A conversation with artist and lawyer Lotus Menezes

By Omar Mohammed

Lotus Menezes is a dancer, lawyer and painter.  A daughter to Joanna and Thomas Menezes, she is a third generation Tanzanian, from her mother’s side, and first generation from her dad’s side. Mr. Menezes came on a boat from Goa, and decided to become Tanzanian because he loved it so much.  He met Joanna and shortly after, they got married. A year later, Lotus was born.

Lotus grew up at Uhuru Street, Kariakoo, in Dar es Salaam and went to Olympio Primary School in Upanga. But when she was 9, she successfully convinced her mother to send her to Greenacres School, a boarding secondary school in Kenya, because her best friend, Modesta, was heading there. After Greenacres, she moved to South Africa, where she read Law at the University of Cape Town. Upon graduating, she came back home, qualified as an Advocate of the High Court of Tanzania and has been practicing law for four and a half years.

Recently, Miss Menezes sat down with Omar Mohammed to talk about her art and upcoming solo exhibition. ‘By the Stroke of a Brush’ opens at Makutano Art Gallery, in Masaki, on the 5th of August.

So, who is Lotus Menezes?

That is a very interesting philosophical question (laughs). I think I define myself by my relationship with my mother, and the things that we’ve gone through in the past, my friends. My art is a priority compared to my work. I think I would consider myself an artist and a dancer, before I consider myself as a lawyer.

And maybe that’s my constant struggle – between my profession, and my art. I say struggle on the one hand, but the two go hand in hand because without my art, I wouldn’t be able to deal with my profession. And without my profession, I wouldn’t be able to do my art.

How do those two things inform one another – you being a lawyer on the one and an artist on the other? How do your artistic pursuits inform your legal profession and vice versa.

The legal profession for me is very constricted. You have to adhere to all sorts of rules and regulations and there is a hierarchy within the profession itself, and so you always need to know your place. And anything you write has to be checked by somebody else, and sometimes people can be very aggressive in the way that they respond to you. So there is no room for creativity, from my perspective. Mainly because of the projects that I’ve been working on, and even if the projects are exciting, still you have to confirm to certain rules and regulations.

With art, for me, that is somewhere where no one can tell me what I’ve done wrong or what I should improve on. Especially when things are going wrong in my profession or in my life or anything like that, I find solace in the canvas and painting and just sitting there and being able to take control of a situation. Even though I may have an idea of what I’m painting, its not necessarily what will come out,  but I at least have control on what’s going to happen – how I can paint, when I can paint, and where this brush stroke goes and where it doesn’t go. But with the law it can be very confined, sometimes, and you have to adhere to these really strict regulations which I  tend to find very difficult as an artist.

Does art make you a better lawyer?

Well [in art] I can bring out my frustrations on the canvas and then I realize that when I go back to the drawing board at work, so to speak, I am calmer. I look at it with a better perspective and my emotions don’t get in the way. So I always have to take time out and go and put it on the canvas.

People often ask me how I get time to do art, work and all sorts of other things, like Salsa. And the truth is, I don’t find the time – it’s something that I have to do, its something that’s within me. I can wake up at 5am in the morning and paint. Or I can stay up late at night to paint. So it’s not about making time in the day, it’s just something that’s a part of me, an expression that I have to channel.

Can you talk about your process as a painter?

Okay, I don’t do many sketches so I don’t start off with an idea and then a sketch and then onto the canvas. I go straight to the canvas. So, for example, at the moment I just started a piece of work for my mother. It’s two paintings, combined, by Jack Vettriano. My mom is a very passionate woman and she likes reds, it’s a painting with sensual women. So that’s for her. What I do is I look at the painting or the picture for a very long time. And then what I do is I start outlining it. I sketch very briefly and then I just start painting immediately.

