Africa | One Work, Many Voices
Michael Armitage and the Ghosts
of Past Picturing
Gabriella Nugent
November 4, 2020
In comparison to the historical recentness of mediums like video and installation,
painting comes freighted with heavy histories, traditions, and pedagogies. This
complicated heritage is taken up by the British-Kenyan artist Michael Armitage whose
paintings respond to contemporary issues and events in Kenya through the ghosts of
past picturing.
Michael Armitage, Nyali Beach Boys, 2016. Oil on Lubugo bark cloth, 96 7/16 x 92 1/2 in. (245 x 235 cm). ©
Michael Armitage. Photo © White Cube (George Darrell).
In comparison to the historical recentness of mediums like video and installation,
painting comes freighted with heavy histories, traditions, and pedagogies. It has
constituted a site where debates of modernism and “primitivism” have played out and
where, as cultures clashed, localized forms and imported styles were joined. While
video, installation, and photography are often considered the globalized media of
contemporary art, oil painting carries a culturally loaded set of connotations as a long-
standing “Western” medium. This complicated heritage is taken up by the British-
Kenyan artist Michael Armitage, whose paintings respond to contemporary issues and
events in Kenya through the ghosts of past picturing.
In his work, Armitage draws upon both Western and East African art history. His
reference systems brings together his immersion in both of these worlds. Born in
Kenya to an English father and Kikuyu mother, Armitage spent his childhood in East
Africa before attending boarding school in the United Kingdom and training at
London’s Slade School of Fine Art and the Royal Academy Schools. Writings on
Armitage’s work have often paid close attention to the way he invokes European
artists, but little has been said about their East African counterparts, presumably due
to the historically Eurocentric nature of art history But it is this coupling of parallel
cultural histories that interests me.
Reverse appropriation
In Nyali Beach Boys (2016), Armitage revisits Pablo Picasso’s Les Demoiselles
d’Avignon (1907), transforming its central subject of five nude female prostitutes to
five nude male prostitutes, known colloquially as “beach boys” who comb the beaches
of Mombasa looking for wealthy female European tourists. The group of young men,
rendered in shades of black, blue, purple, and yellow, stand against a tropical
background of the same color palette. Their faces are reduced to a series of thin lines
and concave eye sockets. They appear impenetrable and masklike, evocative of the
African sculptures that Picasso used in the service of modernism. In his depiction,
Armitage replaces Picasso’s basket of fruit, a symbol of female sexuality, with a black
cat, an overt art historical reference to prostitution, most famously seen in Edouard
Manet’s Olympia (1863).
Armitage’s reworking of Picasso can be described in terms of what artist and art
historian Olu Oguibe has termed “reverse appropriation,” as in a strategy of formal
appropriation of the language and idioms of Western visual expression by the
colonized. Oguibe coined the term with regards to the Nigerian artist Aina Onabolu
(1882–1963), who mastered the forms and techniques of western artistic expression.
As he notes, Onabolu proved that the arts of drawing and painting were not culture-
specific and could not manifest the superiority of one culture or people over
another. The example of Onabolu disrupts the heart of colonial
discourse, namely the perpetuation of fictional differences upon which the colonial
project was constructed. Art and aesthetic sensibility were used to signify the
unbridgeable distance between “savagery” and culture. Within this paradigm,
European modernists alone could appropriate artistic forms without compromising
their creativity; they controlled the axis of appropriation. Alternatively, non-Western
artists who appropriated from Western sources were deemed derivative.
Oguibe’s discussion on the appropriation of imperial culture is reminiscent of the
relationship between mid-century African art movements and Western primitivism.
Art historian Elizabeth Harney has written on the reclamation of African motifs from
within the primitivist aesthetic by Senegal’s École de Dakar. Under the new post-
independence government led by President Léopold Sédar Senghor, the École de
Dakar promoted an aesthetic that corresponded to the philosophy of Negritude.
