Chelenge Van Rampelberg (born 1961)[1] is a Kenyan sculptor who works with wood. She has been called Kenya's first female sculptor.[2]
Van Rampeberg was raised in the rural community of Kericho in the Rift Valley.[3] She was exposed to wood and cutting wood from an early age, due to the necessity of gathering firewood from the forests near her home.[4]
She did not receive a formal arts education until the early 1990s, when she attended a two-week workshop at Alliance Francaise about etching and woodcut printing.[4]
After her three children started school, Van Rampelberg found herself with free time, which she decided to dedicate to art.[4] She took up painting, but hid her pieces.[4] Her husband, after seeing her paintings, encouraged her to try and have them exhibited. Van Rampelberg's first exhibition was in 1985.[5]
Van Rampelberg first began carving wood after an avocado tree fell outside her house and she decided to try sculpting the wood as a way to relieve stress.[3] She continued experimenting, and had carved three pieces she enjoyed within three months.[3]
In 2013, Van Rampelberg was one of six artists included in an exhibition at the Nairobi National Museum celebrating 50 years of Kenyan independence,[6][7] and she also had a solo exhibition in the One Off gallery at Rosslyn, near Nairobi. Several of her sculptures were bought that year by the Sankara Hotel at Westlands.[5]
In 2014, Van Rampelberg was the artist in residence at the Lamu Painters Festival.[3]
In 2020, Van Rampelberg was included as part of a German exhibition centering on work by Michael Armitage, who was a childhood friend of one of her children.[8][9] The exhibition was also shown in London at the Royal Academy of Arts in 2021.[10] In 2022, the exhibition moved to Nairobi under the name "Mwili, Akili na Roho", and was expanded with works by three additional artists.[8][1]
In 2023, two of Van Rampelberg's sculptures were included in an exhibition by Alliance Francaise focusing on Kenyan women artists.[11]
After finishing high school, Chelenge married French artist and furniture designer Marc Van Rampelberg in the early 1980s.[9][12] The couple had three children.[4]