Friday, 29th March 2024
To guardian.ng
Search
Arts  

From Divergence, Alimi Distils Urbanisation Challenges

By Editor
06 December 2015   |   12:11 am
Victims of urban renewal, who get stranded in the process of developing a megacity, attract the palette of Adewale Alimi. The artist also brings into the theme his new forms, which he considers as a shift from the norms. Alimi’s canvas of subtle and conservative colours has been a familiar texture in the Lagos art…

ArtsVictims of urban renewal, who get stranded in the process of developing a megacity, attract the palette of Adewale Alimi. The artist also brings into the theme his new forms, which he considers as a shift from the norms.

Alimi’s canvas of subtle and conservative colours has been a familiar texture in the Lagos art space, at least for nearly a decade. And as an artist with leanings towards impressionism, he comes into his ongoing solo art exhibition titled Divergent, at Alara Contemporary, Victoria Island, Lagos, with what he describes as “deviation from the normal.”

More importantly, Divergence is the artist’s first solo art exhibition after his residency with a fellow artist, Adeola Balogun in Sweden, in the middle of this year. Coalesced in Divergence is the artist’s experience about trending global issue of migration – from his brief European experience – and displaced victims from expansion in urbanisation

Stressing the divergence contents of the exhibition is the artist’s steps into sculpture. He argues that contemporaneity is pushing artists to expand beyond regular space. “I realised that contemporary artists need to expand, so I am including sculptures.”

After Anonymous, a charity exhibition at Quintessence and a two-artists show (Dis)placemt with Richardson Ovbiebo at the same gallery in 2012, Divergence as Alimi’s major show comes with both opportunity and challenge. The privilege is being the first artist to show at a new space, Alara Contemporary, while the task is perhaps his ability to fall in line with the concept of the fresh air created by Alara, an outlet for contemporary African luxury designs such as fashion, art, and food. Described by its promoters as a concept “in the spirit of ‘Alárà’, the Yoruba goddess of ‘splendour’ and ‘marvel,” the space confirms that indeed, there is a huge prospect in indigenous African creative contents.

Having created the works, which undoubtedly have the textures of contemporary styles, Alimi’s dissemination responsibility in appropriation is on the shoulders of Hana Omilani, curator at Alara. Noting that Divergence “is the first Alara art exhibition,” Omilani explains that the space is designed for African artists at home and from the Diaspora.

But as a multi-functional space, the David Adjaye architecture masterpiece comes with curatorial management of contents: Alara’s choice of art shows may depend on how flexible the exhibition space would bend for specific conceptual contents. However, Alara’s major asset in space is the spacious headroom, which most contemporary artists would be at home with.

For the maiden art show, Alara explains its thoughts: “Divergence allows Alimi to subtly but bravely emerge out of the veil of restrictions and limitations of traditional mediums and find his own path to making a unique body of work. Brushed, scraped, layered and smeared, the dynamic surfaces of this series of paintings and sculptures radiate with energy.”

An excerpt from what looks like an Artist Statement in Alimi’s website, says, “Divergence spotlights Alimi´s interdisciplinary approach in integrating unique methodologies and concepts into his artistic practice. He has subtly but bravely emerged out of the veil of restrictions and limitations of traditional mediums and found his own path to making unique body of works for this exhibition.

“Brushed, scraped, layered and smeared, the dynamic surfaces of his paintings and sculptures radiate with energy. Many of them moderately sized, and are notable not only for their size, but for their physical expression of his working process”.

0 Comments