Many of these artists chose to represent a pan-African heritage through objects
preferred by the European primitive art market and modern artists. Harney argues
that those involved with Negritude intentionally played with Western notions of
primitivism to give a new accent to signs of “traditional” Africa and, in the process,
expose the imperialist genealogy of modernist primitivism. Armitage’s recourse to
Western art history issues a similar “reverse appropriation” in that it offers a critique of
the appropriative colonizing lens of modernist painters like Picasso.
Armitage locates his recourse to western art history in east Africa. Instead of canvas, a
traditionally Western surface, Armitage works with oil paint on lubugo bark cloth.
The cloth itself is created by removing a thin layer of bark from the Mutaba tree that is
subsequently beaten by hand into a thin, flexible material. Protected by UNESCO, the
production of bark cloth is an ancient craft of the Baganda people in southern Uganda
where it is worn by kings and chiefs during ceremonial events and used as a burial
shroud. Armitage sources lengths of the cloth and stitches them together before they
are stretched and primed. He incorporates these stitches and the material’s
occasional holes and irregularities into his compositions. While often noted as a
defining feature of Armitage’s work, the medium of bark cloth has been a staple for
many contemporary artists in Uganda, such as Fred Mutebi and Ronex Ahimbisibwe.
In the past, modernists such as Ethiopian-Armenian artist Skunder Boghossian used
bark cloth in their work to reflect the advent of decolonization. For Armitage, it seems
that bark cloth represents both a search for a medium that is East African and a tool
for decolonizing the overladen histories of oil painting.
In Nyali Beach Boys, the social experience of Kenyan beach boys is highlighted by way
of Armitage’s appropriation of Picasso. This art historical reworking challenges an
isolated understanding of the beach boys, compelling audiences to consider
their longue durée. Anthropologist George Paul Meiu has written about the history of
Kenyan beach boys. According to Meiu, in the 1980s, the growing markets of “tribal”
and “ethnic” culture drew Western consumers to Africa in search of transformative,
authentic Otherness – the same impetus shared by modernist painters. In response
to this opportunity, Kenyan men migrated to coastal tourist destinations in order to
sell souvenirs and perform traditional dances for European tourists. Many engaged in
transactional sex or marriage with European women who were attracted to the thrall
of the exotic, namely the virile Maasai warrior. Through these relationships, Kenyan
beach boys expected to acquire wealth, which they would then use to marry local
women and speed up their ritual initiation into elderhood. The lubugo cloth is also
connected to the tourism discussed by Meiu; Armitage first encountered it in a tourist
shop where it was sold as coasters and placemats, despite its sacred status amongst
the Baganda. Picasso’s Demoiselles, the beach boys, and the lubugo souvenirs are
thus entangled in the same Western stereotypes around an Africa available for
consumption. The complicated histories of painting deployed by Armitage enable
viewers to see these connections across time and the ways in which the beach boys
comprise a longer trajectory premised on Africa’s exoticization.
Michael Armitage, The promise of change, 2018. Oil on Lubugo bark cloth, 86 5/8 x 94 1/2 in. (220 x 240
cm). © Michael Armitage. Photo © White Cube (Ollie Hammick).
Rally paintings
In 2017, a year after Nyali Beach Boys was completed, Armitage began to work on a
series of paintings based around events associated with Kenya’s general election and
the violence that ensued as a result of ethnic rivalries and claims of
fraud. The resultant history-style paintings were informed by the artist’s experience of
an opposition rally in Nairobi’s Uhuru Park and images taken from broadcast
media. In The promise of change (2018), a toddler, dressed in orange red robes and a
plumed hat, addresses an indistinguishable crowd from a stage. Three adults bend
over behind him; one of the men pokes out a long, bright red tongue. The third figure
on the left, a woman, appears attached from the bottom of her hemline to a stand of
decapitated heads. There are several frogs of enlarged proportions depicted: one
shares the stage with the toddler and two more are suspended above the crowd. The
strangeness of the scene is enhanced by the pink sky against which several acacia
trees stand in the background. In another painting from the series, The Fourth
Estate (2017), Armitage renders a purple tree that emerges from a sea of people
attending a rally. The tree’s expansive branches are occupied by a dozen or
so supporters, one of whom displays a banner depicting a large frog, while two
additional frog banners are waved by the crowd below.
