The Borneo Post

Reviving a traditiona­l art form in Rwanda

- Ammu Kannampill­y and Ivan Rush Mugisha

KIREHE, Rwanda: A 200year-old Tutsi art form made with cow dung, Rwanda’s imigongo painting tradition has experience­d a revival in the Great Lakes nation three decades after the 1994 genocide, becoming a symbol of culture and unity.

Known for its raised black and white patterns, imigongo is widely believed to have been invented by a Tutsi prince in the 19th century.

Prince Kakira mixed cow dung and ash to create a material which he used to paint threedimen­sional patterns on the walls of his palace in eastern Rwanda’s Gisaka kingdom.

The tradition was named after “umugongo”, the Kinyarwand­a word for “spine”, owing to its curved lines, and became popular among rural households where women would use dung and natural pigments made with soil, clay and aloe sap to decorate their homes.

Basirice Uwamariya, founder of the Kakira Imigongo Cooperativ­e in eastern Kirehe district, told AFP she started making art when she was 15.

But the 1994 genocide targeting the Tutsi minority nearly wiped out the tradition, with almost all 15 members of Uwamariya’s cooperativ­e killed in a bloodbath that claimed around 800,000 lives across Rwanda, including moderate Hutus.

She lost her husband and multiple relatives, leaving her to fend for herself and her two sons.

“I lived in darkness, in silence,” the 53-year-old said, recalling the loneliness that pushed her to revive the cooperativ­e in 1996 and invite other genocide survivors to join her.

Since then, imigongo has evolved.

Traditiona­l patterns exist side by side with modern designs featuring various colours. Natural pigments have been replaced by commercial paints.

Imigongo designs have made their way to upmarket studios and fashion boutiques, adorning garments and wooden artefacts alike, with a market that includes foreigners and Rwandans.

According to Theoneste Nizeyimana, manager of Azizi Life Studio in the capital Kigali, the tradition was once largely limited to eastern Rwanda.

“But after the genocide

But after the genocide destroyed everything... people started thinking about how they can bring back their culture. Today, imigongo is appreciate­d by all Rwandans, not just Tutsi. Imigongo is something that brings people together.

Theoneste Nizeyimana

destroyed everything... people started thinking about how they can bring back their culture. Today, imigongo is appreciate­d by all Rwandans, not just Tutsi,” he told AFP.

“Imigongo is something that brings people together,” he said, pointing out that the Kigali boutique and studio holds painting classes for students whose ages range from four to 75 years old.

It also makes business sense, he said, with its instantly recognisab­le patterns helping to market “made in Rwanda” designs around the world.

 ?? — AFP photos ?? A 200-year-old Tutsi art form made with cow dung, Rwanda’s Imigongo painting tradition has experience­d a revival in the Great Lakes nation three decades after the 1994 genocide, becoming a symbol of culture and unity. Known for its raised black and white patterns, imigongo is widely believed to have been invented by a Tutsi prince in the 19th century.
— AFP photos A 200-year-old Tutsi art form made with cow dung, Rwanda’s Imigongo painting tradition has experience­d a revival in the Great Lakes nation three decades after the 1994 genocide, becoming a symbol of culture and unity. Known for its raised black and white patterns, imigongo is widely believed to have been invented by a Tutsi prince in the 19th century.
 ?? ?? A worker displays pieces of traditiona­l Imigongo cow dung art while waiting for costumers at a shop selling traditiona­l African art and handicraft in Kayonza.
A worker displays pieces of traditiona­l Imigongo cow dung art while waiting for costumers at a shop selling traditiona­l African art and handicraft in Kayonza.
 ?? ?? Combinatio­n photo of genocide survivors belonging to the Kakira Imigongo Cooperativ­e painting pieces of traditiona­l Imigongo cow dung art in Kirehe
Combinatio­n photo of genocide survivors belonging to the Kakira Imigongo Cooperativ­e painting pieces of traditiona­l Imigongo cow dung art in Kirehe

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia