It`s a pity we only exist in the future
Transcrição
It`s a pity we only exist in the future
It’s a pity we only exist in the future Regaining Public Space What Is Public Space? “The police will come and start arresting us because we are a lot of us We decided to do with CVF a documentary about public Then we came out with a song about Maskani and the space in Mombasa, wich for us are Maskani. We filmed documentary trailer. At the end of the workshop we had every Maskani from Mombasa Airoport to Mutuapa. the chance to show the documentary What does public space means for you? Richie: A place where people can gather, where artists can go...a place where you can find freedom within the public. The public space is a place where I know I can go to share something with my friends, a place also where I can go and just chill. Pop: Public space for me means a legal area, where you can do anything positive. What is public space in Kenya? Pop: Public space in Kenya is something that there is and there isn’t at the same time. Richie: There is no much public space in Kenya, because I think that people don’t really know about public space. For example the only public space that they know in Nairobi is JVNG park or Ururu park...but also that is not a real public space because you are limited in what you can do. Pop: Yes..JVNG park or Ururu park they are public spaces, but if you go there at this time of the day (21.00) it’s illegal while it’s legal during the day time...is it public space? Richie: The reason why you can say that public space there is, it’s from the project that we did about public space in Mombasa last year... from that project it seemed like in Mombasa the youth, the old, the young all come together and make public space which they call Maskani. So are you saying that public space is made by people and not by places? Richie: Yes, people pick an area where they figure they can go all time. They know that they can find their friends there to share about their stories. It’s like a place where they meet to discuss about what’s going on in their daily life and how they can get each other involve. Maybe somebody has a job and can go to the Maskani to look for somebody that would like to get it. Pop: When you compare other public space with Maskani, in Maskani the time has no limits, is unlimited , you can go there any moment of the day..trust me!! Can you explain what Maskani is? Richie: People gathering together, sharing ideas, knowing better each others, being together as a community. Maskani is a place where you are supposed to go and feel comfortable. It’s a place where you can come an share everything. You can’t be violent in the Maskani cause you will be kick out from the Maskani. And the Maskani you have to relate to, because you can go to the Maskani where people play sport and you go there and people are talking about how the menu game was yesterday or they are gona go practice because maybe they already have a team. Pop: So Maskani is a spot that brings people together from old to young people. coming from all over the world to develop a project about art and public space. We decided to do with CVF a documentary about public space in Mombasa, wich for us are Maskani. We filmed every Maskani from Mombasa Airoport to Mutuapa. Then we came out with a song about Maskani and the documentary trailer. At the end of the workshop we had the chance to show the documentary trailer together with all the works developed by the other artists. The Maskani project kept continue during the African Maximalism exhibition with the release of the music video of the Maskani song. What’s the future of the Maskani project? Richie: We think that we can still do more about this project. Our next step will be to edit the final version of Maskani documentary and develop another project about art and public space in Nairobi this time. We would like also to go to other countries to find out what public space means there. But now, since we left Mombasa we are back in Nairobi to see what here Maskani is all about, how people are living and talking, and hanging out, what different activities are they doing in different neighbourhood. We figured that Maskani is also the place where you can find a lot of artists. We should go to talk with this people, we should ask what their Maskani is all about, why they meet there and what does public space means for them..this will be part of a new project we are working on the “Urban Mirror”. Pop: “Urban Mirror” is a project witch aims to give a voice to the urban artistic scene of Nairobi. We will try to connect the artists with their own communities. We will look for different artists coming from different Maskani, make a competition and give them the opportunity to develop their potential and to show case their talent. Because we believe that artists are the mirror of the community, they reflect the image of the community. Richie: The Maskani project changed me, now i think that we need to look at public spaces and see who is in this public spaces, who is doing things that are positive. People in the Maskani they have always something to share with the world. Is there any differences between public space in Nairobi and public space in Mombasa? Pop: Yes, There is a real big difference. As we told you in Mombasa public space has no time, you can meet in Maskani anytime you want. In Eastlands