Youth Living in Kibera, One of Africa's Largest Urban Slums, Exhibit in Tokyo as 'Subjects Who Tell Their Own Stories'

Key facts

  • Youth Living in Kibera, One of Africa's Largest Urban Slums, Exhibit in Tokyo as 'Subjects Who Tell Their Own Stories'
  • Youth from Kibera hold a photography and video exhibition in Tokyo.
  • Date: March 29, 2026

Direct answer

Youth from Kibera hold a photography and video exhibition in Tokyo.

Citation
Youth Living in Kibera, One of Africa's Largest Urban Slums, Exhibit in Tokyo as 'Subjects Who Tell Their Own Stories' (March 29, 2026)
Source
PR Times
Date
March 29, 2026
Youth from Kibera hold a photography and video exhibition in Tokyo.
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  • 📰 Published: March 29, 2026 at 01:26
  • 🤖 AI Analyzed: May 26, 2026 at 21:27 (1412h 1m after Published)

As part of the 'CRAWL' program for art workers at the art center BUG (operated by Recruit Holdings Co., Ltd.), a project by Migi Sakata, Co-CEO of Kotatsu Co., Ltd. and Representative Director of the NPO Shift Eighty, has been selected. The exhibition, titled 'Viewing the World from Kibera "Slum" - From Being Told, to Telling Our Own Story,' will open on April 25, 2026.

In this exhibition, youth living in Kibera, a massive slum in Nairobi, Kenya, will challenge the image of the slum as a 'subject being told about' and stand up as 'subjects who tell their own stories' through photos and videos they have captured themselves.

When asked about their future dreams, many of these young people answer 'journalist' because of their experience of being marginalized by society and their strong will to carve out a future despite adversity. Triggered by donated cameras and technical guidance from professional photographers and filmmakers, they began to record their lives, joys, sufferings, work, and hopes. This is not merely a record, but the very process of acquiring the 'power to speak,' and an act of redefining the image of the 'slum'—which has been unilaterally consumed by external perspectives—by their own hands.

The exhibition will feature over 100 works, including commentary videos by the artists themselves. During the exhibition, there will be opportunities for 'dialogue,' such as allowing visitors to ask questions to the youth in Kibera and receive replies later, creating a space where a 'reciprocal exchange of stories' can occur between the subjects and the audience. By bringing the perspective of a Kenyan slum, far removed from the center of Tokyo, into the white cube of BUG, this is an attempt to re-examine the fundamental power and joy of 'expression.'

Highlights

1. Rediscovery from Labeled Landscapes

The word 'slum' may evoke stereotypical images of poverty, crime, and hopelessness for many. However, within the places lumped together by that word, there are diverse moments of human activity, joy, and pride. In this exhibition, artists born and raised in Kibera express their daily lives and the stories they want to tell from their own perspectives. Some works include scripts written and produced by the artists themselves.

Kibera is a globally known massive urban slum, and while famous international artists have created work there before, this exhibition focuses on the residents themselves becoming the subjects who tell their own stories, rather than treating Kibera as 'material' or a 'stage.' It is an attempt to re-examine landscapes that have been told through external gazes, through expression from the inside.

2. The Brilliance of Expression Born Amidst Constraints

Many of the exhibiting artists do not own their own cameras or computers, creating their work with equipment rented with limited personal funds and under restricted data usage. They often lack storage to save high-resolution data and do not have an environment where they can easily save many works in high resolution. Therefore, some exhibited works may show variations in image quality or editing. However, this is not due to a lack of individual skill or motivation, but rather differences in production conditions such as available equipment, software, and communication environments.

FAQ

What is the main theme of the exhibition 'Viewing the World from Kibera "Slum" - From Being Told, to Telling Our Own Story'?

The exhibition aims to shift the narrative from Kibera youth being 'subjects who are told about' to 'subjects who tell their own stories' through their own photographs and videos.

Who are the artists participating in this exhibition and where do they live?

The artists are youth living in Kibera, one of Africa's largest urban slums, located in Nairobi, Kenya.

What inspired these young people to create art and tell their stories?

They were inspired by donated cameras and technical guidance from professional photographers and filmmakers, which enabled them to record their lives and experiences.

What kind of works will be displayed at the exhibition?

The exhibition will feature over 100 works, including photographs and videos created by the youth, along with commentary videos from the artists themselves.

How will visitors be able to interact with the artists and their stories during the exhibition?

There will be opportunities for 'dialogue,' allowing visitors to ask questions to the youth in Kibera and receive replies later, fostering a reciprocal exchange of stories.