Yony Waite (Kenyan, 1935 – 2024)
Untitled (Horse), circa 2021
Signed ‘Yony’ and stamped with a name seal (lower right)
Sumi ink on paper
46.4 x 31 cm
KES 100,000 – 150,000
(US$) 800 – 1,200
Provenance: from the estate of Yony Waite
Sold KES 270,020

Yony Waite grew up on the Pacific Island of Guam, but eventually became a Kenyan citizen. She studied Fine Art at the University of California where her mentor Richard Diebenkorn instilled in her a keen appreciation of the essential value of light. Waite then went to Japan to study the art of sumi-e brush painting where she developed a great love of ink as a medium. Waite kept the Kenyan wilderness at the heart of her practice.

Alongside her work as an artist, Waite was instrumental in establishing various art institutions in Kenya, most notably as co-founder of Gallery Watatu in 1968, which was later sold to Ruth Schaffner in 1984. She went on to establish Wildebeest Workshops and Mkonokono women’s group in Lamu where she lived until her death. Waite received a Rockefeller Grant to create a large-scale work to be exhibited at the Rio Biodiversity Summit of 1992.

Waite has a strong international following and has exhibited extensively in Japan, USA and Kenya.