in Nairobi from 1982 the government came out with the couvres feu and came out with this negative idea that three or four youth they are not allowed to meet up together in a specific place, they cannot gather. If they catch you, you will be arrested. Richie: I think that there is a big difference. People in coast are more friendly and willing to share. Maskani in Nairobi are called Base. Most places in Nairobi where they have this Base is a place where somebody is working in at. Then I agree with what Pop said, during the time of Moi youth were been played for all the chaos that happened around in Kenya. That image of the youth made Maskani and Base not be really solid and strong as part of culture that they had, that culture was taken away from them and youth were not able to be together. Most youth in Kenya are considered violent, thief. And to me as youth who live in Kenya, I believe that youth was who kept Kenya alive. The police will come and start arresting us because we are a lot of us there. But we are talking about an idea to shoot a documentary about all the positive things that are happening in the Maskani. So they are saying that youth are bad, but we do positive things with positive people in different Maskani. Yes there are Maskani with are not positive, but it’s also part of culture, it’s an expression of society. Now time is changed a little bit and people they are start to understand what’s going on. I think also that the public space in Nairobi is getting bigger. Now if you go in Westland during the weekend you will find people not only inside the bar, they are starting to chill outside for all the night and that it’s becoming a culture. We see change and hopefully we will see more change, cause we are bringing public space to Nairobi, we are bringing Maskani to Nairobi. Pop: I think that what is going on in Nairobi is quite different from Maskani in Mombasa. In Mombasa, you may pass to a Maskani when there is nobody over there but you will have the feeling that that is a Maskani. About the public spaces that Richie is talking about, when you pass over there during the day time you will not have the feeling that that is a public space. Richie: I think that people in Nairobi go to those areas because there is a social life there outside the clubs, when they will go to their neighbourhood they will not find any Maskani, so they can’t wait till friday or saturday to go there and hang out with other people not only from their Maskani but from all over Nairobi. People wait till the weekend to come and enjoy a place where a lot of people are, instead of come where is only four people in the neighbourhood and the police can mess with it. If I’m in Westland at night hanging out outside and there is a lot of people outside I feel safe. 8. So you started in Mombasa with the Maskani project and now from there you are coming to Nairobi to develop another project about public space..as you are saying there is big difference between Mombasa and Nairobi public space..so you are going to face a big challenge. Richie: I definitively think it’s a challenge. People is really easy on the coast, but when you come to the city you are dealing with issues of security and insecurity. Me as an artist I have a little bit of advantage to know about the Maskani, because they all know me through tv and documentaries, so I’m more welcome and more familiar to them. But if you can imagine somebody that they don’t know, a regular person who is trying to get something positive in a certain Maskani or Base, for him it would be dangerous. That’s way I think it’s a challenge because there is a difference between the city and the coast. It’s gona to be hard but it’s gona to be a challenge and to me a challenge can be won. Silvia Gioiello What is the Maskani project? Richie: Is an idea started by Ukooflani and Cultural Video Foundation about the meaning of public space. At the beginning we didn’t really know what public space was for us. Thanks to Kuona Trust we went to Mombasa to took part to the Urban Wasani Workshop 2008. We spent 2 weeks in Mombasa with CVF crew and together with other artists Photo: CVF/Silvia Gioiello It’s a pity that we only exist in the future 2 It’s a pity that we only exist in the future A show about Art in Public Space and the Public Sphere. Nairobi, a vibrant city and a leading African metropolis, pulsates with a wealth of new forms of cultural expression, many of which exist beyond the frontiers of conventional institutions. If you understand Art as the imaginative representation of the world, then it is not only an integral part of everyday life, but can also be seen as a barometer of intellectual freedom. Art in the public sphere, the performing of cultural expressions in public, is a further distillation of this and a critical indicator of a culturally healthy society. Nairobi, a vibrant city and a leading African metropolis, pulsates with a wealth of new forms of cultural expression, many of which exist beyond the frontiers of conventional institutions. The idea behind ‘It’s a pity that we only exist in the future’ was to explore the city’s terrain with the aim of representing these fascinating phenomena within the context of a discourse about public space. This was by all means not an exhaustive show, but rather a sample of the city’s cultural nuggets, tracing a seam of art forms