Gagosian presents group exhibition curated by Brice Arsène Yonkeu
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Gagosian presents group exhibition curated by Brice Arsène Yonkeu
Luke Agada, The Things That Stayed, 2025. Oil on canvas, 72 x 72 inches (182.9 x 182.9 cm) © Luke Agada. Courtesy the artist and Gagosian.



NEW YORK, NY.- Gagosian announces Ever So Present II: Between Home and Elsewhere, a group exhibition at Park & 75, New York, featuring work by Luke Agada, Amoako Boafo, Josèfa Ntjam, and Emma Prempeh. Opening on June 25, 2025, it forms the second part of Ever So Present, which opened last December at dot.ateliers, the artists’ residency program in Accra founded by Boafo in 2022. Ever So Present II is curated by Brice Arsène Yonkeu—the first curator invited to dot.ateliers’s new residency program for curators, filmmakers, and writers—and brings together four artists of African descent who engage with the formation of the contemporary diasporic self.


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The 2024 iteration of Ever So Present explored the relationship between dislocation and creative exchange through the practices of that year’s dot.ateliers’s artists-in-residence, whose contributions made direct reference to Accra. Ever So Present II expands this inquiry through work that examines how displacement shapes identity, and cultural ancestry informs emergent realities within a postcolonial context influenced by globalization. The artists assembled by Yonkeu respond to a world in which, for some, belonging remains tied to birthplace, while for others, intergenerational narratives of migration remain a primary force.


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In his painting The Things That Stayed (2025), Agada considers the residues of personal and collective memory that remain after migration, dislocation, and reconstruction. Employing a palette evocative of his native Lagos, Nigeria, he conjures forms that embody the tension between memory, thought, and experience by selectively fusing the emphases and techniques of automatism, Surrealism, and gestural expressionism.

A further expansion of traditional figure painting, Boafo’s Don’t You Miss Me Already (2025) depicts a Black woman in intricate lace clothing, her arms spread in an open embrace that evokes religious iconography, and her gaze conveying unflinching self-assurance. Boafo reinforces his subject’s defiant sense of belonging to multiple worlds while maintaining intimacy by tracing her figure directly with his fingertips.

Ntjam draws the raw material for her complex photomontages from online, photographic, and printed sources, juxtaposing diverse images to deconstruct hegemonic discourses of origin and race. In Nsaku Ne Vunda (2025), she gathers a far-flung group of historical figures including Manuel Antonio Nsaku Ne Vunda (spiritual envoy and first African ambassador to the Vatican), Harriet Tubman (abolitionist and freedom strategist), and Henrietta Lacks (unconsenting contributor to modern science whose cancer cells were the source of the “immortalized” HeLa cell line). The resultant assemblage forms a biomorphic cartography of Black resistance in which displacement becomes a generative force.

Finally, Prempeh’s paintings position time, memory, and belonging within the contexts of ancestral connection and personal transformation. In the diptych Di sea have many ghost (2025), the artist grounds her figures in a sprawling landscape with a dreamlike, cinematic feel, further underscoring her fascination with temporality by embedding schlag metal—imitation gold leaf that corrodes over time—into its surface.

In addition to participating in this exhibition, Boafo will take over Gagosian’s space in London’s Burlington Arcade, opening on July 3.

Luke Agada was born in Lagos, Nigeria, in 1992, and lives and works in Chicago. Recent exhibitions include Polyreality, Hive Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing (2023–24); and Shared Vision: Portraits from The CCH Pounder-Koné Collection, African American Museum in Philadelphia (2024–25).

Josèfa Ntjam was born in Metz, France, in 1992, and lives and works in Saint-Étienne, France. Recent exhibitions include swell of spæc(i)es, a collateral event of the 60th Biennale di Venezia (2024); 15th Gwangju Biennale (2024); and Futuristic Ancestry: Warping Matter and Space-time(s), Fotografiska, New York, Berlin, and Stockholm (2024–25).

Emma Prempeh was born in London in 1996, and lives and works there. She is of Ghanaian and Vincentian heritage. Recent exhibitions include Raise Your Glass, Lightbox Gallery, Woking, England (2020); and Conversations, Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool, England (2024–25).

Brice Arsène Yonkeu is an independent curator and cofounder of Bwo Art Gallery, Douala, Cameroon. Recent projects include Still I Rise, Google France, Paris (2022); and Ever So Present, dot.ateliers, Accra (2024–25).



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