I use thick brush strokes when painting. The only reason that I can explain my painting now is because I used to paint with, a friend, Joe, a painter as well. And his paintings are very delicate. He does very soft layers upon layers and he builds up to something. I just go at it and attack the canvas aggressively. So its very thick brush strokes, and if there is a mistake then I will pile on more paint.

Sometimes paintings change, like for example I have one called ‘Zanzibar Monsoon’ showing a man walking down a narrow street. It’s mainly blue hues and its very textured. With that painting I started ages ago and I just had ochre and I was trying to paint – I cant remember what – probably a woman I think, something, it was very abstract. And then after a while I decided to paint this scene. It’s a very well known scene in Zanzibar– its a postcard and there’s lots of rain and there’s a guy that you can barely see and he’s walking into the perspective of the painting. And for that I use very thick brushes. I’m very lazy when it comes to cleaning my brushes so sometimes I pile on the paint and cleaning becomes a very arduous task.

I never consider a painting finished, even when it is signed. Salsa in Dar, for example, contains a flamenco dancer and she’s got her arms up in the air and it’s a really crimson background. I don’t feel like she’s finished. Maybe some time later I will pick up the brush and make a change here or there. But the paintings are never finished for me.

So that’s the process so to speak– no sketching, I go straight onto the canvas and then build on it over time.

In terms of how long it takes me to paint something, it varies. It could be two hours, two months, a year. It depends on my inspiration and how I’m feeling at the time and what inspires me.

Talk to me about where you grew up and your background.

I am a daughter to Joanna and Thomas Menezes and I would say a third generation Tanzanian, from my mom’s side, and first generation Tanzanian from my dad’s side. My dad came on a boat from Goa, and decided to become Tanzanian because he loved it here.  He met my mom and shortly after, they got married. I was born a year after and I grew up in Kariakoo on Uhuru Street. Actually, Swahili was my first language. My mom always tried to make me speak English but because I spent a lot of time outdoors with the kids around the streets I spent a lot of time speaking Swahili.

I then went to Olympio Primary School. When I was 9, I decided to go to boarding school in Kenya because my best friend, Modesta, was going there. I said to my mom, ‘my best friend is going, and I’m going with her.’ And so I did. After secondary school, I came back home and then went to South Africa, the University of Cape Town where I studied law. I’ve been back home since graduating, which is four and a half years ago.

When did you realize that you were an artist?

My dad was good at sketching and he would always sketch my mom and I or sometimes write poetry. He had a very artistic soul. So, there was one time that I had this big eraser, with a big picture of Mini mouse on it – and I went to my dad, I think it was one afternoon after school, and I was pestering him and I asked him to please sketch this Mini Mouse for me, and he was a little too busy. And usually, being his only child, he would have all his attention on me, but at this one point he was quite busy. So he said to me, ‘why don’t you do it yourself?’ And he was quite stern and I was a bit taken aback by it. So I was like, ‘oh well then,’ and so I went and started drawing Mini Mouse. After that, I felt compelled to draw. Just sitting in that moment and focusing on one thing and blocking out everything around me. So I started drawing and it became my pastime, my hobby. Also, I probably developed it more because there was no electricity at home and I didn’t grow up with a TV. So, I would spend a lot of time drawing. I didn’t have lots of expensive toys or lots of kids after hours to play with so I would just retreat and draw. And that became my thing.

So why didn’t you pursue art at university?

Well I did actually say to my mom at the time that I wanted to go study art and I did, in fact, get into art school. But she sat me down at the arcade opposite Saverios in Mikocheni and said, ‘I know that you want to do art and that its your passion, but I honestly don’t think you can earn a living from it, especially in Tanzania. So my advice to you is you love history and literature and the arts, so why don’t you find something that would take you in a different direction based on those subjects.’ I did my A-levels in Art, History and Literature, so that’s why she said this to me.

