RiF - 2020http://hdl.handle.net/10570/81502024-03-29T11:32:28Z2024-03-29T11:32:28Z1890 Captain (Later Load) Lugard a representative of the chartered Company.Makerere University.http://hdl.handle.net/10570/96222022-03-22T09:37:53Z1890-01-01T00:00:00Z1890 Captain (Later Load) Lugard a representative of the chartered Company.
Makerere University.
It is a photograph taken of 1890 Captain (later Load) Lugard, a representative of the chartered Company, the I.B.E.A. Co., set up a camp and built a fort on the Small hill called Kampala.
A photograph of 1890 Captain (later Load) Lugard, a representative of the chartered Company, the I.B.E.A. Co., set up a camp and built a fort on the Small hill called Kampala.
1890-01-01T00:00:00ZAbasegu dancing for Omukama.Makerere University.http://hdl.handle.net/10570/93512022-02-09T10:54:12Z1925-01-01T00:00:00ZAbasegu dancing for Omukama.
Makerere University.
It is a Photograph taken of Abasegu dancing for Omukama.
A photograph of Abasegu dancing for Omukama.
1925-01-01T00:00:00ZAcademic goals.Paul Lubowahttp://hdl.handle.net/10570/99372022-05-09T13:26:56Z2012-01-01T00:00:00ZAcademic goals.
Paul Lubowa
In this, The artist produced the a body of painting championing women's right to education. it is located in the Makerere university library.
During 1980s and the decade that followed, there were concerted efforts in different parts of the world to ensure that women had access to education. These efforts were a concern for every one interested in the growth and development of Africa. Many scholars and entrepreneurs came to realise that it was no longer tenable to have a male dominated educated and developed society. Resulting from this realization was a campaign to sensitize the masses to be part of these efforts. Lubowa a renowned graphic designer and painter was one of those artist who produced a body of painting championing women’s right to education. Academic goals, is one of these art works done by the artist during those decades. In this particular painting, the artist, presents a group of three women holding a book and another open book displayed on the table. His usage of the number three is significant and one needs to pay attention to its symbolism. Three is a sacred number in many African societies. Sacred things are given in three. Sacrifices offered to ancestors and to Royalty are presented in three. The artist’s use of three women here is a call to break all the taboo that had been created to deny women access to education. He critically looks at the society in which he works and makes a statement that calls for the dismantling of the culture that hinders women emancipation.
2012-01-01T00:00:00ZThe Achievement.Paul Lubowa, Margaret Trowell school of Industrial and Art.http://hdl.handle.net/10570/99382022-03-29T01:22:55Z2012-01-01T00:00:00ZThe Achievement.
Paul Lubowa, Margaret Trowell school of Industrial and Art.
Painted in 2012, the achievement’ is one of those paintings that demonstrate the artist’s mastery of the painting media in a mysterious way.
Painted in 2012, ‘the achievement’ is one of those paintings that demonstrate the artist’s mastery of the painting media in a mysterious way. Two graduates standing in communication with two proud mothers are presented, wearing motorboats, a sign of achievement. What is going between the graduates and their mothers all seems to be left to the interpretation of the viewer, but the flow of the white robes the graduates are adorning suggest celebration moods. Painted in various tones of broken brown, with carefully mixed green hues and subtle blues, the painting gives the viewer a psychological sense of vanishing forms fused with the background. The artist’s use of the female figure as opposed to male forms is an indicator of the emphasis put on the empowerment of women by Makerere University during and after 1990s, an Institution where the artist works. This painting reveals that education is not a preserve of men but rather a right for all.
2012-01-01T00:00:00Z