existing within different social, cultural and geographical groups throughout the city. The Masai Mbili art collective from Kibera featured prominently in the show. Solo 7, who during the post-election violence last year painted peace slogans throughout Kibera exhibited documentation of some of these, together with some original works. Gomba showed documentation of the performative work ‘Mai self portrait’, where he obscures his identity with large wire-mesh glasses and interacts with members of the public. The collective as a whole were represented by a T-shirt mobile with messages and slogans referencing space, publicness and security. Funds Photo: African Maximalism raised by the T shirt sales will be used to purchase the collective’s studio space in Kibera. Photo: CVF The opening itself was representative of the ethos of the whole show, bringing together actors from different plays, and placing them all on one stage. From ambassadors to rappers, from citizen journalists, to local photographers, from Nairobians of the Westlands to Nairobians of the Eastlands, it was a cocktail, but not a bomb. Dj’s Ugomatic from Nairobi and Andi Teichmann from Berlin spun tunes that rocked them all. So maybe we were actually wrong. Maybe we do not only exist in the future, but we also exist in the present, it’s just a question of knowing how to see ourselves. And that is one of the things that African Maximalism is trying to do. We try to make things Moving from Kibera to town, Hapa TV, who place a broad range of content in matatus screened one of their showreels and Biki Kangwana and Jacob Wachira showed a video of their jointly-conceived performance in public space ‘The Moth’ in which Jacob dressed up as moth, went onto the streets and listened to the people’s grievances. The Nyayo Monument Photographers, some of whom have been taking people’s portraits by the Nyayo Monument for the last 20 years were also featured through the collection of Samson, and a photomontage of the photographers at work. Moving over to the Eastlands, Slum TV, who document life in and around Mathare showed a taster of their latest showreel, ‘The Superlatives’, about the biggest, best, baddest, fastest and smartest in Mathare. Lukas Pusch, who in 2006 donned a white tuxedo and performed the rich white man in Africa, exhibited the video of his work, Vienna Voodoo. Ukoo Flani and Cultural Video Foundation initiated a collaboration in June 2008 as part of the Urban Wasanii workshop in Mombasa. They developed a song about Maskani, the public spaces in Mombasa, a music video and a documentary about the project. The music video and a trailer for the documentary were screened, both inside and outside the building and Ukoo Flani performed at the opening. A slideshow of the other work from the Urban Wasanii project, facilitated by Kuona Trust was also on show. visible, we try to connect loose synapses within the city, the country, the continent, and re-establish broken circuits. We create situations, we dream of being catalysts. But who is African Maximalism? Maybe you are. African Maximalism is as an open source movement, inclusive to all that want to learn the language. It’s about the freedom of producing innovative work, without the burden of being an individual. We are a movement with no leader, an idea with no manifesto, an aesthetic with no rules. Come and join us. African Maximalism Photos: African Maximalism It’s a pity that we only exist in the future 3 Psychosafari Diary Occidental Plaza – Gypsies – Steve’s Steak House We started off with an amazing tandoori barbeque at the small Indian barbeque spot at Occidental Plaza (the marinade is a closley-guarded secret by the owner, who personally prepares it every day). In collaboration with the ‘turbo naan’ also on offer this meal fueled us for our pending “I stopped urban derive. observed some curious courting rituals and rolled out to the next scheduled set. Steve’s Steak House behind the racetrack on Ngong Road, somewhat weirdly, is a wicked location for a party. Even more weirdly, on Saturday eyeing my 14th February it was also populated by Nairobi’s dancefloor companions entire high school popWe then drifted, via ulation. Some mothers automobile, to Gyp- suspiciously and started even showed up to drag sies, where we were their teenage daughters confronted by the throwing down my limited home. Nevertheless, beauties and beasts play awesome music of Nairobi nightlife. moves...” that rocks everyone Andi Teichmann, a and even the weirdminimal/progressive/techno DJ who came est crowd become your friends. As soon especially for ‘It’s a pity we only exist in as Andi started to spin, something in my the future’ was supposed to play a set here, mind relaxed, I stopped eyeing my dancebut the management insisted on at least half floor companions suspiciously and started an hour of love songs, as it was Valentines throwing down my limited moves. It was day. As these tunes were kind of absent the denouement of the derive, when the from Andi’s record bag, we drank a beer, emotional subtext activated and reconfig- Central Park Football Somehow or other we managed to get up for Sunday afternoon football. About ten of us congregated at the Nyayo Monument in Central Park, and recruiting a few passers by, we settled in to a 7 a side re-enactment of Arsenal versus Chelsea. It was close, for a while, Gomba from Masaii Mbili studios scored a memorable goal for the reds. Vincenzo Cavallo from Cultural Video Foundation, countered with a beauty for the blues. We then took time out to breathe. After half time things starting getting strange. The blues started winning. Andi Teichmann twisted his ankle. I scored. In my delirium of triumph I thought I saw a city council official shutting us down. Sadly it was not delirium. Apparently football in the park is highly subversive and he Photo: CVF ured the ‘real’ context. 