I was slightly disappointed because I really had my heart set on going to art school. I’d sent my portfolio to this one university and they’d accepted me. But I had to make a decision, taking into account my mom’s advice, I decided to do law. It seemed general enough for me to do it and then to branch out to different things. So when I went to university I don’t think I did my degree to the best of my ability because I was doing it for the sake of doing it. But after a year there, and once I felt settled, I started painting. And whatever turmoil I was going through at university it translated into a painting.

What are your influences as an artist?

When I was fourteen I discovered Roy Tabora, he’s from the Philippines but he’s based in Hawaii. He does these Hawaiian seascapes. So a lot of my seascapes are based on his, but with a Tanzanian context. I discovered him in a calendar and then I decided to find out more about him. I was going through a lot of turmoil at the time, so seascapes were the best way for me to express my feelings. So a lot of them are angry seascapes. I didn’t think they were angry at the time but when people look at them they say ‘you must’ve been really angry or really emotional.’ And I probably was, but I wasn’t aware of it at them time. So my way of expressing my emotions was not getting angry outwardly or shouting, it was painting.

That was one, another one is – I do like Jack Vettriano, mainly because he was self-taught so I’m drawn to that. And he does a lot of post-impressionist paintings of women and men in very basic situations – like in a bar, or in a club or by the beach. I like his work because of the strong paintbrush strokes and the red and black two-tone nature of his works.

When I was eighteen, I loved drawing mermaids. So through Google – that was when I had newly discovered the internet – I googled all these mermaids and mermaid figures and I discovered this guy called Jonathan Earle Bowser and he does very true to life paintings of women in different settings, including mermaids. And so I based my a-level art on his work.

But I liked Roy Tabora’s work for a long time although I now feel that most of his paintings can be a bit contrived, his sunsets, for example, too orange or too purple and it doesn’t just seem true to life. And with Jonathan Earle Browser I’ve found that his paintings are just too perfect. I wanted something less perfect like Jack Vettriano.

Those are the three main ones that I can think of. But also, when I traveled to Italy and Paris, I jumped into lots of museums and art galleries and looked at the masters that I’ve really been taken aback by. And its interesting because when you look at the paintings they’re not as wonderful as when you see them in a book, for example, maybe the colours are slightly different or its been hyped up too much. I like the impressionist paintings, mainly because they went against society and they painted whatever. And I guess the art dealers did a good job of trying to change people’s opinion on how to view impressionist art.

Now lets talk about your upcoming exhibition. This is going to be your first solo exhibition. How many artworks are you going to exhibit? What are your expectations and what do you ultimately hope to achieve?

I’d say about twenty pieces. I’m hoping to make a few more beforehand.

Why am I doing it? Well, I want to sell paintings (laughs). I do and I don’t. Because when you sell a painting it’s like loosing something that’s a part of you, that you are unlikely to see again. So you can never really price your art. I don’t know how to price my art, in that way, it’s a very tricky thing.

When I initially decided to do the exhibition, it was a spur of the moment decision. I just came up with a step plan, executed it and before I knew it I’d put a down payment for Makutano Art Gallery and had already commissioned postcard artwork and the event poster. Now when I’ve had the time to reflect, I really don’t know what I’m doing (laughs). Because it’s scary – its one thing to have people walk into your home and go ‘oh you paint, that’s great, I didn’t know that about you.’ But to put yourself out there and have people come and view your artwork with probably the motive of owning it and keeping it in their homes, it’s a very strange and difficult thing as well.

It’s a personal thing for me, it’s my emotions up there on the canvas. So I don’t know how I going to respond to people’s reactions, positive or negative. I don’t know if I will be sad, really, really sad selling certain paintings. Because the way that I’ll price it is, I will mark something up depending on how much I like it (laughs). So if it’s really that good, if someone is willing to pay that much for it then they can have it.

There are a few paintings that I feel will be star paintings in the exhibition, others maybe not so much. But I’m willing to put everything in. What’s stopped me from doing an exhibition before was the fact that I don’t have a theme. I’m painting oceans one day and women the next, and little seascapes today then little flowers the next day.

