Oscar Ryan Ouma

Oscar Ryan Ouma

Oscar Ryan Ouma

Profession
Storyteller and Creative Facilitator
Project
Oscar Ryan Ouma
Based in
Kenya
Platform Member
Works at
-
Oscar Ryan Ouma

About the project

Environmental Memory Maps

Environmental Memory Maps is a community-led initiative that explores how people living along the Lake Victoria Basin in Busia, Kenya observe, remember, and document environmental change. The project brings together elders, youth, fisherfolk, and local communities in Samia Sub-county, Busia, to record environmental knowledge through storytelling, oral histories, photography, illustration, and participatory mapping.


Many environmental changes, such as shoreline erosion, flooding, declining biodiversity, and changing fishing grounds are first noticed by the people who live with them every day. Yet these observations are rarely documented or included in wider environmental conversations. By creating Environmental Memory Maps, the project combines community memories with present-day observations to build a visual record of changing landscapes. The process encourages dialogue across generations while preserving ecological knowledge that might otherwise be lost, showing how creativity and community participation can contribute to understanding and responding to environmental change.

About the projects’ approach

The project builds on the idea that environmental knowledge is not only produced through scientific instruments but also through lived experience and long-term relationships with a place. Rather than treating local people as participants in a study, the project works with them as contributors whose observations and memories are valuable forms of knowledge.
Workshops, community conversations, oral history interviews, photography, illustration, and participatory mapping are used to document both historical and present-day environmental conditions. Elders share memories of landscapes that have changed over time, while younger participants contribute their own observations of today’s environment. These perspectives are brought together through creative processes that produce visual maps, stories, and public exhibitions. The approach values collaboration, curiosity, and shared learning, creating space for communities to reflect on environmental change while imagining possible futures together.

About the designer

Oscar Ryan Ouma is a community storyteller, environmental communicator, and the co-founder of Kenge Content Hive, a community cultural organisation based in Busia County, Kenya. With a background in Information and Communication Technology (ICT), his work combines storytelling, digital media, visual documentation, and community engagement to explore the relationship between people, culture, and the environment.
Through Kenge Content Hive, he has collaborated with communities around the Lake Victoria Basin on projects that document local knowledge, environmental change, and cultural heritage. His practice has also included international collaborations such as the Design Reparations partnership with collaborators from the Netherlands, where storytelling and participatory design were used to explore climate resilience and ecological memory.
His work is driven by the belief that creativity and Arts can help communities preserve knowledge, strengthen dialogue, and inspire collective responses to environmental challenges.
This profile is part of the CitiObs × Distributed Design cohort of creative practitioners selected through an international open call exploring the role of art, design, and making in environmental protection and citizen science. From 213 proposals submitted worldwide, 25 projects were selected for their ability to connect communities, environmental observation, and creative practice in meaningful and impactful ways. Discover more about the collaboration on the CitiObs website and read about the selected projects.