Talented siblings use art to live off the streets

By Jeckonia Otieno

Not so long ago, Erick and his elder brother Adam Kawessa were in one happy family and there was no need of their knowing where the next meal would come from, for dad and mum took care of that. Then their parents died and left the two to fend for themselves and take care of their younger sister.

Ideas of how to go about this new responsibility were untenable. They watched as their frail grandmother, whom they live with in Uganda, struggled to feed them. Adam decided to quit school to help. Erick continued with school on and off.

Artistic portraits
Then one day, the two brothers decided to earn a living in the streets; not by begging but through selling their talent – drawing artistic portraits.

We recently met the two on one of the Mombasa streets. They had spread out artistic pieces they had drawn and painted.

Their creativity is impressive: They capture near-perfect images of famous and not-so-famous people. Those impressed by their work give them some money – coins and some notes too. This money goes to ensuring Erick and the sister continue with school.

Living off the streets has not been easy, says Erick, the one who can speak English as Adam dropped out of school too soon.

“We have faced ups and downs since our parents died while we were still very young. But our strong will to continue to live has sustained us here.”

As he speaks, big brother Adam is busy working on a drawing of a man herding cattle.

The two who are both Kenyan and Ugandan citizens, were born in Jinja, Uganda. Their mother was from Kisumu while their father was Ugandan.

Their father died in a road accident in 1998 while the mother fell ill and passed on six years later. They had to live with their grandmother in Jinja.

Erick was born in 1994, two years after Adam, while their sister is nine and in Standard Two at a village school near Jinja. Erick is in Form Four at Madina Islamic School in Jinja.

Spare a little
While both Erick and Adam can draw befitting portraits of anybody or anything they set their eyes upon, they have little to show for it and they have to put up in squalor in Mombasa’s Kongowea Estate where they pay  Sh500 daily for lodging.

But they can’t go home yet; they are patiently waiting to impress more passers-by to buy their work to enable them pay school fees and perhaps spare a little for their grandma.

Adam dropped out of school early to help their grandmother take care of his younger siblings since their sister was barely a year old when their mother passed on.

“After realising we were talented in art, we decided to exploit it to avoid hunger,” intimates Adam, through Erick, his co-artist and translator.

Erick’s real life on the streets began in 2007 he travelled to Nairobi and started doing his artwork along the streets. This got him arrested by the City Council askaris who incarcerated him at their Muoroto base near Machakos Country bus terminus.

Erick recalls, “Two ladies, two ladies who were working with the council – Regina and Caro, helped me and I was released.”

He then went back to school with the little money he had collected to pay his school fees. After a few months he had to drop out again to come look for money to keep him in school.
In 2010, the two headed straight to Mombasa because Nairobi had become too harsh and the askaris were always harassing them.

In no time, Adam puts the final touch on his hunter portrait. His focus as he works has already drawn a crowd of curious onlookers. All the young men need is a picture and they will produce a painted image of the same.

A portrait costs just Sh500; professionals charge several times more.
Erick says their dream is to become great artists and as famous as Pablo Picasso.