Michael Armitage, The Fourth Estate, 2017. Oil on Lubugo bark cloth, 129 15/16 x 78 3/4 in. (330 x 200 cm). ©
Michael Armitage. Photo © White Cube (George Darrell).
Armitage’s paintings on the rallies recuperate a series of Kenyan and Ugandan artists
to the attention of global audiences. Though several of these artists were featured in
the landmark exhibition, Seven Stories About Modern Art (1995), at London’s
Whitechapel Gallery, the writing on the art history of East Africa remains thin, making
Armitage’s work even more significant. In the catalogue for Seven Stories About
Modern Art, curator Wanjiku Nyachae suggested that modernist painters skewed the
reception and exposure of art from East Africa: there was an absence of the
sculptures and masks made famous by Picasso in the region, which led to its dismissal
by scholars and collectors. She wrote that this alleged absence endures in
perceptions around contemporary art from East Africa.
Mathias Muwonge Kyazze, Misfortune, 1985. Oil on board, 77 3/4 x 35 53/64 in. (197.5 x 91 cm). Courtesy of
Makerere Art Gallery.
Armitage’s treatment of electoral violence and the political landscape of Kenya evokes
the work of students at Uganda’s Makerere School of Fine Art in the early 1980s
whose paintings addressed the failures of the postcolonial state in the wake of Idi
Admin’s regime. In Misfortune (1985), Mathias Muwonge Kyazze visualizes Uganda’s
entrapment in a cycle of violence and destruction through a spider web packed with
prey. There is a sense of several generations besieged by violence: a bird and its
chicks struggle to escape from the claws of mythical creatures, while a skeleton
attacks a chained pregnant woman whose womb has been torn open. An owl, the
Ugandan symbol of death, watches over the carnage. The art created at this moment
in time seems to provide Armitage with a case study on the confluence of painting and
political unrest in East Africa.
Armitage also calls upon the Kenyan-based artists Jak Katarikawe and Meek
Gichugu whose careers were forged through Nairobi’s notable Gallery Watatu and Paa
Ya Paa Gallery. Their paintings were even included in Armitage’s first major
institutional exhibition, Paradise Edict (2020) at Munich’s Haus der Kunst. In The
promise of change and The Fourth Estate, Armitage’s dream-like portrayal of the
rallies, where reality gives way to the imagination, is reminiscent of Katarikawe. The
paintings’ color palette adopts the artist’s trademark pastel hues of yellow, blue, pink,
and purple. More than just dreamlike, the sinister and surreal atmosphere portrayed
by Armitage seems to draw from the world of Gichugu where bodies are distorted and
tongues unfurl against a landscape of acacia trees.
Long-ago dubbed by Western critics as “Africa’s Chagall” due to his depiction of
dreams, animals, and his home village, a popular story goes that when Katarikawe
heard of his European predecessor, he suggested that Chagall had copied him. This
anecdote gets at the lingering centrality of a European canon of painting, in which
artists who fall outside are made sense of through the canon, but they themselves are
secondary to it, or optional to the art history syllabus. Alternatively, Armitage’s
paintings place European and East African artists on equal footing, refuting these
derivative accounts. As the discipline of art history attempts to become more global
and attuned to the legacies of colonialism, Armitage’s paintings weave together, like
the stitches of his lubugo cloth, these interconnected histories.
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Jak Katarikawe, Untitled, ca. 1995. Oil on hardboard, 41 11/32 x 29 59/64 in. (105 x 76 cm). Courtesy of Red
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Meek Gichugu, Everything, 1998. Oil on canvas, 38 3/16 x 30 45/64 in. (97 x 78 cm). Courtesy of Red Hill Art
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