But I met this woman once and she said to me, ‘you don’t need to have a theme. You should exhibit everything that you paint just to show your diversity.’ And from that moment on I was like, well, okay. I have always been waiting for this moment when I would discover a theme. Because when you look at the lives of artists you see twenty years of progress and evolution of [a certain theme]. Yes I’ve been painting for a long time but I don’t think that I’ve developed myself to the point where I know what my theme is, or what my style is. I’m constantly searching for a style and I haven’t found it yet. But then through searching for a style, I’m doing different things.

And I think the positive thing that might happen at the exhibition is people’s comments about what they may think my style is.

Please pick three paintings and describe them to our readers.

"Coco Beach" by Lotus
"Coco Beach" by Lotus

So this painting is called ‘Coco Beach’. It’s a portrait painting of palm trees on a rocky cliff. In the back left hand corner you see the sea, which is quite dark and grey in the distance and as you come to the foreground of the painting the sea becomes lighter but more violent. The surf is churning and again on the left hand side in the foreground there is a rock and the water is churning around it. The sky is alive and you feel like the wind is coming from the right top corner of the painting and blowing onto the palm trees, the coconut trees. Bits of the sun are caught in the leaves of the trees.

For me it’s a very moving picture because it expresses a lot of anger but a lot of calm depicted by the wind and in the sky.

"Monsoon Zanzibar" by Lotus
"Monsoon Zanzibar" by Lotus

I call this one ‘Monsoon Zanzibar’ mainly because it reminds me of being in Zanzibar during the rainy season. And that’s why it’s such a popular picture because it’s taken from a postcard of a photograph that’s quite well known in Zanzibar.

So what’s happening here is that the whole picture is perspective. There is a man in the middle with his back to us, carrying a big brown paper bag. You cannot see his figure very well, its very murky and he’s got a big umbrella over him. And in the back behind him you can see that there is another umbrella but it’s a bit brighter, and colourful because the light is shining there.

Above are buildings, like the way it is in Zanzibar. There are a few buckets of water in the side probably to ‘kinga maji.’ And there is a cloth peeping out of one of the doors and all the doors are dark. I’ve used a fan brush to create the rain falling down which kind of hangs halfway and stops, suspended over the umbrellas.

The umbrellas remind me of Renoir’s umbrellas and that’s what I was trying to depict. I also have fish. I have a thing with these fishes. It’s cut outs of kanga material inspired by a well-known Tanzanian artist, Minzi who uses kanga in his paintings. And he integrates them into the painting with brushstrokes. So initially I put these fishes because, well, the fishes mean a lot to me because I am a Pisces and that’s my sign and I really like these little fishes, they are white and yellow.

I got different reactions from it – some people had seen the painting without the fishes, so when I put them in, some people didn’t like it. And that’s the danger of letting people see your artwork before its finished. So I decided to paint over it, probably influenced by my viewers and I don’t know whether you should be, but how can you say what’s right and wrong. So I painted over it with a bit of thinners and so when you come close you can see the fish but from a distance you can’t and I kind of like that magical air about it.

"Salsa in Dar" by Lotus
"Salsa in Dar" by Lotus

The ‘Salsa in Dar’ is a favorite of mine. Mainly because she looks like she is rising out of the ashes, someone who is rising out of whatever trials and tribulations she has had and she is coming out strong, with a strong sense of herself, knowing who she is and where she is going. She is still looking down because she is still building the courage to look up.

Also this painting merges my two passions – dancing and painting. And it’s a woman dancing and expressing herself even though she is rising out of trouble.

The colours have particular significance for me in this work. I love crimson red – its funny because every time I’m coming out of something, for me red is a calming, happy colour – kind of the opposite to popular notions of red – seeing red and being angry, etc – but for me crimson is a happy colour.

