Thursday, October 11, 2018

Tuesday, August 28, 2018

Living Studio - Lamu Series

Nothing quite like a residency to make one want to take some time off for some RnR. The rigorous critic sessions and studio visits from curators, to production of work and prepping for an open studio. I felt done, exhausted and in need for some well deserved break by taking some time off on an invitation which had been extended to me. Funny how while on break with some time to rejuvenate and rest I also managed to get some work done whilst having some interesting conversations. Such is the life of an artist, when you're doing what you love, it ceases to be work! 


The Living Studio 





Untitled

Monday, June 25, 2018

Artist in Residence

I am currently an Artist in residence at Art OMI in New York. 

work in Progress 


In Progress 


Resume your flesh and form 

Monday, May 7, 2018

Feedback Art Africa And The Eighties

"Let slip the reins", 2017-18, ( Triptych) 300cm x150cm Acrylic/Mixed Media on Canvas 


Feedback: Art, Africa, and the Eighties looks at the 1980s from both a historical and contemporary perspective, a time at which social change and political unrest was a major reference point also for artistic expression on the African continent. It examines the social, political, and economic realities in Africa of that decade through the creative visions of artists, then and now. Shaped by social uprisings, protests, civil conflicts, coups d'état, famine, and both military and civilian dictatorships, the 1980s marked the beginning of the formation of visions of political independences in Africa. It was also the last decade of the Cold War. Although many African countries tried to avoid taking sides, they became a sort of testing ground for the Western and Eastern blocs to conduct social, political and economical experiments. These experiments caused economic consequences across nations. However, the 1980s were also a time when new radical utopias began to take shape, such as Thomas Sankara’s revolutionary politics in Burkina Faso. In addition, the end of Apartheid in South Africa was finally appearing on the horizon. Thus, the African continent was at once the continent of “no future” and a space for the formulation of new visions - which impacted the post-Cold War times era after 1989.

Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Feedback Art africa and the 1980s

Feedback: Art, Africa, and the Eighties looks at the 1980s from both a historical and contemporary perspective, a time at which social change and political unrest was a major reference point also for artistic expression on the African continent.