Bonniers Konsthall presents 'Frida Orupabo: On Lies, Secrets and Silence'
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Wednesday, November 13, 2024


Bonniers Konsthall presents 'Frida Orupabo: On Lies, Secrets and Silence'
Frida Orupabo, White happiness, 2024. Sculpture. Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Nordenhake Berlin.



STOCKHOLM.- Bonniers Konsthall will open the fall of 2024 with Frida Orupabo’s first solo exhibition at a Swedish institution. On Lies, Secrets and Silence takes its starting point in our most private and intimate space—the home. Through newly produced works in the form of collage, video and sculpture, staged as spatial installations, the exhibition focuses on the complex relationships that are contained within the domestic sphere, central to our everyday lives and in the creation of our identity. Familiar environments and relationships that suddenly, through subtle changes, may transform from safe to strange and unpleasant.

In recent years, Frida Orupabo (b. 1986, based in Oslo, Norway) has been recognized internationally as one of the most important artists of our time. In her image-based practice, she works with digital and physical collages, exploring issues of identity, gender, family relations and racism. Her work draws from personal experiences that are deeply intertwined with shared, collective experiences. Using a distinct collage technique, Orupabo’s artistic process is rooted in a photomontage tradition where she manipulates, cuts, arranges, inverts and loops images. Powerful as they are, these interventions create imaginative and poignant reworkings of motifs that seek to challenge colonial notions still embedded in many social, economic and political structures.

Through the distortion and manipulation of images, my work tries to say something about different social constructions – race, gender, sexuality, beauty, class. I aim to explore their interconnectedness as well as to look at white fantasies about blackness, specifically the black female body. I am concerned with the damage and consequences of being determined from the outside, but I also look into the possibility of resistance – how we challenge and re-create. I am trying to make works that speak to the reality I know. – Frida Orupabo

Frida Orupabo is a trained sociologist and has been collecting images all her life. Her artistic journey took off when, while working at a center for human trafficking and sex workers, she collected images from the internet. Her carefully curated feed, which she shares on her Instagram account @nemiepeba, includes material from digitized colonial archives, popular culture contexts and the internet at large. The Instagram account has been widely recognized, and when the prominent American artist Arthur Jafa took notice of Orupabo’s images, which he has described as “not so much an archive as an ark, a borne witness to the singularity that is blackness.” He invited Orupabo to present her work in his exhibition at the Serpentine North Gallery in London (2017).

Today, Orupabo has established herself as an artist who rejects the ideas of originality and authenticity. She appropriates images, disassembling them in her works to highlight the violence inherent in their distribution. The bodies in her pieces transcend the limitations imposed by the archives. Many of the works are reminiscent of cutout dolls, built up layer by layer, loosely pinned together – but rather than play, they are figures of resistance. Orupabo’s reconstructed bodies possess an agency of their own, but at the same time emphasize the multi-layered and malleable nature of the self. Philosopher Judith Butler’s theories of queerness, gender and identity, particularly performativity in Gender Trouble (1990), describes how individuals alternate between the roles of subject and object in social contexts. The pantin doll, which is both controlled as an object and expresses itself as a subject, illustrates the ambivalence and the feeling of being imposed bodily prejudices.

The exhibition presents two large-scale collages, Big Girl I (2024) and Big Girl II (2024), two Amazonian women as pantin dolls majestically gazing down at the viewer. Orupabo uses the gaze as a powerful means to reclaim power and subjectivity. This method is in line with feminist theorist bell hooks’ ideas on the politics of the gaze, which she discusses in detail in The Oppositional Gaze: Black Female Spectators (1992). hooks describes how the resilient gaze can challenge and reshape power structures, and Orupabo channels this power in her works to give black women a place of power and subjectivity. In so doing, she reshapes and reclaims historical and cultural narratives.

In the exhibition, Frida Orupabo explores everyday motifs linked to or taken from the home. Collages of everyday objects create scenes that convey both proximity and distance. Symbols of childhood and security, such as the doll’s house in the video installation House Party (2024), become a way of exploring the dark sides of the home, and the relationships that are contained therein, through Orupabo’s lens. The exhibition invites us to reflect on how emotions and experiences such as security and anxiety, closeness and distance coexist and shape our identity in depth, and how we navigate our most intimate spaces.

The title of the exhibition is taken from a prose collection by Adrienne Rich, one of America’s foremost poets and feminist theorists. In a poetic landscape, Rich’s collection On Lies, Secrets, and Silence: Selected Prose 1966–1978 (1995) addresses issues of racism, history, motherhood, and the politics of language. For Rich, as for Orupabo, the works become part of the effort to define a female subjectivity that is political, aesthetic, and erotic, and that refuses to be included in a culture of passivity.










Today's News

August 29, 2024

The Leica Store Washington DC exhibits captivating photographs by Jamie Johnson

Nye & Company to host a three-day Country House Splendor auction Sept. 11-13

Cube Art Fair: The world's largest public art fair returns to New York City for its 11th edition

Ahlers & Ogletree announces highlights included in Fine Estates Auction September 13th

At Clemente Bar, a love story between chef and artist

How Laurie Anderson conjured Amelia Earhart's final flight

A 4-year-old boy breaks a 3,500-year-old jar at an Israeli Museum

Hundreds of artworks acquired by the Vancouver Art Gallery

One woman's quest to map the Paris flea market

In Los Angeles, an artist's studio for a blind potter

Victoria Siddall appointed new Director of the National Portrait Gallery, London

Galerie Eva Presenhuber will present a group of important new paintings by artist Wyatt Kahn

Pace Gallery announces representation of Kenjiro Okazaki

NILS STÆRK opens Eduardo Terrazas' sixth solo exhibition with the gallery

Haggerty Museum of Art welcomes Director John McKinnon

Kulendran Thomas presents a series of newly commissioned works at WIELS

Is this the Edinburgh Fringe, or a wellness convention?

For a new 'Empire Records,' Zoe Sarnak set out to write a '90s anthem

A pianist who's not afraid to improvise on Mozart

Bonniers Konsthall presents 'Frida Orupabo: On Lies, Secrets and Silence'

Rosa Parks Museum examines homelessness through work of sculptor Jim Hager

A bargain at the opera: Philadelphia offers all seats for as low as $11

If Liza Minnelli's jewelry could talk

In 'Only Murders in the Building,' this actor is above suspicion

Pussy888 APK: A Review of User Interface and Usability-A Love Letter to Minimalism or a Cry for Help?

What's New? Delving into the Latest Updates and Features in Kiss888 APK

Art and Gambling: How the Two Influence Each Other

Exclusive Interview with LaraR: A New Star Shining in the Music World

The Ultimate Guide to Burning MP4 Videos to DVD

NFT marketplaces:A comprehensive guide for learn the essentials of digital collectibles

Art made into collectibles,Here is Your guide to buying quality that appreciates in time

From Canvas to Digital: How Artists Can Bring Their Portfolios Online

Our World-Interview with Conceptual Image Artist Chao Sun




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful