Kambalu's work, which references Situationism and the ChewaNyau culture of his native Malawi,[4][5] manifests in various media, from drawing, painting, installation, video to literature and performance.[6]
One of his most well known artworks is Holy Ball, a football plastered in pages of the Bible.[7] Kambalu held an exhibition of 24 "Holy Balls" at Chancellor College in 2000 at which he invited the visitors to “exercise and exorcise”.[8] He has since shown his work internationally.[9] In 2015 he was included in Okwui Enwezor's All the World's Futures at the 56th Venice Biennale.[10] In November 2015 a judge in Venice dismissed a complaint[11] filed by the Italian situationist Gianfranco Sanguinetti against the Venice Biennale and Kambalu with regard to the unauthorised and wholescale appropriation of Sanguinetti's entire archive for one of Kambalu's installations, Sanguinetti Breakout Area.[12]
Kambalu's Nyau Cinema is a series of short film clips of psychogeographical performances, shared as interventions on social networking sites and as installations in galleries.[13] These have been described as "cinematic fragments that blend slapstick and spiritual ritual".[14]
His first book, an autobiographical narrative entitled The Jive Talker or How to Get a British Passport, was published by Jonathan Cape (Random House) in July 2008, and in August 2008 by Free Press (Simon & Schuster).[15] His second novel, Uccello's Vineyard, published in 2012,[16] is in The Book Lovers, a collection of artist novels at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Antwerp.[17]
Kambalu is represented by Kate MacGarry in London and Galerie Nordenhake in Stockholm.[18][19]
On 5 July 2021, it was announced that Kambalu's artwork had been selected as the next to occupy the fourth plinth in Trafalgar Square in central London from September 2022 until 2024. The sculpture, entitled Antelope, restages a 1914 photograph of Baptist preacher and pan-AfricanistJohn Chilembwe and European missionary John Chorley. Chilembwe wears a hat in an act of defiance, as it was illegal at the time for an African to wear a hat in front of a white person.[20]
Exhibitions
Selected solo exhibitions
2017 – Red Barn Farm, Galerie Nordenhake, Stockholm, Sweden [21]
2015 – The Unbearable Lightness of Nyau Cinema, Gallery U Mloka, Olomouc, Czech Republic