DON’T MISS A THING
Your privacy is highly respected. We would never share your information.
+256 788 610 919
nhellend@gmail.com
TUWAYE
‘Let’s Talk’
How can art be shaped to address universal values?
Nabukenya gives a new life to pieces of fabric from tailors in Kampala that would otherwise be discarded. Given the different histories attached to the different companies that produce textiles for a Ugandan market, Hellen’s work narrates the history of fashion trends Uganda has witnessed from the recent past to present. In every part of her artwork – knotted, stitched or bound – the pride invested in selecting, grouping, and making these installations is evident. She is attentive to fabrics and patterns.
Drawing attention to their textures, the resulting creative ingenuity is visually engaging. The highly textured artworks reveal ideas around dialogue and community, and the complexity involved in her thought process. Her artworks grant a glimpse into a rarely captured historical scope ignored by the mainstream media or academic research.
Various colours and tones of her textiles tackle the transformative colour themes within social and economic trends revealed through commercialism in fashion and the process of discarding textiles from which she exhumes her materials and gives them a new life as artwork. The process of how the textiles return into the cycle alongside the stories is invigorating.
She invites viewers to immerse themselves into her progressive path through collective creation by women whose activities extend from conversations as they stitch, knot and weave waste textiles into visual contemporary art. The social sentiment they communicate has so much currency today.
They remind us that while much of contemporary life is steeped in wastefulness, Ugandans have always had ways of exploiting fabric remnants. In her Maama Yampa, Taata Yampa painting, Maria Naita highlights families making clothes for their children with left-over fabrics in a patchwork method.
DON’T MISS A THING
Your privacy is highly respected. We would never share your information.
+256 788 610 919
nhellend@gmail.com