Exhibition

TERESA KUTALA FIRMINO | Manifestation Oku Yongola | Manifestation of Wanting

28 Apr 2021 – 25 May 2021

Regular hours

Monday
10:00 – 18:00
Tuesday
10:00 – 18:00
Wednesday
10:00 – 18:00
Thursday
10:00 – 18:00
Friday
10:00 – 18:00
Saturday
12:00 – 16:00
Sunday
Closed

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Everard Read London presents a solo exhibition of mixed media works on canvas by Johannesburg-based artist, Teresa Kutala Firmino.

About

TERESA KUTALA FIRMINO | Manifestation Oku Yongola  | Manifestation of Wanting

https://www.everardlondon.com/exhibition/92/​

28 April – 25 May

REQUEST PORTFOLIO | +44 (0) 20 7590 9991

Everard Read London presents a solo exhibition of mixed media works on canvas by Johannesburg-based artist, Teresa Kutala Firmino, a multi-disciplinary artist working in various media including paint, photography, and performance.

Kutala Firmino’s work embodies the artist’s efforts to grapple with trauma, both personal and collective, in everyday life. Many of her paintings are constructed scenes of the past and present, which are often intertwined.

The artist collects and curates textiles and images from magazines, newspapers, historical documents, and social media, and places them in colourful, contained stages. She creates surreal scenes in tightly confined interiors, where the characters are free to re-enact their stories or construct new ones. This process allows Kutala Firmino to create alternate past, present and future narratives of Africa, thus rebuilding her own archive of African history.

The artist’s own stories begin with the collective trauma of her birthplace, Pomfret, a border town in northern South Africa near Botswana and an atrophied community of former 32 Battalion* soldiers and their families, many of whom had Angolan heritage and were settled there at the end of the South African Border War.

Drawing on her own stories and experiences of the collective trauma of Pomfret, war, poverty and displacement, the act of making work is cathartic for Kutala Firmino. She believes “we heal by retelling our stories” and undertakes to tell “African narratives from an African perspective, as honestly as possible.” 

Kutala Firmino is acutely sensitive to the fact that the history of the Pomfret population is recent, “so people who were affected are still alive. Some of these stories were hidden for a reason.” She instead interprets the stories as fairy tales, thereby transforming the narratives into something elevated and universal.

The artist’s seemingly playful and vibrant canvases are rich in symbolism and metaphor and explore the complex issues of identity and cultural heritage, gender violence and what it means to be a young black woman in the 21st century.  In her paintings, Kutala Firmino creates a series of tableaux in which female forms, often with faces resembling (or hidden behind?) African masks, are the protagonists, and Kutala Firmino re-enacts their stories by imagining alternate realities that challenge the accepted version of historical events.

Masks are recurring motifs in Kutala Firmino’s work. Their function and power is activated by belief systems within African communities across the continent and the artist remains interested in how African objects and symbols have found their way into European contexts. Kutala Firmino talks of “an African deity opening its eyes in a museum in Belgium and realizing it is not home.” And she is interested in the dialogue between Africa and Europe regarding the restitution of objects that are sacred to a particular culture, thereby “reactivating these deities.” 

Kutala Firmino is acutely sensitive to the fact that the history of the Pomfret population is recent, “so people who were affected are still alive. Some of these stories were hidden for a reason.” She instead interprets the stories as fairy tales, thereby transforming the narratives into something elevated and universal.

The artist’s seemingly playful and vibrant canvases are rich in symbolism and metaphor and explore the complex issues of identity and cultural heritage, gender violence and what it means to be a young black woman in the 21st century.  In her paintings, Kutala Firmino creates a series of tableaux in which female forms, often with faces resembling (or hidden behind?) African masks, are the protagonists, and Kutala Firmino re-enacts their stories by imagining alternate realities that challenge the accepted version of historical events.

Masks are recurring motifs in Kutala Firmino’s work. Their function and power is activated by belief systems within African communities across the continent and the artist remains interested in how African objects and symbols have found their way into European contexts. Kutala Firmino talks of “an African deity opening its eyes in a museum in Belgium and realizing it is not home.” And she is interested in the dialogue between Africa and Europe regarding the restitution of objects that are sacred to a particular culture, thereby “reactivating these deities.”

Kutala Firmino’s work increasingly explores her profound interest in the black female body and seeking new narratives to reframe the notion of the black body as a site of trauma. With her paintings she imagines new territory for black women’s’ bodies – a place beyond the male gaze; beyond pain and suffering. Through her paintings Kutala Firmino imagines modern and millennial women reclaiming their bodies, their power and the power of the erotic.

This is Kutala Firmino's second solo exhibition with the Everard Read group of galleries.

32 Battalion was a light infantry battalion of the South African Army founded in 1975, composed of black and white commissioned and enlisted personnel. Unlike other South African Defence Force (SADF) units, 32 Battalion was mainly deployed in southern Angola, acting as a buffer between the SADF's regular forces and its socialist enemies. The unit was also used to assist the anti-communist movement of the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA). 32 Battalion was disbanded in 1993 as a result of negotiations between the South African National Party and the African National Congress.

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Teresa Kutala Firmino

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