Osborne Macharia
Photographer Osborne Macharia has created a fictional underground fight club in downtown Nairobi, Kenya. In a warehouse somewhere in the capital, blood, sweat and tears are expended in the pursuit of glory by fighters exclusively of a short stature.
Osborne Macharia
Characters include veteran fighter Mangalitos, who stands at 4.5 feet and is a titan of the fight scene. Gracing the ring for longer than anyone else, he's the only warrior to lay claim to every championship title available, winning crowns with his finishing move, the Spinning Back Ng'oto.
Osborne Macharia
Reigning champion Dudus uses her sling shot to take down opponents in high stake contests, organized by shadowy figures that even the fighters themselves do not know the names of.
Osborne Macharia
Mrefu first entered the ring when he was five and never looked back. With immersive back stories and high production values, it's easy to forget Macharia's photography is in fact a fiction, created in collaboration with a team of production designers, makeup artists and costume designers, alongside subjects affiliated to the Short Stature Society of Kenya.
Courtesy Osborne Macharia
Osborne's other creations include the Kabangu, Kenya's hip hop grandpas. Having started their careers in the 80s, these fictional mentors teach would-be rising stars the important values in life, such as upholding peace, equality, prosperity and social justice.
Courtesy Osborne Macharia
Security guards by night, hip hop heads by day, the band live in Kariobangi -- Nairobi's informal settlements. An enthusiastic group of hip hop aficionados, they meet regularly to educate and mentor young upcoming talent.
Courtesy Osborne Macharia
The group had remained in relative obscurity until recently -- perhaps because they never existed. Kabangu are the fictional creations of Macharia and stylist Kevin Abraham. The bands nonexistence has not limited them gathering over half a million views online. Some followers believed the group were real.
Courtesy Osborne Macharia
"It's a way of telling our stories, in our own different kind of way", says Osborne Macharia. "I think for so long Africa has been known to be a continent of war, poverty, disease, famine and so on. Sometimes when we actually travel outside and show images of back home people are always shocked and say that's not what I know about Africa from what I see in the media" he explains, adding it's "just to show people that yes we have our own issues but there is more to it, there is beauty, there is life and positive energy, there is fun".
Courtesy Osborne Macharia
The artists imagine rich backstories for his characters. Kenya's league of extravagant grannies -- another fictional ensemble -- were once corporate and government leaders in the 1970's but are now retired. They live the high life traveling to exotic and remote areas within Africa to explore, party and enjoy themselves in exclusivity.
Courtesy Osborne Macharia
Mrs. Kamau Njuguna is a former governor of the central bank of Kenya (1980-1985). Many online believed the grandmothers were real, some posting that they wanted to meet them and that the women's efforts had given them "life goals."
Courtesy Osborne Macharia
Mau Mau were guerilla fighters during Kenya's struggle for independence. Macharia and Abraham created an editorial series focused on them, where they became an elite group of freedom fighting opticians. In Kikuyu -- one of the main languages in Kenya -- Macicio translates to spectacles.
Courtesy Osborne Macharia
Karanja 'the mole' Jere normally operates underground with his modified underground breathing suite. His hair is designed to appear like a rodent burrowing through the soil and his spectacles are telescopic, able to see close to one kilometer away.
Courtesy Osborne Macharia
Nyakundi is a communications expert and voice imitator. He uses the knobs attached to the mouth piece on his spectacles to imitate five different animals using code language.
CNN  — 

Kenyan photographer Osborne Macharia has a knack for capturing underground (and wholly fictional) scenes. His series of hip-hop grandpas proved so realistic that his Instagram followers have asked where they can download the subjects’ tracks.

Now, Macharia is at it again, this time documenting the (again fictional) fight club Mengo, in the heart of Nairobi, with its roster of short-statured fighters.

Macharia’s fight club is set in an abandoned warehouse in Kenya’s capital, where the city’s ultimate fighters converge every month to engage in illegal bloodsport.

The characters make up a motley crew. There’s Dudus, a female wrestler who has been in the ring since the age of 10 (she’s the current reigning champion). She defends her title armed with a sling shot and a keen eye. Meanwhile wizened veteran Mangalitos, the only fighter to have held all championship titles, defends his legacy with specialist move the Spinning Back Ng’oto, using a chain attached to his foot.

‘We wanted to bring a sense of glory’

Macharia’s latest creation is another fantastical narrative from the conceptual photographer, weaving together a rich story we almost want to believe is true.

His composite photographs, captured in a studio and on location before being digitally stitched together, have been his pet project for over a year, one he returns to when he’s not pursuing commercial ventures or winning prizes at the Cannes Lions.

But this isn’t a project playing fast and loose with its interesting subjects: there’s a message behind it too.

“Society has placed [people with dwarfism] in a bracket of people with disability,” Macharia says. “We wanted to change this narrative. We wanted to portray them as this strong, energetic and vibrant people.”

“Traditionally if one was given the brief to photograph people living with dwarfism, it would be the same old direction of pity, disability and the need for help,” he adds. “This was taking a different approach.”

Joakim Mwangi, president of the Short Stature Society of Kenya (SSSK), says the community is stigmatized in Kenya.

“Parents refuse to take children of short stature to school… parents don’t think much of them,” he says. “Even at work we face a lot of discrimination, and we are not respected in any social gatherings.”

Macharia says “we wanted to bring a sense of glory” to people of short stature.

“In as much as they do have their challenges and need for assistance in being accepted in society, we felt this was a different way of creating that awareness,” he explains.

All the “fighters” in Macharia’s series came through their affiliation with the SSSK, who were pleased with the photograph and his team’s approach. The subjects chose their own character names, while props, production and styling were overseen by Macharia’s regular collaborator Kevin Abraham.

“Abraham and I kept pushing the project as it seemed quite impossible and hard to put together,” says Macharia.

“It’s been a sentimental project for my team and I; we were happy that the subjects loved the outcome and were proud to be part of the project.”

Watch the video above to discover how the project came together.