For “Enkolangala,” the fourth exhibition by Amasaka Gallery, one of the rare public contemporary art venues outside the capital city Kampala, Buka invites us to reflect on the interactions among the individual, social mores, and human nature. Nodding to Masaka’s role as a hub for the production of bark cloth, the artist paints with and over the material, combining the ancient tawny brown Buganda fabric with everyday white canvas. He further draws out this contrast through the pop-accented, near-comic depiction of figures in primary hues.
Buka’s paintings subtly address the delicate tussle for control in the relationship between an art object and its viewers, paying particular attention to the pernicious influence of the generalized representation of identity and difference produced and promoted by dominant markets. Under this logic, the shared values among individuals or objects rooted in multicultural and multilingual communities are relinquished to a single linear narrative of a “people.” Buka’s portraits call out that fantasy, refusing to play by its rules. Rather than cater to viewers, the paintings force them into the role of voyeurs, eavesdropping on the intimacies of others.
— Nantume Violet
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