And there are a lot of reasons for that. For example, my mom loves red – she wears red lipstick and red nail polish every single day, during the day and the night, she loves her red bags and her red dresses and her red shoes. So I’ve always been acquainted with that colour. While the colour in the painting is nor red per se, its more of a coral red, as my mom calls it. So this is not…well the coral is there but the rest of it has different tones. So I’ve always liked that colour, to use it as background especially for figures and also because it warms the figure.

In this exhibition, in a way, you are announcing yourself to the world as an artist. How do you feel about that?

I’m freaked out (laughs)! Because nobody really wants to hear negative responses to their work especially when it’s such an emotional, personal thing. But of course as a developing artist I think it’s important for me to receive whatever constructive criticism there is out. Obviously this is going to come from people who are art lovers and others who have no idea about art. But any reaction is good because it’s a human reaction.

So I will be putting myself in a position where I will eventually be looking forward to that criticism because then, I believe, it will make me better at my art. I don’t have to take it into consideration every time, but it is food for thought. So that’s what’s scary.

Also, for a long time I’ve been shy to say that I’m an artist and I normally won’t say it to people even people who I’ve known for a long time unless they come to my home and see my work.

But with this exhibition, I am going to now be a public artist and that comes with certain expectations. People might ask you to produce work and it’s difficult to just produce work when asked. Because you need to be inspired by it and I think it takes away from your art if you are constantly reproducing things without those inspired emotions.

So I think I’m scared (laughs).

What do you say to young Tanzanians out there who are aspiring artists?

I would say to them that they should not stop doing it. They shouldn’t be disheartened but they should also be realistic about whatever environment they are in. I think Tanzania’s still in it is infancy in terms of art, in terms of artists making a secure living from their art. There are so many things that go into it – people need to like your art, unfortunately, they need to be willing to pay a certain amount for you to survive off it. So it is a business in itself.

In terms of developing, on a larger scale there’s talent there, but then you also need different influences. You need different creative spaces in which to talk about your art and to learn about the experiences of older artists. So I think young people should continue to pursue their art. But my advice will be, and some people may not think this entirely the artist’s way and maybe this is where my lawyerly business side comes in, I think you should try to have other things that you can fall back on.

And it does mean that your time is going to be limited, because you’re spending time making money in a different way and then you also want to spend time with your art. But I think if art is truly your passion, if music, if dance is truly your passion then you will always find a way to express it. And once you’ve become financially independent – and because we need to be honest about it, we need to be financially independent – and once you have done that then you’ll put yourself in a place where you can make certain decisions, like ‘I’m going to open a gallery’ or ‘ I’m going to develop my art in this way.’

Even prominent artists in Tanzania, not many are making a ‘killing’ out of their art. It’s different to the service delivery industry, for example, where you can make a cup of tea and sell it for 1000 shillings and whether the person likes the cup of tea or not, they still have to pay you. With art you do a piece of art and people can look at it and like it but not necessarily pay for it. So it’s a difficult thing to harness, but its not to say that you can’t achieve what you want to achieve but I think you need to be smart about where you are going.

Omar Mohammed is Media Strategist with Serengeti Advisers and his media blog is at The Wayward Press.

Thanks to both Lotus and Omar for sharing their work on Vijana FM!

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Al-Amin founded Vijana FM in 2009. With over a decade of experience in communications, design and operations, he now runs a digital media consulting agency - Lateral Labs - in Dar-es-Salaam.

This post has 8 Comments

8
  1. It would be an honor to view Lotus Menezes’s artistic creations. Congratulations Lotus on this momentous milestone.

  2. A beautiful interview, Lotus. Even though I know you kama dada yangu this revealed new depths to the way you think about your work. Can’t wait for the exhibition!

  3. I went to Greenacres School with Lotus infact we wre even in the same class she was very very talented back then and i must say she is still very very talented now based on paintings i have seen in this interview. Fantastic work Lotus keep it up!!!

  4. Well done Lotus, you make me so proud to be your mother, so sorry to be missing the opening day of your exhibition but looking forward to being there upon my return… xxxxxxxx

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