Loading...
「ツール」は右上に移動しました。
利用したサーバー: natural-voltaic-titanium
2いいね 44回再生

Tiwani Contemporary opening in Lagos Nigeria featuring Joy Labinjo's Full Ground Exhibition

To mark the opening of Tiwani Contemporary in Lagos, the gallery is delighted to present its inaugural exhibition: FULL GROUND by acclaimed British-Nigerian artist Joy Labinjo – the first showing of her work in Nigeria and on the African continent.

Comprising a series of nude self-portraits – her only works of such kind to date, the exhibition unfolds an interest in the significance of the nude in the history of visual art and contemporary public practices of sending nude digital imagery for example to lovers.

Each work comprises loose geometric color blocks where her body can be likened to a variegated landscape. Capturing a range of poses, the works are resolutely frank and unapologetic.

In this way, they assert an acceptance of self that is divergent from performative nudity and highlight self-love as erotic and feminine and at odds with patriarchy and sexism.


In the context of historical and contemporary events in Nigeria, the works also recall the significance of female nudity and its link to collective action in the West African country. In the early 20th century, numerous accounts emerged of women using their nude body to dissent against onerous taxation structures and unfair laws during the country’s colonial period. More recently, Nigerian women have threatened and used naked protest against a range of happenings in the country including the abduction of school girls in Chibok in the northeast and, in the north, anti-violence in Kaduna respectively.

As such, Labinjo’s work presents the body as a political agent and platform. By portraying herself nude, she invites the viewer to consider the artist’s position and the cultural loads that cover the body. Labinjo obscures reference to place, time, and social affiliation and prioritizes her self-perspective, removing much of the representational content that took precedence in earlier work. These works imitate a personal relationship between Labinjo and her body and present a point through which the artist is able to build associations that inform her interpretations of her surroundings and crucially, her own body.

Text from Tiwani Contemporary

コメント