Visual art in Tanzania has historically been characterised by indigenous mediums including sculpture, beadwork, and textile. Around the 60s, a painting style named after its founder Edward Said Tingatinga emerged and took centre stage as the country’s most notable art style. Tingatinga birthed an era of tourist-oriented paintings that depicted people, wildlife, and nature, often in two-dimensional shapes and bright colours.
The seeds for the burgeoning contemporary art scene that we presently enjoy were arguably planted in the early 2000s. The emergence of centres like Nafasi Art Space, as well as existing spaces like Dar es Salaam Centre for Architectural Heritage (DARCH) and National Museum and House of Culture keenly hosting exhibitions by young visual artists, played a crucial role in improving participation and access to visual art. Also, the willingness of young artists to cut through the status quo, even when audiences were far less receptive than they are now, has certainly shifted the needle towards a more expansive art scene.
Now, Tanzanian art workers are merging technique with innovation and imagination to come up with bodies of work that are distinctive, compelling, and thought-provoking. Most notably, the contemporary Tanzanian scene is characterized by the use of mixed media, and a preference for inward exploration of our identities, communities, and histories, over the outward gaze.
Here is a list of 10 current standout visual artists:
1. Valerie Asiimwe Amani
Valerie’s work explores the body, language, and space. The content of her art is always relational- she is always drawing connections (or interrogating the lack thereof) between people and their bodies, their communities, their histories as well as the systems that govern them. She often uses metaphors to explore grand themes like displacement, beauty, and belonging. Owing to her poetry background, her work has a rich storytelling quality to it. Valerie’s art pieces span in scale from long rolls of fabric sewn together, draping high and wide across space, to intimate pieces hosted in smaller frames.
2. Sabi John
Sabi is a visual artist and poet whose art is an invitation into her interiority. Her work often depicts the emotional, physical, and spiritual state she is in, and in this way, can be quite intimate. Her collection titled ‘Emerged From My Slumber Way Too Early,’ exhibited at Nafasi Art Space, shines in its use of juxtaposition of colour and technique to illustrate tension in the state of being. As Sabi embraces this tension between the real and the abstract, seen and unseen, as well as the outer and inner worlds, she invites audiences to think about the tension in their innermost thoughts and feelings.