Njideka Akunyili Crosby, daughter of late
Dora Akunyili, is making name for herself abroad. The young artist based
in Los Angeles, is currently the talk of the art world. Dozens of
wealthy collectors want to buy her latest works, yet none is for sale—at
least, not to private individuals.

Ms Crosby’s first European solo show will open at the Victoria Miro Gallery in London on October 4th, the week that Frieze Art Fair starts. Now 33, she moved from Nigeria to America at the age of 16.
Her “Afropolitan” identity has forged a highly distinctive visual style. She works mostly on paper, creating large-scale interiors that combine serene human figures with dense areas of collage and image-transfer that subversively evoke her Nigerian heritage.

Ms Crosby’s first European solo show will open at the Victoria Miro Gallery in London on October 4th, the week that Frieze Art Fair starts. Now 33, she moved from Nigeria to America at the age of 16.
Her “Afropolitan” identity has forged a highly distinctive visual style. She works mostly on paper, creating large-scale interiors that combine serene human figures with dense areas of collage and image-transfer that subversively evoke her Nigerian heritage.
Quote
“Her
paintings have a distinct vocabulary,” says Glenn Scott Wright, a
director at Victoria Miro, which represents Ms Crosby. “You can go
around an art fair with 10,000 works and you would know hers
immediately.”
No comments:
Post a Comment
Content on this Blog site is for general information purposes only. Your comments are provided by your own free will and you take sole responsibility for any direct or indirect liability. You hereby provide NewsEye™ Media with an irrevocable, unlimited, and global license for no consideration to use, reuse, delete or publish comments, in accordance with Community Rules & Guidelines and Terms and Conditions.