Kay Chiromo


Witness Kay Chiromo was a Malawian artist and art educator. He was born in Makoka Village, T.A. Chigaru, Blantyre District. He is considered as one of the most talented and respected artists in Malawi. His medium is oil paintings but also did book illustrations and a video documentary.

Education and career

As an art scholar he worked studied under first generation Malawian wood carvers Akamitondo and Jibu Sani at the KuNgoni Centre of Culture & Art. A mission established by Canadian Claude Boucher Chisale whom also taught art. He received his Masters in Fine Arts degree from the Pratt Institute, a private art college in New York City, in 1986.
He then went on to teach at the University of Malawi. He was a Senior lecturer and head of the fine art section in the Department of Fine and Performing Arts at Chancellor College. He has inspired artists around the world including David McCurry who studied under him whilst in Malawi.

Art

His oil paintings were sometimes built up with fabric, sand or pebbles to produce a deep relief and three-dimensional effect. He once noted that, "Africans express better in three-dimensional arts. He regularly used different canvas shapes straying away from the rectangular canvas.

Notable works

His paintings became popular internationally in the 1980s. They have been exhibited in galleries and exhibitions in the United States,Zambia, England, Canada, and South Africa.

Publications

Kay Chiromo died in 1994 but his artistic legacy can be seen throughout Malawi. The UNESCO sponsored book collection of his work was written by him but published after his death. There was also an annual national literary competition, the 'Kay Chiromo Literary Competition' that was named in his honor from 1995 to 1999. Award winning essays from this collection have been published in books such as the' Wildlife and Environmental Essays: Prize Winning Essays from the Kay Chiromo Competition 1995–1999' Chiromo died in a car accident in 1994.