90 minutes later, Andi stopped playing and once again the place changed again. It actually looked physically different. Text: Sam Hopkins Football Photos: African Maximalism called his. He called his boss to bring the trucks to take us away! We started singing ‘Redemption Song’ and I tried not to think of the ramifications of a night in jail... However, at this stage the photographers from Nyayo Monument, who take people’s portraits in the park and were also part of the exhibition, called us over. When we told them what had happened they just laughed and then told us that the ‘official’ was ‘bogus’. They have worked in the park for 20 years and know everyone. We then returned to challenge him and then he tried to have a go at the photographers. It became absurd and he left. We were kind of triumphant, but too exhausted to carry on playing so we went home and slept the sleep of the innocent. It’s a pity that we only exist in the future 4 I got lost. Became disorientated. Tried to dance to R n B. Someone was sick. It was time to leave. Psychosafari Diary The future of Public Space (1) This was the first of our panel discussions, featuring Alexander Nikolic, an artist from a country that no longer exists, Emmanuel Dennis, a representative from Otpur, partnership for change and Claude Ngomsi from UNHABITAT Safer Cities. The aim was to mix these discussants with representatives from the city planning department and the police force to address issues about safety, policing and political expression in public space. Sadly these representatives did not turn up but nevertheless Shalini Gidoomal managed to chair an invigorating debate. For a full report see article on page 6 Photo: African Maximalism The future of Public Space (2) The second of our panel discussion, two After a while we moved to a local video days later took up the parallel debate of booth (pirate cinema) to watch a rough cut how to involve artists and cultural opera- of Judy Kibenge’s film about Solo 7, one tors in the development of an imaginative of the Masai Mbili artists. During the post urbanism. MC Kah from Dandora and Se- election violence of 2008 Solo 7 went out with a paintbrush and geni Ngethe, from Hapa TV represent- “It was the most relaxing paint peace messages all over Kibera, which ed the cultural field, whilst Juma Assiago Psychosafari to date, and was a real flashpoint of violence. The film cuts from UNHABIAT Safer Cities and I think my best Saturday between an interview with Solo 7 and footage Elijah Nvedi from Private Sector Alli- afternoon for a long time” of the violence. It was a powerful experience to ance represented the urban thinkers. Charles Matathia skillfully, sit and watch these graphic images right in and not entirely impartially, chaired the de- the heart of where that very violence took bate and probed the discussants about their place. Solo 7 is a hero. positions. We then moved back to the studio where we were joined by a local musician playing an orutu (a one stringed lute from Nyanza • Maasai Mbili Excursion Masaii Mbili is an artist collective that province played with a bow). This kicked work from a Studio in Kibera, a slum of off a jam session amongst the visitors, about 750,000 inhabitants. On Saturday the artists and some of the children who 21st we went down to their space to visit come to the studio on Saturdays for art them. It was the most relaxing Psychosa- class. Maybe it was the Kenya Cane, but fari to date, and I think my best Saturday I am pretty sure we found a rhythm. The afternoon for a long time. We discussed afternoon was rounded off by some sweet some of the work that the guys were do- goat cooked at Anders’ place by a chef ing, but mainly chilled out, drank Kenya that came to the second panel discussion. I Cane and took a break from the artload of think psychosafaris should become a regular Nairobi feature. the past week. Photo: Associated Media Professionals It’s a pity that we only exist in the future 5 “Constantly negotiate your rights...” Who controls the public sphere? Who owns it? How is it secured? Who educates the enforcers? In typical Kenyan fashion everything was late. One panellist was “stuck in traffic”. Another pair – government bods from Nairobi City Council of course - had not quite confirmed attendance. That left the activist from the “country that didn’t exist and a Senegalese consultant to the UN to kick off the debate on the issues of the use of Kenyan space within the public cultural confines of the German funded-and-run Goethe institute. At this point the slight, and slightly rushed, Emmanuel Denis, from Partnership for Change – the organisation of the black t-shirts, the wearing of which can get you arrested, – flustered into the room and into his place on the panel. But here, he said “the social halls and recreational amenities of the city are being stolen.” In fact