MOKE
(1950 - 2001) [view
available works from this artist]
Moke was born Monsenguro
Kejwamfi in 1950 in Ibe, Bandundu Province, Democratic
Republic of Congo.
Seen rightly as a painter reporter of
city life, Moke was among the leading artists of the
school of popular painting that sprung up in Kinshasa
in the first decade of Zaïres independence.
Moke arrived in Kinshasa
at the age of ten, living hand to mouth and day by
day. Discovering that there was a market for paintings,
he taught himself how to render landscapes on discarded
pieces of cardboard. In 1965 he painted a picture
representing General Mobutu waving to the crowds as
he led the parade commemorating Independence Day;
this composition, which he returned to many times
in later years, launched Mokes career. He set
up a studio at the crossroads of Kasa Vubu and Bolobo
avenues, the district where many billboard and advertising
artists worked, and immersed himself in the daily
life of the city from which he drew his inspiration.
Moke adopted the conventions of commercial
art, boldly outlining his robust figures without concern
for likeness or perspective. Instead, he celebrated
the painterly aspects of his art, using a rich palette
and vividly animated compositions. Unlike Chéri
Samba or Cheik Ledy, who were to follow in his footsteps,
Moke rarely depicted social conflict. Rather, his
sympathetic and vivaciously humorous paintings were
grounded in his observation of daily life in Kinshasa:
street scenes, bars, the local dandies known as sapeurs,
the powerful Miziki (associations of financially independent
women), all-night parties, neighborhood disputes,
and public ceremonies all found their way into his
canvases.
source: CAACART
Selected Exhibitions
Moke GALLERY