It is going to be a real showcase for South Africa’s and the
continent’s fast growing and vibrant contemporary art economy as the 2nd
edition of the Cape Town Art Fair kicks off in South Africa. And in
line with its mission of ensuring sustainable presence for African art
within a global context, one of the leading art gallery in Nigeria,
Omenka gallery will from February 26 to March 1, participate in the Art
Fair scheduled to hold at the Avenue, V & A Waterfront, Cape Town.
Omenka will present recent works by four leading contemporary African
artists Joel Mpah Dooh (Cameroon), Duke Asidere (Nigeria), Gerry Nnubia
(Nigeria), and Ndidi Emefiele (Nigeria). The four artists differ in
their primary point of investigation.
Among them, Joel Mpah Dooh is preoccupied with experimentation and
has enjoyed international critical acclaim with his paintings and
multi-med
ia works.
The artist is inspired by the tactile reality of his environment
though he is mostly an inner traveler. Mpah Dooh works on paper, canvas,
corrugated iron and most recently acrylic sheets, while incorporating
earth, paints, clay, packaging, wood, and chalk to explore the fragility
of individual human identity and how we reinvent ourselves while moving
and evolving in the city.
Asidere’s work engages contemporary African politics. Through visual
metaphors, the artist comments on the everyday human drama that
surrounds him; political, social, psychological or cultural.
Furthermore, he adds an element of surprise to these sketches of human
drama by infusing them with irony and humour.
Asidere’s broad oeuvre ranges from headless or limbless figures and
faces of strangely hybrid beings to densely populated urban landscapes,
accentuated with thick strokes of vivid colour.
He has recently turned to car enamel paint, which he applies with a
spray gun to produce emotionally charged works that retain figurative
subject matter, and at the same time emphasize abstract qualities.
Perhaps the most distinguishing characteristic of Asidere’s style is his
simplicity of form and expressive line, which he achieves with an
economy of means.
Gerry Nnubia offers critical possibilities for painting, and explores
the tensions between form and formlessness vital to the tenets of
modernism with his “acrylic flow”. Nnubia’s technique involves the
skillful manipulation of his medium to a liquid viscous flow often
assimilating accidental occurrences and temperature adjustments,
depending on the effect sought.
Emefiele also adopts the historic practice of using the human figure
symbolically, dating back to the sculptures and paintings of ancient
Egyptians, whose “god-like” pharaoh was often depicted much larger than
ordinary mortals, his erect, stiff posture signifying his unyielding
majesty and authority.
The heads of her female figures are large, bearing semblance to those
of traditional Yoruba sculptures, carved disproportionately to other
parts of the human body to emphasize its function as the seat of wisdom,
upon which the destiny of an individual is carried. Here, the female
body becomes a contested site and an important source of information,
through which she challenges established notions of beauty.
Overall, the exhibition has a strong contemporary outlook and engages
the traditions of African art history, resulting in iconic imagery that
captures intense and challenging moments. Omenka is a leading art
gallery in Nigeria and represents a fine selection of established and
emerging contemporary African and international artists working in
diverse media.
Omenka participates in major events like Art Dubai, Joburg Art Fair,
Cape Town Art Fair, Cologne Paper Art, Docks Art Fair, Lyon, LOOP,
Barcelona, Art14, and 1:54 Contemporary African Art Fair. Additionally,
Omenka encourages a cross fertilization of ideas by collaborating with
leading galleries across the world to bring the work of many
international artists to Nigeria, often for the first time. Omenka
Gallery also organizes several workshops and residencies to encourage
curatorial and professional artistic development.
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