he had just arrived from a public meeting in Eastleigh where this issue of grabbed space was under discussion. Seems Nairobi City Council has sold a social hall used by 200 youth groups to a public private partnership group planning to build a skyscraper. The activist, Alexander Nikolic – from Yugoslavia-the-former, his green mesh cap According to Emmanuel, crime was on set at a jaunty sideways angle launched the rise in Eastleigh as the youth groups into a complicated story about a political milled streetwise instead of being able to party that didn’t exist in a country that utilise the hall (which has already been did – Austria. “Call it an artists uprising,” torn down). he explained, “a mimicry of the political It would have been nice to hear from City protelysing platforms of electioneering Hall – either planning or police - about the politicians.” It was an election year and justifiation for this manoeuvre. But they 4000 people had still hadn’t showed up. turned out to hear the “In artistic terms public ruling party state their manifesto during a In the audience, an actual political rally space is a question of agitated Italian kept in a prominent square. reaching and missing The next day 12,000 production. When you the mike. came to hear the artists mock-up of a political propaganda affair, engage in constant When he finally grabbed set around the topic one he rose and said – of racism. It looked, “go to Uhuru Park and production you bring sounded and felt like a you will find preachers political rally, but it was screaming in the name just a (better attended) up the quest of owner- of God, urging all the spoof. “A good use unfaithful to seek the of public space by truth and light and artistic citizenry to ship” all that. And nobody raise topics pertinent to arrests him even though his actions may national life” he added. And indeed as he conflict with those of a greater number of finished his story it was on the high note park goers, who have come for peace and of a serious and positive after effect, as a quiet without any preaching. new law was later enacted which eased voting restrictions on Austria’s black and immigrant population. “But change the tone of that message to a political one, to one that espouses or extends information about rights. To Wish the Kenya government was that one in which governmental criticism proactive. Instead the City Hall reps invited comes into play and plain clothes and to attend this meeting still haven’t shown uniformed policemen appear quickly up. and silently to stop proceedings.” The talk – billed as a dissection of How public is the public space? Indeed, what are we, as members of the public, permitted to do in these spaces is indeed broad ranging. Comments and questions during the hour and a half panel flew over and around the subject – but answers were less forthcoming. Who controls the public sphere? Who owns it? How is it secured? Who educates the enforcers, asked one Mathare based audience member after he related a story of young people being taken to public grounds within slums to be shot by police. Who indeed. Claude Ngomisi – the UN consultant at UN Habitat’s Safer Cities programme, who’s special brief is policing, defined the parameters of the Urban Planning perspective according to Habitat (Access and movement, surveillance, ownership, physical protection of users, management and maintenance) and gave examples –although none from Kenya. “In Mexico City”, he said, “the parks and open spaces that had been taken over my drug dealers had been liberated by the police and made safe for all to play in. That is good “You have to constantly negotiate your rights,” said the Nikolic in response, as he entered into a brilliant twist of logic – “In artistic terms public space is a question of production. When you engage in constant production you bring up the quest of ownership. And when that happens in a public space you inevitably end up with conflict. It’s a constant negotiation of your rights. Gaining public space is really gaining democracy.” Ngomisi agreed – we need to make a list of public places of yesterday to make sure that in 10 years time we know what they are and can check to see if they still exist. They are your social amenities and Government needs to provide them. Do you know your spaces? He asked? There was an emphatic yes from the room. “We know the schools, the halls, and the areas that get so roundly grabbed,” said an audience member, “We know them. “And if you UN people make sure you are present when we fight to keep them,” he added “then police are more shy with their tear gas.” We would have liked to ask the policing department of City Hall about that. But he still hadn’t turned up. Shalini Gidoomal Photos: African Maximalism It’s a pity that we only exist in the future 6 Art at Service The artist must take over the public spaces, turn those not just into a canvas but a living expression of disaffection not only at the evil dystopia that power breeds but also the ignorance of power’s subjects to the dystopian space they blindly occupy Theodor Adorno imagined art’s place as notion of Arts’ Budget to a government one that was contrary to the oppressiveness like Kenya’s takes on the eerily saddening of the power structure. To many artists, this paradox of Nairobi Water or Kenya Power. thought rings true and in their work an edgy But the