11 Views
2
View In My Room
Drawing, Ballpoint Pen on Paper
Size: 35.4 W x 33.1 H x 0.4 D in
Ships in a Crate
11 Views
2
Artist featured in a collection
Historically the act of creating a portrait in itself could be seen as a means of celebrating the sitter depicted. This notion of celebration is the reason I specialise in portraiture and why I feel the onus to champion figures that I believe should be given greater visibility within the context of contemporary British history. My use of antique ephemera as the canvases for my works is part of a pragmatic process of adding further context to a specific artwork. I deliberately chose specific pages from Havelock Ellis’ Questions of Our Day (1936) as I feel the pages of text chosen highlight relevant questions of greatness, Britishness and identity in a way that allows for for a cohesion between the the ideas that I am look to explore within in the work and the figures I have chosen to depict. The portraits shown in the frames on the walls within this imagined scene are of six living Britons from different generations that I believe represent what it means to be a great Briton. In the foreground I have drawn G F Watts and Simon Frederick, two men who could also be considered to be influential Britons worthy of celebrity. The narrative of Black British history has been distorted and revised with a colonial lens. This work is a holistic ‘hall of fame’ shining a spotlight on important British figures who happen to be Black, but I have not chosen them just because they are black. It is not a Black British hall of fame or even my hall of fame, thus the title of the work is ‘A British Hall of Fame’. The 6 great Britons shown in the work are John Agard, Sonia Boyce, Dave (AKA Santan Dave), Lubaina Himid, Paul Stephenson and Phyllis Akua Opoku-Gyimah. Black ballpoint pen on antique collaged texts.
Ballpoint Pen on Paper
One-of-a-kind Artwork
35.4 W x 33.1 H x 0.4 D in
Black
Yes
Ships in a Crate
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United Kingdom.
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United Kingdom
My practice looks to empower often marginalised minorities through the exploration of identity within portraiture. Confronting socio-political issues within my drawings can act as a catalyst for a discourse regarding the perception of various demographics as being of lesser humanistic value. Specifically, with the disenfranchised often being undermined by mainstream media; somewhat paradoxically reflecting an archaic hierarchy of status, similar to colonial ideologies. Using antique texts and maps as the canvases for my works enables me to pragmatically re-contextualise ephemera, creating a cohesion between the concepts informing the work and the aesthetic output. As I empower various figures; I simultaneously do so with the ground used, presenting them within new contexts. Placing myself or family members as the subjects of my portraits evokes a sense of immediacy, apropos to navigating the intersection of my western upbringing and familial west African culture. Informed by my Sierra Leonean and Lebanese heritage, I am conscious of representing figures that have historically been conspicuously omitted from traditional British portraiture. I call upon anecdotal references to portray scenes that are occasionally quasi surrealist representations; confronting lingering ethnocentrisms that are still embedded within modern western society. I employ delicate mark making techniques with precise strokes of the everyday ballpoint pen. This process is influenced by sketches from the high renaissance. I meticulously build layers of tonality leading to an element of photorealism. Through an almost contradictory process of using this relatively modern art medium with a classical approach to mark making: I look to celebrate authentic drawing within the digital age. At the core of my practice, I depict motifs that contradict largely accepted revisionist narratives apropos to West African Histories. The portraits investigate how identity can be constructed by historical oppression, with semblances of antiquated ideologies at the root of nuanced prejudices that I have personally experienced. Ultimately, my work looks to embolden individuals that feel as though they have been labelled as the ‘other’ in any manifestation. In March 2022 I was elected as a member of The Royal Society of British Artists.
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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