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Viewing Wangari Mathenge
Above The Ascendants XVII She Is Here Too But Why Are You, 2021 by Wangari Mathenge. Pippy Houldsworth Gallery
Above The Ascendants XVIII She Is Here Too And So Are You, 2021 by Wangari Mathenge. Pippy Houldsworth Gallery
Above The Ascendants XIX Her Things Are Here, 2021 by Wangari Mathenge. Pippy Houldsworth Gallery
Above The Ascendants XVII She Is Here Too But Why Are You, 2021 by Wangari Mathenge. Pippy Houldsworth Gallery
Above The Ascendants XVIII She Is Here Too And So Are You, 2021 by Wangari Mathenge. Pippy Houldsworth Gallery
Above The Ascendants XIX Her Things Are Here, 2021 by Wangari Mathenge. Pippy Houldsworth Gallery
Wangari Mathenge
12 October — 13 November 2021
Pippy Houldsworth Gallery
https://www.houldsworth.co.uk/exhibitions
Vivid colours, expressive brushwork and figures surrounded by everyday objects characterise Wangari Mathenge’s figurative paintings, often based on herself or family members. ‘I’ve heard comments about how empowering and inspiring it is for black people to see themselves reflected this way,’ Mathenge once said. ‘However, for me, painting is merely an expression of myself, a form of catharsis.’
Mathenge’s first solo exhibition in the UK, now on display at Pippy Houldsworth Gallery, draws on her early memories and personal observations to address the diasporic experience of home and identity. Central to the exhibition is Mathenge’s first large-scale installation, incorporating her first stop-motion animation, showing a family living space from the 1970s, replete with retro furniture, books and music. Hanging inside are paintings from The Expats, a series that responds to photographs from her childhood.
Also on display are new large-scale paintings depicting intimate scenes within the home. Some of her figures are at rest. Others are reading, sipping coffee or braiding hair. In this series, Mathenge reclaims the domestic sphere — traditionally a space for labour — as a place of sanctuary and learning. Add to your autumn agenda sharpish.
Above New Spring, 2017. Courtesy of COS x Studio Swine.
Above New Spring, 2017. Courtesy of COS x Studio Swine.
Above New Spring, 2017. Courtesy of COS x Studio Swine.
Above New Spring, 2017. Courtesy of COS x Studio Swine.
Superblue London
Open daily (except Mondays), times vary
6 Burlington Gardens, London
https://www.superblue.com/london/
Flooding Instagram feeds across London is Superblue’s latest immersive installation by artist duo A.A. Murakami. Created specifically for the gallery’s new digs in Burlington Gardens, Silent Fall prompts us to contemplate nature and our relationship to it. As you meander around the dark, mirrored room, you’ll encounter artificial, bone-white trees dripping smoke-filled bubbles which you can touch, pop and blow. (Thanks to the mirrors and lighting, which morphs from white to red, the effect is infinite.)
As each bubble bursts, forest-like aromas such as moss, rain and pine are released. Though critics have panned the venture, with many struggling to see its conceptual links to nature, it’s a fun, multi-sensory experience worth investigating if you’re in or around Mayfair.
Above Nicola Tyson, Holding Patten. Sadie Coles HQ London
Above Nicola Tyson, Holding Patten. Sadie Coles HQ London
Above Nicola Tyson, Holding Patten. Sadie Coles HQ London
Above Nicola Tyson, Holding Patten. Sadie Coles HQ London
Nicola Tyson: Holding Pattern
1 October — 6 November 2021
Sadie Coles, Davies Street
https://www.sadiecoles.com
Nicola Tyson’s absorbing, psychologically complex paintings are all about the ‘embodied experience’. And nowhere can you see this more clearly than in her new solo show at Sadie Coles in Davies Street. Drawing on artistic forebears as diverse as Maria Lassnig, Francis Bacon and Pablo Picasso, Tyson deftly balances figuration with abstraction to explore the interplay of perception, thought and feeling.
On display are nine new paintings and three groups of graphite drawings. What strikes is Tyson’s bright, clashing colour palette: brilliant reds, vibrant yellows and emerald greens applied in bold segments abound. As do fragmented body parts and ambivalent forms.
Highlights include Self-Portrait Pencil (2021) and Hair piece (2021), featuring an abstract head with a singular recessed eye. In this latest body of work, Tyson continues her investigations into psychology and anatomy, surface and depth, fixity and metamorphosis.
At once recognisable yet peculiar, these compositions intrigue and perplex in equal measure. That’s what Frieze Week is all about, right?