responsibility of the artist is to hold contrariety lashes out with an often feeble the power system to account; the role of ar, but at times muscular punch at power’s to act as the mirror of society cannot and jugular. But the more the artist fights should not be held hostage by finances. power, attempts to subvert the system, Social commentary, exposing society to its the more power fights back. Power is a own glare, and the weakening, nay, negation resilient adversary. Power is like a good of the stranglehold that the power system virus. As a defence mechanism, it adapts has on the collective necks of its subject some of the host’s cellular structures and class must be pursued by the conscientious kills its host slowly so that it can have more artiste even at the risk of life and limb. time to perpetuate its stranglehold on the “The responsibility of the The contest between host species. the artist and the artist is to hold the power edifices of power The artist desirous for the hearts and of culling power’s system to account” minds of the public tentacles, negating is endless. In a the ubiquity of power in daily life, finds Reuters report on June 25th 2007, the top his voice constantly stifled and his media U.S. Commander in Iraq for day-to-day appropriated to serve hegemonic ends. The operations, Army Lt. Gen. Ray Odierno, challenge of the artist then becomes how was quoted as saying: “One of the things to find new ways to communicate with the we do as part of our foot patrols among the public. For a long time the printed word population centers is monitoring graffiti was the artist-activist’s canvas but media to gauge public sentiments.” Clearly, the conglomeration and government regulation eagerness of the artist to subvert the system took that away. Then came recording is only marched by the necessity of the technology but the ‘record deal’ quickly system to counter-subvert its opponents. killed that. The record deal is genocide to In this instance, an art form, illegitimated the audio activist: ‘keep it real’ and sell in the United States is celebrated at the five records or sign the dotted line, lose the expense of all its cutting-edge surveillance message and sell five million. Just look at technology and advanced human resources what happened to black American music as the tool of choice for intelligence when it moved from the out-house into the gathering in a far off combat zone. The street penthouse. artists of Iraq, find in this instance, both As all this was happening, arts and culture their space and expression appropriated budgets were shrinking. Wait, in Africa, by the dominant power and used as both we never quite had them to begin with. The an instrument for validating the US occupation of Iraq but also in propping up a simulacrum of consent of the governed. That particularly because the system, its legitimacy or lack thereof notwithstanding, has not only the monopoly of violence, but also control- especially under martial law- of the information and situationsreal or imagined- that get privileged and disseminated as representative of the will of the masses. It must be clear to the artist, then, that the power structure has a more potent arsenal under its wing than a mere voice, spray can, paint brush, mouse or whatever other weapon the artist may wield. The battlefield thus must be seen to be unequal and the artist must loose most of the structure of conventional warfare: the fighting formation of the letters to the editor, the aesthetically appealing symmetry of the art gallery and the riding in tandem of the music hall and the repertory theatre. The artist must become a guerilla, take his fight to the public in ways that makes it clear to that public that they too are affected by the treachery against which the artist stands. The artist must take over the public spaces, turn those not just into a canvas but a living expression of disaffection not only at the evil dystopia that power breeds but also the ignorance of power’s subjects to the dystopian space they blindly occupy. Charles Matathia Maasai Mbili Being Kiberans has given Maasai Mbili a firm foundation for a political and socially committed art concept that widens the concept of art Kibera’s people know that they cannot count on anything coming from outside and this is both the curse and the strength of the area. Kiberans have found thousands of ways to cut corners, from the stealing of electricity to the many self help groups, where people take mutual responsibilities for the sake of the group or the surrounding communities. Maasai Mbili (M2) is a community based art group, formed in 2001. Maasai Mbili has ten active members, and a group of six promising art students/aspirant members closely connected to the core group. and has time after time during the years recieved many proofs of popularity and respect, lately by the American Ambassador, who visited the M2 Art Centre to thank for peace-keeping activities during the post-election violence. In 2003 M2 accquired a space, a two storey structure, originally a pub, and turned it into a studio and a gallery. The centre is situated along Kibera Drive, just after Ayany Junction, and almost all the M2 activities are focused at Kiberan development, through community interaction. M2 is an interesting part of a cultural redefinition that the last 5-6 has become a pronounced