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Nengi Omuku

Nengi Omuku

The Dance of People and the Natural World

First major UK solo exhibition of new and recent works by Lagos-based artist Nengi Omuku.

The Dance of People and the Natural World will not only introduce Omuku’s work to a wider UK audience, but also seeks to broaden the exposure and awareness of the vibrant contemporary Nigerian art scene.​

Displaying more than ten pieces​, the show spans five of Hastings Contemporary’s eight galleries, and includes works made between 2021 and 2023 that explore Omuku’s love of nature and the ways in which it provides her with a sense of safety and serenity. From 2021’s Lighthouse through to her latest, as yet to be titled work made this year (2023), the series focuses on a sense of re-immersion in nature. As Omuku explains: “This comes from both a personal place, telling my story as a gardener and florist, as well as what I feel is a collective leaning, and re-communion with nature today.”

Born in Warri, Nigeria, Omuku spent several years in London, studying at the Slade School of Fine Art. She has subsequently developed a distinctive style, which involves applying oil paint to gesso-prepared composite strips of the Nigerian fabric sanyan; a tightly-woven, hand-spun material that is an important aspect of Nigeria’s cultural history.

A further highlight of the exhibition at Hastings Contemporary will be the chance to see two new works (made this year), along with her largest piece to date, Eden (2022). This monumental painting (measuring 224 x 520cms) is an invitation to pause and relax, and to enjoy a moment of quiet reflection and respite. In Eden, Omuku invokes a sense of the biblical paradise and a longing for a pre-fall state of tranquility, alongside a sense of the solace to be found in nature.

Welcome Home (2022) and Lighthouse (2021), both feature her signature spectral figures set in a dreamlike landscape. Still Life (2021) alludes to the time Omuku spent working as a florist and horticulturalist under her mother, while the foregrounds of Repose (2022) and Swing (2022) suggest the influence of Monet’s garden at Giverny on her work and the artist’s own research into Impressionism.

Looking ahead to the exhibition, her first major solo show in a UK public gallery, Nengi says: “It is a great privilege to have my first solo institutional exhibition at Hastings Contemporary, whose programme I have long admired for its far-reaching approach to painting. As a student at the Slade I dreamed of having a museum show in the UK, my home from home, and nowhere feels more fitting than Hastings Contemporary whose coastal location, for me, finds kinship with Lagos. The group of works presented focus on bringing love and light into the world, on concern for the environment and on sustainable practices to nurture and protect natural habitats.”

Supported by Pippy Houldsworth Gallery, Kasmin Gallery, Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery and The Roden Family.

Press

Download the press release here

Main image: Nengi Omuku, Eden, oil on sanyan, 2022. Photo courtesy of the artist and Pippy Houldsworth Gallery.

Book tickets for Nengi Omuku
Nengi Omuku, Repose, oil on sanyan, 2022. Photo © the artist/Pippy Houldsworth Gallery.
Installation image of The Dance of People and the Natural World. Photo: Pete Jones.
Nengi Omuku: "The Dance of People and the Natural World"; Hastings Contemporary Gallery; Rock-a-Nore Road, Hastings. TN34 3DW; 7th October 2023 © Pete Jones pete@pjproductions.co.uk
Installation image of The Dance of People and the Natural World. Photo: Pete Jones.

 

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LIMITED EDITION PRINT

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The limited edition print, Days Gone By, was commissioned to coincide with the exhibition. Purchase yours from our online shop.

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EXHIBITION CATALOGUE

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Published to accompany the exhibition, this beautifully designed catalogue brings together Nengi's landscape paintings with writing from Liz Gilmore and Azu Nwagbogu.