Olugambo (Gossip) is defined as the exchange of information with evaluative content about absent third parties, an activity in which many people frequently engage. Much of the gossip emanates from drastic changes in our economic constraints some of which have roots in the covid-19 epidemic, HIV/AIDS pandemic.
Gossip is a habit that is engraved within our human psyche. It is an integral part of our lives. Informal evaluative talk about absent third parties and usually about other people’s business, social life. Though, it is frowned upon, and often even condemned, in cultures around the world.
- Gossip can be means of social connection beyond its typical negative connotations for example: Helps you build bonds and make friends. The act of talking to someone else can help build trust. Or it can suggest those that aren’t to be trusted and should be avoided
- Gossiping can reduce stress and relieve anxiety. If u are stressed, worried, or annoyed about a situation, let those feelings through a neighbor, friend or colleague.
Dr. Lilian Mary Nabulime uses the sculptures developed to address this insidious behavior using sarcastic figurines in a series of terracotta and wood sculptures mostly consisting of female figures that are passionately lost in the act of gossip. This is evidenced in their facial expressions and body language. The sculptures are reduced to faces seated on simplified body forms wrought in slabs.
The figures are fashioned to such effect that they strike a theatrical countenance of characters in a comedy. The faces are animated with exaggerated emotions, perhaps telling of the very overstatement that characters employ while gossiping about others in real life.