New Works by Maliza Kiasuwa Create Totems of Mixed Meaning Out of Everyday Objects

Maliza Kiasuwa Talisman 2, 2023 16.5 x 12.5 in. Collage on paper Courtesy of the artist and Morton Fine Art
Art Martin Cid Magazine
Art Martin Cid Magazine

Washington, D.C. – Morton Fine Art is pleased to present Art as a weapon, an exhibition of mixed-media collage and sculpture by artist Maliza Kiasuwa. Based between Brussels, Belgium and Naivasha, Kenya, Kiasuwa’s collage practice blends locally available materials with cultural referents. At once reflecting contemporary globalization and reinvesting in traditional

object-based animism, Kiasuwa’s practice continues to expand in the years following her decisive move into paper-based collage. The artist’s second solo exhibition with the gallery, Art as a weapon will be on view from June 17 to July 18, 2023 at Morton Fine Art’s Washington, D.C. location (52 O St NW #302).

Maliza Kiasuwa
Maliza Kiasuwa Intersection 2, 2023 40 x 27.5 in. Paper and thread Courtesy of the artist and Morton Fine Art

An artist with a longstanding practice rooted in found objects and the histories that inscribe them, Kiasuwa uses thread to stitch disparate materials into an interlacing dialogue. Her works often simultaneously depict and simulate a vision of exchange between parties that—while surprising or possibly dissonant in material—are imbued with a sense of harmony and dignity in form.

Moving only recently into paper-based collage, Kiasuwa considers this new body of work a stylistic breakthrough in her career as an artist, unlocking new possibilities of implication and gesture.

Of Congolese-Romanian heritage, Kiasuwa’s formal collage arrangements are indebted to a fusion of Christianity and animism that inform African culture. Traveling and living between Africa and Europe, Kiasuwa has been inspired from a young age by this “mix of the sacred,” including the talismanic qualities of everyday objects, as well as the strong, sometimes shocking contrasts between natural beauty and human intervention in the region. Working with these influences, the artist’s compositions evoke stances of power while remaining culturally unfixed, allowing for multiple interpretations to exist within their totemic arrangements.

Maliza Kiasuwa
Maliza Kiasuwa Paradoxes 3, 2023 23 x 16.5 in. Paper and sand paper Courtesy of the artist and Morton Fine Art

For example, in Kiasuwa’s “Talisman” series, approachable icons make for contradictory readings, thanks to the artist’s cunning arrangement of cut-outs resembling fish. Lake Naivasha, on which the eponymous city depends, has recently been a site of local conflict as pollution, overfishing and climate change are met with government and humanitarian intervention. The many Naivashans who depend on fishing for sustenance have grown frustrated by the decreasing size of available fish in the lake, and environmental restrictions have led to open conflict with the

authorities. Kiasuwa invokes these recent issues in open dialogue with the more typically Western—and Biblical—interpretation of the iconography as a symbol for abundance.

The artist’s conjoining series “Intersection” and “Paradox” seem to enact this process of symbolic suggestion and conversation, in both its possibilities and limits, by utilizing another familiar yet charged visual typology: the African mask. With her deft use of simple shapes and subtle curves, Kiasuwa constructs arrangements that seem to evoke the entire sweep of art history associated with this mask design, from the traditional power figures of Central African statuary to the bold-faced appropriation of so-called “primitivist” European Modernism. Constructing

stripped-back depictions of ambiguous encounters, again with fish imagery seemingly resting on each subject’s mind, the artist creates indicative works free from simple lessons. Her evocative tableaux simultaneously inspire association while provoking us to ponder what subjectivities may hide behind one another’s masks.

Maliza Kiasuwa (b. 1975, Democratic Republic of Congo), is a visual artist of European and African descent. She lives and works in Kenya, where she creates works with stimulating and eclectic elements celebrating Africa’s mystic power of nature by using raw materials and traditional symbols of energy that flow through the veins of the continent. She transforms everyday articles by combining reductive methods of shredding and twisting with constructive processes of tying, weaving, stitching and dyeing. The process is fluid, focused and meditative. Kiasuwa has exhibited in Kenya, Switzerland, Italy, England and the United States.

Maliza Kiasuwa
Maliza Kiasuwa Intersection 1, 2023 40 x 27.5 in. Paper and thread Courtesy of the artist and Morton Fine Art

Morton Fine Art

Founded in 2010 in Washington D.C. by curator Amy Morton, Morton Fine Art (MFA) is a fine art gallery and curatorial group that collaborates with art collectors and visual artists to inspire fresh ways of acquiring contemporary art. Firmly committed to the belief that art collecting can be cultivated through an educational stance, MFA’s mission is to provide accessibility to

museum-quality contemporary art through a combination of substantive exhibitions and a welcoming platform for dialogue and exchange of original voice. Morton Fine Art specializes in a stellar roster of nationally and internationally renowned artists as well as has an additional focus on artwork of the African and Global Diaspora.

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News about art, exhibitions, museums and artists around the world. An international view of the art world. Responsible for the Art Section: Lisbeth Thalberg
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