.

The exhibition features 25 artists from 6 countries: Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Sudan, Rwanda and Ethiopia.

Artists Showing: Dawit Abebe. Cloudy Chatanda, Eltayeb Dawelbait, Kebreab Demeke, Salah Elmur, Tamrat Gezagegn, Wanja Kimani, Ehoodi Kichapi, Otieno Kota, Mbuthia Maina, Vita Malulu, Sidney Mang’ong’o, Henry Mzili Mujunga, Patrick Mulondo, Ulindula Mwakisopile, Ian Mwesiga, Paul Ndema, Eria ‘Sane’ Nsubuga, Michael Soi, Ephrem Solomon, Nadir Tharani and John Taouss Tuyisabe.

All works for this exhibition were carefully selected by Circle’s curator, Danda Jaroljmek with support from Circle Art Agency’s wide-reaching network including: 32º East, Kampala; Nafasi Art Space, Dar es Salaam; Wanja Kimani and Karen Obling in Addis Ababa and Salah Elmur in Khartoum.

For More info visit http://www.circleartagency.com/exhibitions/