Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
My works tends to be erotic.
I feel that art is beyond language.
I'm big into multifunctional clothing.
Equal rights for women and queer folks!
There's a recycling mentality about my work.
Motherhood is the ultimate call to sacrifice.
I believe art is a connection, like passing on a flame.
I really believe in dreaming and making things from nothing.
I hope my kids see imagination has power to change everything.
When I'm making a collage, there are a lot of things about it that are violent.
Often, there's an emphasis in my work, and it's sort of the celebrating of the body.
Our interest is in showing that homophobia is not part of the agenda for a new Africa.
I am inspired and affected by Aspen, the light and the landscape and the natural world.
I do all I can to make my world a better place to live in for me and for my kids as well.
Always acknowledge your position in the food chain... They eat because you grow the food.
We have to redefine what we mean when we say, 'Who are your people?' 'Where are you from?'
I would like to make work for my country, art which is innately Kenyan by being made in Kenya.
Some people get turned on by my work, and it sells, but what drives me is the process of making it.
One of the things I'm interested in is not just women but the female qualities that are present in everyone.
I've always been curious about the things that I'm afraid to look at, that make me embarrassed or bother me.
Beautiful things can happen when you act intuitively and instinctively in a moment of anxiety and do something radical.
If something hurtful enters your body, you create something beautiful to protect yourself from it. That's my philosophy.
I keep things moving along with a seriously loving, caring, and brilliant man, a fierce group of friends - and really strong coffee.
I'm not a policy maker. I'm not even a very great activist. My main thing is to make things that speak for the culture that I live in.
There are ways to speak that can transform things, which has less to do with authority but is more about resourcefulness and ingenuity.
The medium of film is really wonderful because it can behave in the same way as collage and painting; it can be layered and non-literal.
So many a time, I would find myself stuck in my studio while, in another country, my exhibitions were opening and I was being celebrated.
I use femaleness as another lens, so I don't even think all my creatures are women; I just think that I bring out the femaleness in them.
I juxtapose and slice up reality and fiction quite easily. I'm aware that it is up for grabs and a powerful tool to explain how we take control.
While I was a student at The Cooper Union, they discouraged too much of a focus on any one medium, and it helped me try new and different things.
What is Africa, anyway? Even I don't know what Africa is, entirely. But I know that it's not some of these simplified sound bites you hear in America.
I'm very much a person that believes that there's something that was introduced into Kenya and Africa as we know it that has made us despise our bodies.
Females carry the marks, language and nuances of their culture more than the male. Anything that is desired or despised is always placed on the female body.
Gold and precious gems are, in many places, the one form of wealth a woman can use to protect and enhance herself within the elaborate structure of patriarchy.
I've always loved the idea that you think you know what you're looking at from a distance, yet when you come up close, it gets intricate and nutty and obscene and provocative.
When certain things reach a tipping point, and you know people's lives are in danger, you have to decide that it's time to speak up, and you have to say something loud and clear.
Being taught to despise your body is being taught to perhaps admire someone else's body more than yours - being taught that your body is good for certain things and not for others.
I feel like I've spent a lot of time imagining home and thinking about a dream-like place, as opposed to a real place, because that's not what I was able to do, meaning go home or be home.
A lot of my work reflects the incredible influence that America has had on contemporary African culture. Some of it's insidious, some of it's innocuous, some of it's invisible. It's there.
Football has that wonderful gift of being accessible. You don't need much gear, a coach, or a lifeguard. You just need your imagination, strong legs, and a couple of friends, and it's a game.
If I don't have an ability to go the places that I have been invited to show at and to speak at and to feature my talent, well then, I am going to stay here in New York City and work my butt off.
I love magazines because they're so dispensable, and they're so quickly consumed. In that way, they're quite honest. They're unashamed about how small an amount of time they're trying to keep our attention.
I think there is something about countries and nations that is hard to define. And, in fact, that's probably why we create such massive boundaries - because it's so slippery where they begin and where they end.
'Misguided Little Unforgivable Hierarchies' is a piece that I did around the time that I was very frustrated and angry with the fact that the U.S., where I live, had decided to pull itself into another war. I was really angry.
In 'National Geographic,' you always saw pictures of tribal Africa. And here I am, sitting in Nairobi in our suburban house, watching TV and thinking, 'Why is it always going to be these tribal people 'that are the ambassadors of our image?
I am fascinated by these ocean-grown folks. On the coast, there's all this cross-pollination of ideas. Someone thinks they saw something. One person's madness is reiterated by another, and a story is born. The rumour becomes a substitute for news.
I have this amateur side attraction to, and interest in, the sciences and biology and physics and evolution. Paleontology is of interest to me. I'm interested in the way these fields have helped us understand how we are human and why we are human.
In most cases I start off with a sketch. But I'm also thinking about real images: out of National Geographic, out of fashion magazines, out of The Economist, out of Time. I'm making a sketch, but I'm using the existing images that have been put out in the world.
Born Free is an idea that came from a place of deep respect for the delicate cycle of life. How incredible to be able to work with gifted designers who, as mothers, recognize what the devastating loss of a child could mean and how easily that loss can be avoided.
My work is often a therapy for myself - a working out of these issues as a black woman. And a way of allowing other black women to work through this kind of stigmatization as they look through the images and feel how distorted or contorted they might be in the public eye.