Chibụike Ụzọma: To Kick a Stone
Chibụike Ụzọma: To Kick a Stone
Documented here are sixteen of the artist's large paintings rendered in oil and acrylic or acrylic spray paint on canvas, made in 2022. Accompanying an exhibition of the same name at Simon Lee Gallery, London, the first solo exhibition of his work in the UK, this publication is the fourth pillar of a collaborative project by the artist, setting his own paintings in relation to video and audio works by Edward Owens and João Orecchia respectively. Ụzọma works with non-linear narratives, using a mix of painting languages that dodges and weaves the liminal spaces between representation and meaning. Fragments of stenciled letters jolt against textured pools of paint, and diaphanous figures are cropped by cinematic horizons. Comprising colorful, abstruse portraiture against stark black and white backgrounds, the paintings in "To Kick a Stone" are deeply suggestive, but ultimately formalist explorations of shape and composition.
An introduction by Kat Sapera, Director of Simon Lee Gallery, draws upon her first encounters with the artist and details the influence of philosophy and the act of looking. Sapera brings the collaboration with Orecchia and Owens to the forefront of her discussion while touching on Ụzọma's making processes.
In an essay by Ụzọma, the artist himself writes lyrically upon subjects including poetry, religion, good and evil, in order to bring a number of key concepts that circle his work into the field of view.
Essays by Bishupal Limbu, Associate Professor of English at Portland State University, and by Carlos Valladares, writer and critic, help amass a portrait of an artist whose inquiry is informed by film, philosophy, and pictorial language--with the layering, unraveling, and opening-up of narrative as a core focus. Their writing brings key art historical figures into dialogue with Ụzọma's work.
Lastly, the artist appears in conversation with writer and curator Ekow Eshun. This frank and illuminating conversation provides insight into the artist's painting practice, previous series of works and intentions, while also discussing issues of identity and Blackness. Their interview further reflects on past exhibitions, connections with other key artists, and Ụzọma's recent MFA studies at Yale.
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Documented here are sixteen of the artist's large paintings rendered in oil and acrylic or acrylic spray paint on canvas, made in 2022. Accompanying an exhibition of the same name at Simon Lee Gallery, London, the first solo exhibition of his work in the UK, this publication is the fourth pillar of a collaborative project by the artist, setting his own paintings in relation to video and audio works by Edward Owens and João Orecchia respectively. Ụzọma works with non-linear narratives, using a mix of painting languages that dodges and weaves the liminal spaces between representation and meaning. Fragments of stenciled letters jolt against textured pools of paint, and diaphanous figures are cropped by cinematic horizons. Comprising colorful, abstruse portraiture against stark black and white backgrounds, the paintings in "To Kick a Stone" are deeply suggestive, but ultimately formalist explorations of shape and composition.
An introduction by Kat Sapera, Director of Simon Lee Gallery, draws upon her first encounters with the artist and details the influence of philosophy and the act of looking. Sapera brings the collaboration with Orecchia and Owens to the forefront of her discussion while touching on Ụzọma's making processes.
In an essay by Ụzọma, the artist himself writes lyrically upon subjects including poetry, religion, good and evil, in order to bring a number of key concepts that circle his work into the field of view.
Essays by Bishupal Limbu, Associate Professor of English at Portland State University, and by Carlos Valladares, writer and critic, help amass a portrait of an artist whose inquiry is informed by film, philosophy, and pictorial language--with the layering, unraveling, and opening-up of narrative as a core focus. Their writing brings key art historical figures into dialogue with Ụzọma's work.
Lastly, the artist appears in conversation with writer and curator Ekow Eshun. This frank and illuminating conversation provides insight into the artist's painting practice, previous series of works and intentions, while also discussing issues of identity and Blackness. Their interview further reflects on past exhibitions, connections with other key artists, and Ụzọma's recent MFA studies at Yale.
Published on the occasion
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