De Buck Gallery is pleased to announce its collaboration with curator Kilolo Luckett on a spring group show, Conjuring Wholeness in the Wake of Rupture. Featuring Tajh Rust, Marielle Plaisir, Stephen Towns, Dominic Chambers, Amani Lewis, Sharif Bey, Osi Audu, Devan Shimoyama and Rashaad Newsome, Conjuring Wholeness in the Wake of Rupture explores the countless ways the physical and spiritual body creates, shifts, and endures in the world.
In conjunction with this exhibition, the gallery will be showing the same group of artists in our booth at the 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair in New York City between May 2 – May 5.
The artists in this show use cultural memory, the body, the Black imagination, and cosmology as radical tools of self-identification, protection, and care. The works on view center new narratives and unfamiliar histories, and reveal hidden stories that eschew Western, heteronormative authority and disruption. The artists create complex and visceral environments to confront stereotypes and rigid beliefs systems. They reject alienation and separation, and embrace the universality of Blackness through the inventive use of materials, familiar forms, mythical figures, and vibrant colors.
Conjuring Wholeness in the Wake of Rupture presents an exciting roster of contemporary artists including Amani Lewis, whose fresh work challenges societal perceptions of Baltimore through a layered digital process; Sharif Bey, whose ceramic sculptures explore the cultural significance of ornamentation; Marielle Plaisir, whose imaginative paintings critique prejudice though her reconstructed worlds; Dominic Chambers, whose large scale paintings reference literary narratives cited in literature and African-American history; Osi Audu, whose self-portraits explore the dualism of the mind/body relation; Rashaad Newsome, whose stunning collages contemplate and question distorted notions of power; Tajh Rust, whose environmental portraits explore the relationships between black identity and space; Stephen Towns, whose lush depictions of the African Diaspora speak to constructs of race and its effects on society; and Devan Shimoyama, whose work showcases the relationship between celebration and silence in queer culture and sexuality through depictions of the black queer male body.
Kilolo Luckett is an art historian, curator, and cultural producer, with over twenty years of experience in arts administration and cultural production. She is currently acting curator for Visual Arts at the August Wilson Cultural Center in Pittsburgh, and serves as an Art Commissioner for the City of Pittsburgh’s Art Commission.
1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair is dedicated to contemporary art from Africa and its diaspora with annual editions in London, New York and Marrakech. Drawing reference to the fifty-four countries that constitute the African continent, 1-54 is a sustainable and dynamic platform that is engaged in contemporary dialogue and exchange.