Samson Kambalu
Samson Kambalu (born 1975) is a Malawi-born, London-based artist and author, who trained as a fine artist and ethnomusicologist at the University of Malawi's Chancellor College.
Life and work
Kambalu was born in Malawi, where he attended Kamuzu Academy, the so-called "Eton of Africa".[1] He graduated from the University of Malawi's Chancellor College, Zomba in 1999. Kambalu completed his MA in Fine Art at Nottingham Trent University in 2003 and wrote his PhD at Chelsea College of Art and Design, looking at how the problematic of the gift and the general economy animates various aspects of his art practice.[2]
Kambalu's work, which references Situationism and the Chewa Nyau culture of his native Malawi,[3][4] manifests in various media, from drawing, painting, installation, video to literature and performance.[5]
One of his most well known artworks is Holy Ball, a football plastered in pages of the Bible.[6] Kambalu held an exhibition of 24 "Holy Balls" at Chancellor College in 2000 at which he invited the visitors to “exercise and exorcise”.[7] He has since shown his work internationally.[8] In 2015 he was included in Okwui Enwezor's All the World's Futures at the 56th Venice Biennale.[9] In November 2015 a judge in Venice dismissed a complaint[10] filed by the Italian situationist Gianfranco Sanguinetti against the Venice Biennale and Kambalu with regard to one of his installations, Sanguinetti Breakout Area.[11]
Kambalu's Nyau Cinema is a series of short film clips of psychogeographical performances, shared as interventions on social networking sites and as installations in galleries.[12] These have been described as "cinematic fragments that blend slapstick and spiritual ritual".[13]
His first book, an autobiographical narrative entitled The Jive Talker or How to Get a British Passport, was published by Jonathan Cape (Random House) in July 2008, and in August 2008 by Free Press (Simon & Schuster).[14] His second novel, Uccello's Vineyard, published in 2012,[15] is in The Book Lovers, a collection of artist novels at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Antwerp.[16]
Kambalu is represented by Kate MacGarry in London.[17]
Exhibitions
Selected solo exhibitions
- 2015 – The Unbearable Lightness of Nyau Cinema, Gallery U Mloka, Olomouc, Czech Republic
- 2015 – Double Feature: Nyau Cinema, Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt, Germany
- 2014 – Sepia Rain, Stevenson Johannesburg, South Africa
- 2012 – Tattoo City: The First Three Chapters (with guests), Castlefield Gallery, Manchester, UK
- 2000 – Holyball Exercises and Exorcisms, Chancellor College, Zomba, Malawi
Selected group exhibitions
- 2016 – Liverpool Biennial, Liverpool, UK[18]
- 2016 – Dakar Biennale, Dakar, Senegal[19]
- 2016 – Lost & Found, Paradiso, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
- 2015 – Embodied, Nikolaj Kunsthal, Copenhagen, Denmark
- 2015 – 50/50, New Church Museum, Cape Town, South Africa[20]
- 2015 – Transformation Marathon, Serpentine Galleries, London
- 2015 – Schema, Stevenson Cape Town, South Africa
- 2015 – All The World's Futures, Venice Biennale, Italy[21][22]
- 2014 – Chroma, Stevenson Cape Town, South Africa
- 2014 – Dakar Biennale, Dakar, Senegal
- 2004 – Bloomberg New Contemporaries, Liverpool, UK[23]
Bibliography
Books
- 2012 – Uccello's Vineyard. ASIN: B009Z48N2Y
- 2008 – The Jive Talker or, How to Get a British Passport. ISBN 0-224-08106-3
Articles
- 2015, Entering the Arena: All the World's Futures, Art in Culture, South Korea,[24] and Contemporary And[25]
- 2014, Great African Minds: Dr Charles Chanthunya, Peter Hammer Verlag
- 2013, The Museum and the Individual, essay on Meschac Gaba's Museum of Contemporary African Art, Tate Modern[26]
- 2011, Der skurrile Diktator, Kulturaustausch, IFA, Germany
- 2010, Dr Albert Schweitzer's Troublesome Young Brother, Kulturaustausch, IFA, Germany
- 2010, Windmill Jive, Salz Magazine, Austria
- 2009, Action Bitte – Malawians at Leisure, Kulturaustausch, IFA, Germany
Residencies, fellowships and awards
- 2015, Research fellowship, Smithsonian Institution National Museum of African Art, Washington DC, USA
- 2014, Research fellowship, Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, USA
- 2013, AHRC PhD Research Award, UK
- 2005–10, The Fire Station Residency, ACME, London, UK
- 2004, Decibel Visual Arts Award, Arts Council
- 2000, Thami Mnyele Artist Residency, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Notes and references
- ↑ Kamuzu Academy
- ↑ Chelsea College of Arts blog: interview with Samson Kambalu
- ↑ Aloisia Leopardi, Game Changers: Samson Kambalu and his idea of play in art and life, Griot, 31 March 2016
- ↑ Roxana Azimi, L’Afrique à Venise (3) : sombres et majestueux « futurs » d’Okwui Enwezor, Le Monde, 7 May 2015
- ↑ Blouin ArtInfo art listing
- ↑ Massa Lemu, Play and the Profane in Samson Kambalu's Holyballs, Holyballism and (Bookworm) The Fall of Man
- ↑ Virtual Museum of Contemporary African Art
- ↑ Kate MacGarry: Samson Kambalu biography
- ↑ Biennale Arte 2015: Samson Kambalu
- ↑ Raffaella Pelligrino, "Gianfranco Sanguinetti contro la Biennale di Venezia", Artribune, 28 December 2015
- ↑ Roxana Azimi, "L’écrivain italien Sanguinetti porte plainte contre la Biennale de Venise", Le Monde, 19 October 2015
- ↑ Eric Loret, "Samson Kambalu, souverain du cinéma «nyau»", Cafe des Images, 8 September 2015
- ↑ Louisa Buck, "Venice Biennale: highlights and best of the rest", The Telegraph, 29 May 2015
- ↑ Bookforum Review
- ↑ Uccello's Vineyard by Samson Kambalu
- ↑ M HKA Ensembles: Uccello's Vineyard
- ↑ SAMSON KAMBALU – Kate MacGarry
- ↑ Liverpool Biennial 2016: Samson Kambalu
- ↑ L’exposition internationale
- ↑ Thuli Gamedze, Giving renewed attention to old voices?, Arthrob, 1 February 2016
- ↑ La Biennale di Venezia: Artists: Samson Kambalu
- ↑ Sean O'Toole, Africa from afar, Contemporary And, 29 May 2015
- ↑ New Contemporaries 2014
- ↑ Art in Culture, June 2015
- ↑ Entering the Arena, Contemporary And, 11 June 2015
- ↑ Tate: Viewpoint: Samson Kambalu
External links
- Official website
- Kate MacGarry: Samson Kambalu
- Random House
- Simon & Schuster
- Contemporary And: Samson Kambalu
- Giles Foden, Good news from Africa, review of The Jive Talker, The Guardian, 23 August 2008.
- Susan Williams, The Jive Talker, by Samson Kambalu – Portrait of the artist as a young African (review), The Independent, 4 July 2008.
- Aminatta Forna, Review: The Jive Talker by Samson Kambalu, The Telegraph, 10 August 2008.
- Massa Lemu, For the ranter, the whole world is a playground. In conversation with Samson Kambalu, Contemporary And, 13 February 2014.