Kelani Abass. Scrap of Evidence, Ayajo, 2021. digital print, oil on canvas, cornerstone, rubber block, Overall: 30 × 35 cm (11 13/16 × 13 3/4 in.). Art Gallery of Ontario. Purchase, with funds from Friends of Global Africa & the Diaspora, 2022.
By exploring photographic histories in West and Central Africa—specifically studio portraiture—three contemporary African artists reimagine these traditions through a range of introspective, experimental, and critical approaches. Re-Mixing African Photography: Kelani Abass, Mallory Lowe Mpoka and Abraham Oghobase highlights these engagements with the photographic archive, and showcases new and recent works, featuring family photographs, archival material and mixed media objects.
Blurring the boundaries between photography, painting, and sculpture with his series Scrap of Evidence (2018 - 2021), Kelani Abass's three-dimensional objects reflect his interest in memory, archives, and temporality.
Mallory Lowe Mpoka mines family archives that expand on the tradition of studio photography in her performance-based, multi-layered compositions in her Self-Portrait Project (2020) and The Matriarch (Alter-Egos) (2023).
Abraham O. Oghobase engages with self-portraiture in order to challenge limited colonial ideas related to race and otherness in Colonial Self-Portrait (2018).
Until January 7, 2024
Abraham Onoriode Oghobase (b. Lagos, Nigeria, 1979) is a Nigerian visual artist living and working in Toronto, Canada. In his photography-based practice, he engages with issues around knowledge production, land, colonial histories and representation by experimenting with the narrative and materiality of his images.
Mallory Lowe Mpoka (b. Montreal, Canada, 1996) is a queer Cameroonian-Belgian artist who works between Tiohtiá:ke (Montreal) and Douala, Cameroon. Mpoka’s work often employs self portraiture, and her images form a unique diasporic aesthetic that draws inspiration from the history of Central African portrait photography.
Art Gallery of Ontario, 317 Dundas Street WestToronto, OntarioM5T 1G4
Blurring the boundaries between photography, painting, and sculpture with his series Scrap of Evidence (2018 - 2021), Kelani Abass's three-dimensional objects reflect his interest in memory, archives, and temporality.
Mallory Lowe Mpoka mines family archives that expand on the tradition of studio photography in her performance-based, multi-layered compositions in her Self-Portrait Project (2020) and The Matriarch (Alter-Egos) (2023).
Abraham O. Oghobase engages with self-portraiture in order to challenge limited colonial ideas related to race and otherness in Colonial Self-Portrait (2018).
Until January 7, 2024
ABOUT THE ARTISTS
Kelani Abass (b. Lagos, Nigeria, 1979) lives and works in Lagos, Nigeria. In his practice, Abass employs personal photographs to construct his multilayered and multi-dimensional work. Using archival material, he explores the possibilities inherent in photography, painting, and printing to highlight personal stories inspired by social and political events.
Kelani Abass (b. Lagos, Nigeria, 1979) lives and works in Lagos, Nigeria. In his practice, Abass employs personal photographs to construct his multilayered and multi-dimensional work. Using archival material, he explores the possibilities inherent in photography, painting, and printing to highlight personal stories inspired by social and political events.
Abraham O. Oghobase, Colonial Self-Portrait , inkjet print on fine art paper, overall 12.75 x 17.8 cm. Courtesy of the artist. ©Abraham O. Oghobase
Abraham Onoriode Oghobase (b. Lagos, Nigeria, 1979) is a Nigerian visual artist living and working in Toronto, Canada. In his photography-based practice, he engages with issues around knowledge production, land, colonial histories and representation by experimenting with the narrative and materiality of his images.
Mallory Lowe Mpoka (b. Montreal, Canada, 1996) is a queer Cameroonian-Belgian artist who works between Tiohtiá:ke (Montreal) and Douala, Cameroon. Mpoka’s work often employs self portraiture, and her images form a unique diasporic aesthetic that draws inspiration from the history of Central African portrait photography.
Art Gallery of Ontario, 317 Dundas Street WestToronto, OntarioM5T 1G4
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