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London CNN —At Frieze London this year, three large artworks by the artist Nengi Omuku were hung away from the walls so viewers could walk around them. The other presented strips of sanyan, a thick traditional Nigerian fabric that Omuku uses to replace the usual canvas fabric painters often use as their base. “The fact I’m painting on a vintage surface gives soul to my work,” Omuku said over Zoom two days before the fair opens. Omuku's work is painted directly onto strips of sanyan, a thick traditional Nigerian fabric. “I’d never seen a pre-colonial Nigerian textile before, and it looked quite similar to linen.”The artist has exhibited in Paris, New York, Bangkok and London.
Persons: CNN Style’s, Alayo, Nengi Omuku, ” Omuku, it’s, Yinka Shonibare, Omuku, Todd White, Loewe, Kristin Hjellegjerde, Keir Starmer, sanyan, , , “ I’d, Rees, I’ve, there’s, “ I’m Organizations: CNN, London CNN, London, , Frieze’s, Slade School of Fine Art, Baltimore Museum of Art, Institute of Contemporary Art, ICA Miami, British, Downing, Co, Slade Locations: London, Nigeria, Lagos, Paris, Bangkok, New York, Miami, Paris , New York, Dakar, Senegal, Nigerian
Displaying art in your home? Here are some do's and don'ts
  + stars: | 2024-05-13 | by ( Lucy Handley | In | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +6 min
Andreas Von Einsiedel | Corbis Documentary | Getty ImagesThere are two common mistakes people make when hanging art in their homes, according to art consultant Louisa Warfield. People sometimes make the mistake of hanging artwork too high, according to art consultant Louisa Warfield. Louisa Warfield Art ConsultancyA guideline is to hang the work so that its center is about 150cm above the floor, Warfield said. Louisa Warfield Art ConsultancyIn a large home, a gallery wall might be about 160cm in height and about the width of the couch the art will hang above, Warfield said. Art collector Helen Sunderland Cohen said she aims for a "harmonious and balanced" environment when it comes to playing art.
Persons: Louisa Warfield, Andreas Von Einsiedel, Warfield, it's, David Price, Rachael Harding, , Louisa Warfield's, Sophie Carter, Yoko Kloeden, Helen Sunderland Cohen, Yinka Shonibare, Aimee Parrott, Prunella Clough, Simon Bejer, Sunderland Cohen Organizations: CNBC, Sunderland, City & Guilds School of Art Locations: British, Nigerian, London
Audiobook of the Week: ‘How to Write About Africa’
  + stars: | 2023-08-25 | by ( Dipo Faloyin | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Deciding what audiobook to listen to requires its own special calculus, related to but distinct from the factors we consider when picking a book off a shelf. From the Book Review’s own endless listening, we will select and review a different title each week, from a range of genres, to help you decide. HOW TO WRITE ABOUT AFRICA: Collected Works, by Binyavanga Wainaina. Reading Binyavanga Wainaina makes you sit up straight. Dismantling the Western world’s constructed myths and clichés about Africa, his art firmly orients you toward the reality of life across the most genetically diverse place on earth.
Persons: Binyavanga Wainaina, Read, Dominic Hoffman, Yinka, Wainaina, Locations: Africa
Kouoh said that she decided to take the job after many conversations with Black colleagues. Kouoh has changed “how the local community see Zeitz,” said the Cape Town-based artist Igshaan Adams, who recently spent eight months in residence there. What influences come from an artist like Issa Samb or Gerard Sekoto to younger artists today? “There is a lot of mutual support, of generosity and care across the continent. I am part of that generation of African art professionals who have pride and knowledge about the beauty of African culture, which has often been defined by others in so many wrong ways.
Persons: Kouoh, Black, , Zeitz, William Kentridge, Carsten Holler, Wangechi, Igshaan Adams, , Koyo, — Tracey Rose, Johannes Phokela, Mary Evans —, Issa Samb, Gerard Sekoto, haven’t, won’t, Okwui Enwezor Locations: Zeitz
“They helped me develop a sense of kinship,” Oluwamuyiwa said by phone, “and I became confident that photographing was a valid way to understand a city.” His interpretations of Lagos are gritty and fast paced, matching the environment in which he works, yet he manages to elucidate things that can only be apparent to someone looking closely. In such moments, as in “Boss and Assistant” where two men in a Danfo (the rundown yellow minibuses used for public transport) seem to be whispering to each other, or in “Hazy II,” where light pours from under the Third Mainland Bridge onto two figures standing in a canoe, the images transcend their sharp surfaces and acquire a misty luster; grittiness gives way to haziness, and the private anxieties of Lagos life become heightened. A quick history of Lagos: Indigenously peopled by the Awori, it was once a military outpost for the ancient Benin Kingdom, a slave trading port for the Portuguese, who named it after their own city, and eventually an entry point for British colonialism into Nigeria.
Persons: ” Oluwamuyiwa, Boss Locations: Lagos, haziness, Benin Kingdom, Nigeria
Claire Haffenden is the director of artist relations and events at Universal Music. That planning experience helped me in my current role, director of artist relations and events at Universal Music, where I lead a team of five. I became head of artist relations and events in 2008 and director of artist relations and events in 2013. Claire Haffenden, the director of artist relations and events at Universal Music. I make sure every artist's team has an allocation of guest tickets, for the artist's family, friends, and contacts.
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