pan-African concept, Ghetto Culture. Today we meet a similar approach to art as a social and political tool in Dakar, Abuja, Lagos, Kinshasa or Johannesburg. Cultural expressions are connected to specified conditions, such as community belonging and interaction, knowledge forwarding and palpable results. In some cases the Ghetto Culture actors have pronounced it fully, in manifestos and constitutional declarations (like M2 in Nairobi, Ubuntu in Kampala and Kalakota in Nigeria). M2 has for years been a strong, independent, active and well-known force of Kibera based community development M2 has met a great interest outside Kenya. The group is booked for exhibitions in Austria, Sweden and USA. It’s a pity that we only exist in the future 7 People are cultural agents Alexander Nikolic and African Maximalism in dialogue a.n.: Thanks that you invited me for the show, it’s possible that i have quite a developed idea, about art and public space in general, but how and why did you choose such a topic, and what is there relevant for you, in terms of Nairobi? AM: In the sphere of local contemporary art practice it seems that artists are not engaging with public space, hence the title as a provocation. But if you further interrogate local cultural production, and understand art in public space as the performance of cultural expression in public, than Nairobi is a goldmine. a.n: What’s provocative about the title, and by the way, do you know the story about the gold of the socialists international? If it would have been found by the capitalists, it would have turned in their hands, into coal. a.n: Ok, can I be a bit polemic about that, and ask you, would you redistribute that diamonds, to the mothers of the people who went missing in that public space in the last two years? AM: We are very aware of working in an environment, where thousands of young men simply disappear. We don’t think our show can solve that problem. But what our show can do, is to analyse what is permitted in public space, and stimulate an interdisciplinary discourse between artists, activists and theoreticians. So, in answer to your question, the wealth we distribute is the wealth of understanding. abandoned if they don’t work. The last decade of global culture has not proved the theories of Cultural Homogenisation to be correct. People are cultural agents and chose and select from the mainstream of culture. Hiphop may have originated stateside but to see Kenyan hiphop as simply derivative of that culture is to misconceive contemporary culture. a.n: Well, I’m not sure if I buy this... but I will hold further judgement until I see what you have to offer in the show. Afro Max, it’s been a pleasure. AM: Karibu. See you on the 13th. a.n: But you know, I never met more than 30 people at openings here, and even although I’m not living here, I already have the impression that I know most of them.. but maybe I’m wrong. AM: Of course the title suggests that art practice in public space does not exist, or is an almost utopian fantasy, but actually this is not the case. It is merely that the local institutions, which incidentally are almost exclusively controlled by foreign interests, do not showcase or represent this form of local art production. AM: Well, that is exactly point. The artfield is limited, which is why we hope that this show can create a space for interdisciplinary discourse and cross-pollinate between different fields of knowledge. Regarding the field of Art, the time has long passed when galleries and exhibitions are about looking at well crafted objects. We understand our role as catalysts of ideas, connectors of different a.n: Maybe, we get later back to the thoughts, creators of situations in foreign interests, but what is your which viewers themselves create goal? and imagine alternative possibilities to the present. AM: Our goal is twofold, to disrupt the current practice of the local art a.n: I mean, this is not new, and to me institutions, and shift their focus to sounds like you are simply exporting recognise a local cultural practice, European avant-garde thought from which is simply not featured. the 1960’s and planting it in a new However, neither do we seek field. In fact, is this not simply the simply to celebrate an ‘exotic’ art latest version of a long history of practice. By including these artists cultural imperialism? Where is the within this space, we also intend African in your Maximalism? to challenge them, and to stimulate within them further questioning of AM: (Laughter)... Whilst an their own practice. accusation of Cultural Imperialism is to some extent valid, ultimately a.n: And the danger that the gold it is short-sighted. It is true that we could turn into coal? use tools and strategies gleaned from Contemporary Art discourse, AM: Than we crush it into and this discourse does originate in diamonds. the Global North. But, this is just what they are; tools, which can be Project sponsored by THANKS TO; Cultural Video Foundation - http://culturalvideo.org Alexander Nikolic - http://www.eroticunion.org/ Slum TV - http://www.slum-tv.info Sam Hopkins - http://www.samhopkins.org Hapa TV - http://hapatv.com/ Ukoo Flani - http://www.myspace.com/ukooflani Biki Kangwana / Jacob Wachira Kuona Trust - http://www.kuonatrust.org Lukas Pusch Urban Wasanii - http://urbanwasanii.wordpress.com/ Masai Mbili - http://www.art4peace.org/