Exhibition
At Peace
9 Dec 2021 – 30 Jan 2022
Regular hours
- Thursday
- 10:00 – 18:00
- Friday
- 10:00 – 18:00
- Saturday
- 11:00 – 16:00
- Tuesday
- 10:00 – 18:00
- Wednesday
- 10:00 – 18:00
Free admission
Address
- 19 Great Titchfield Street
- London
England - W1W 8AZ
- United Kingdom
Travel Information
- Oxford Circus
At Peace, curated by Jade Foster, features five leading Black female artists Alanis Forde, Miranda Forrester, Sahara Longe, Cece Philips, and Emma Prempeh.
About
About the Exhibition
Each of the five artists featuring in the show, create figurative works that are unbound by prejudice; subverting and rethinking how Black women and figures have been regarded by Western naturalistic classical and modernist traditions within painting. Traditionally depicted as ‘at service’, mocked, or absent, black figures in art are often seen through a racialised lens - as homogenous and primitive. However, the works chosen for At Peace communicate a sense of independence and palpable presence. The show embodies 'exhibition as research’ and is driven by an holistic approach to curating by establishing a space of healing in which the artists and the artworks exercise collective agency: all five artists share similar belief systems as well as an understanding of the pressure within the art industry to conform to expectations of what Black artists 'should be creating.' At Peace therefore seeks to act as a space in which each artist presents, talks about and references their work in their own way and on their own terms.
About the Artists
Featuring for the first time in London is contemporary Barbadian artist Alanis Forde, whose expressionistic realist approach focuses on the black female identity in an idealised ‘exotic’ Caribbean space. Miranda Forrester’s figurative works address the invisibility of womxn of colour throughout history in art and combating the fetishization of their bodies. Sahara Longe’s vibrantly-coloured and soft-edged portraiture reexamines Old Masters as she chooses to swap in Black bodies in place of the models who historically dominated the period. Cece Philips’s large scale oil paintings explore the relationships between women, power and cultural signifiers whilst taking inspiration from archival writings and found historical photographs. Emma Prempeh’s darkened earthly tones play upon the notion of distant memories and of family heritage whilst simultaneously drawing from immediate and future evocations. Taking on almost mystifying forms and shapes, Prempeh's sometimes partially defined figures and objects float freely through time and space.
About the Curator
Jade Foster is a British curator and artist of Jamaican and Saint Lucian heritage based in Nottingham, UK and a current CCCADI Curatorial Fellow in Afro-Caribbean Art. They are also a founding member and initiator of Black Curators Collective (BCC).
Jade Foster is interested in artists who create for communities, exploring untold histories that are not visible in the mainstream or widely spoken about. Of the exhibition, Foster states; “The ethereal artworks presented with this exciting exhibition feel ‘at peace’, radiating and basking in a tangible presence of their own by embodying pleasure and contentment. The works and exhibition itself are a practice of world-building, developing past imaginaries within Black abstraction and figurative painting, which establishes Black figures as the protagonist. No longer depicted as being ‘at service’ or taken out of habitat, the artists visualise everyday interiors bodily and spatially across centuries, owned or inhabited by the figures depicted.”