“I like to let corrupt Kenyans take a hard look in the mirror, to show them how greedy they are. I just can't stand the hypocrisy. If you like going to a prostitute, why shouldn't I make a work of art about it?”
Kenyan artist Michael Soi (1972) doesn’t shy away from controversy. His bright, colored paintings are about political sensitivities and sex work, and he finished a series of 100 artworks on the Kenyan-Chinese relations. But the Chinese are not happy with his statements about their "political interference" in Africa.
To find out more, read the full piece (in Dutch), tap on this link or get a copy of Trouw!
Newspapers
New work for Het Parool: a story about Amsterdam's gable stones
In the PS weekend magazine of Dutch daily Het Parool, you can read how I took on a rather peculiar assignment when I couldn’t travel back to our apartment in Kenya: Lieke asked me to photograph hundreds of Amsterdam’s ‘stone tablets’.
A bit more than a year ago, when COVID cases surged in The Netherlands, Lieke asked me to join her on a walk through a near empty Amsterdam – did I ever see these beautiful little pieces of art bricked into the walls of Amsterdam’s houses?
I must’ve cycled past them countless times, these so-called ‘gable stones’ showcasing ships, circus tents, angels and lovebirds. Could I photograph these tablets for her new Instagram account, Lieke asked? I decided that this could actually give my pointless lockdown walks some purpose, and said yes. My ‘gable stone safari’ had begun.
What I learnt from these little depictions filled with history, mystery and fantastic stories, often hidden in plain sight, can be read in a story I wrote for Het Parool. Click here to read the piece, or check out some of my photos over at Instagram: @stonetabletsofamsterdam!