MOKE,
1950 - 2001
Moke was born Monsenguro Kejwamfi
in 1950 in Ibe, Bandundu Province, Democratic Republic of Congo.
Seen rightly as a painter reporter of city life,
artist 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.
Artist 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