Portrait of Kim Karabo MakinDesign Indaba
Blue is a Personal Journey
Botswanan photographer Kim Karabo Makin uses the color blue to explore her experience of the unique spirit of her home country.
Botala Jwa Loapi: The Blue of the Sky
In Setswana, the term Botala Jwa Loapi can mean "the blue of the sky" depending on the context. In this work Kim uses the phrase as a starting point.
Three Chiefs rendered in the Color Blue
Kim's work features a repeated pattern design that borrows from the face of the Botswanan currency's 100 Pula note. The note features portraits of three chiefs who are monumentalised as fathers of the nation, for their role in the Republic of Botswana’s grand narrative.
Evoking Traditional Dress
In addition to referencing Botswanan history through the motif of the three chiefs, Kim also refers to letaisi - traditional Botswanan dress.
What does Kim say about her work?
''By intricately weaving together the history of the Three Chiefs, with the cultural value of particular geometric patterns and traditional dress, my work unpacks the layers of our societal make-up and fabric, based on my lived experience of daily life in Botswana"
What Does Kim Think it Means to be African?
"I believe that to be African means to be in constant conversation with our historical entanglement. To be African means to acknowledge and nurture the interconnectedness of one’s sense of self."
Blue Skin of AlgeriaDesign Indaba
Blue, Beauty and Charm
Ramzy Bansaadi's exploration into his country via the color blue has allowed him to show the different ways in which this culturally predominant color exists in Algeria.
Blue Skin of AlgeriaDesign Indaba
A Day in the Life of the Color Blue
For his long term project exploring traditional festivals in rural Algeria, Ramzy noticed the prevelance of the color blue in the places he visited. In selecting the photographs which documented this color, Ramzy created an photo-essay on the color blue in rural Algeria.
Blue Skin of AlgeriaDesign Indaba
What Does Ramzy Think it Means to be African?
"Africa is like a thousand leaves of a single tree. To be African now is to be in the future. This continent is full of hope, and we can't wait for it to be concrete."
Blueing HopeDesign Indaba
Blueing Hope
How does Rwandan artist Christian Benimana understand his country through the color blue?
In his triptych Blueing Hope Christian Benimana has created digital drawings exploring how blue is ''a calm messenger which paves the way before the sun rises and lays the foundations on which the hope brought by the first ray of sun stands."
Future MemoriesDesign Indaba
The Future is a Memory
For Ethiopean photographer Michael Tsegaye, the buildings in the process of construction which fill the Ethiopean streets portray a kind of timelessness. His photographs, titled Future Memories, explore this.
Future MemoriesDesign Indaba
Addis Ababa - A City Under Construction
As Michael notes "The plastic sheeting used to protect civilians from the building works and scaffolding that rises into the sky is a particular shade of blue. Almost like the sail of a ship, sailing in on the crest of a wave of change."
What does Michael Think it Means to be African?
"To be an African is to live in the now. The changes that I see in Addis are happening all over the continent. New buildings, new ideas, new everything… Africa has a young population, and there is a thriving, new energy that represents what it means to be African."
Blueing HopeDesign Indaba
Blue is a Symbol of Opportunity
As Christian says "The first ray of the sun is the universal symbol of hope, but the calm blue of the dawn remains the symbol of opportunity and a new beginning for me."
Blue is an Invitation
"It is a gentle reminder of a chance we have to begin afresh; an open invitation to try again, to correct what we haven't done properly in the past, and do better today."
What does Cristian Think About What it Means to be African?
"Being African is to be constantly misunderstood, constantly caught in tensions between what one is and what one is perceived to aspire to."
"Like a soldier on the battlefield, being African means to relentlessly fight hopelessness and despair. To – against all odds – emerge hopeful for the potential to fundamentally change the way we think about, understand, interact, and integrate our own lives with Africa."
Blueing HopeDesign Indaba
United in Blue
In this exhibition, the artists and their works are as different and varied as the countries from which they hail. Their unique African stories exist here, however, unified by the color blue.