YOU SEA US
LUDOVIC NKOTH
LUCE GALLERY
Turin
from March 4 to April 27, 2021 (extended)
With online exhibition walkthrough
Exhibition view, You Sea Us, Ludovic Nkoth solo show, Luce Gallery, Turin, 2021, Photo Andrea Ferrari, Courtesy the artist and Luce Gallery
In Turin, from March 4 to April 27, 2021, Luce Gallery is proud to present You Sea Us, Ludovic Nkoth’s first European solo show with the gallery.
In the artist’s native land - Cameroon - water is not only the symbol of life and rebirth, but it also represents how countless African migrants start their journeys to Europe in search of a better life, all too often to find nothing but closed doors, hostility, and in the worst case, death. The human rights situation of migrants and refugees at the Mediterranean Sea is desperate, dangerous, and the numbers of lost lives at the hand of European authorities are unjustifiable and one of our century’s biggest tragedies.
“My idea was to travel to Europe and create these works on European land to show them everything they are refusing to face in their own backyard. I lived in Spain for a couple of months during the pandemic because I wanted to experience what it would even feel like to walk around that part of the world as a migrant of color,”Nkoth explained.
The exhibition features six works on canvas portraying people forced to face the unknown. The large-scale painting “Lighthouse” depicts a sinking boat, an image we are often confronted with daily, but this time, the viewer has to observe and contemplate these desperate scenes and therefore becomes part of it as a witness.
Nkoth uses an array of mediums in this body of work, including wood panels of the masks that almost work as sculptures, works on paper, metal, shells, sand, fishing rods, and more. He uses raw materials such as sand to evoke different dimensions - literally but also on a deeper spiritual level.
Throughout the show, Nkoth thoughtfully waves in different symbols such as shells, passengers, and fallen angels as part of a complex and personal investigation of the African continent that suggest a sense of depth and discovery. Shells were traditionally used as currency and are also associated with the spirits of the water. Here, Nkoth uses them to represent the bodies that were lost at sea. The painting “Do They Hold Me Down” is a self-portrait, and the shadow coming through the body stands for all those souls lost in the Mediterranean Sea. According to the artist, those “fallen angels”who were once on that same trajectory are now returning to protect new passengers through this horrifying experience and to guide them to the shore safely. The show’s centerpiece, “The Gates Of No Return”, in which Nkoth depicts the menacing routes asylum seekers are forced to take given the lack of legal paths to enter Europe.
In the piece “The Light In Me”, Nkoth explores the relationship between black bodies and water more joyfully and positively as a counterpoint to current narratives.
Ludovic Nkoth(1994, Yaoundé, Cameroon) lives and works in New York.
He holds a BFA from the University of South Carolina and is an MFA candidate at Hunter College in New York.
Recently, he had a solo show at François Ghebaly in Los Angeles. His works have been exposed in group shows at Anthony Gallery, Chicago; CFHILL, Stockholm; Ross + Kramer Gallery, New York, among others.
The video featuring the exhibition walkthrough is available online at www.lucegallery.com/video.php.
You Sea Us
Ludovic Nkoth
Luce Gallery
Turin, from 4 March to 27 April 2021 (extended)
Largo Montebello 40, Italy
Hours: Tuesday to Friday, 3:30 - 7:30 pm
+39 011 18890206 / info@lucegallery.com
Instagram: lucegallery / Facebook: Luce Gallery
Online videos featuring the exhibitions walkthroughs guided by the artists: www.lucegallery.com/video.php
Press Office
THE KNACK STUDIO / Tamara Lorenzi
tamara@theknackstudio.com / +39 347 0712934
info@theknackstudio.com / www.theknackstudio.com
Ludovic Nkoth, The Gates of No Return, 2020, mixed media on Belgium linen, 121.9 x 434.3 cm (48 x 171 inches), Courtesy the artist and Luce Gallery, Turin
Ludovic Nkoth, Lighthouse, 2020, acrylic on Belgium linen, 198.1 x 248.9 cm (78 x 98 inches), Courtesy the artist and Luce Gallery, Turin
Ludovic Nkoth, Do They Hold Me Down, 2020, mixed media on Belgium linen, canvas size 152.4 x 121.9 cm (60 x 48 inches), overall size 191.2 x 121.9 cm (75.2 x 48 inches), Courtesy the artist and Luce Gallery, Turin
Ludovic Nkoth, The Last Note, 2020, acrylic on Belgium linen, 152.4 x 121.9 cm (60 x 48 inches), Courtesy the artist and Luce Gallery, Turin
Ludovic Nkoth, The Light In Me, 2020, acrylic on Belgium linen, 182.8 x 121.9 cm (72 x 48 inches), Courtesy the artist and Luce Gallery, Turin
Ludovic Nkoth, Untitled Mask #6, 2020, acrylic on wood panel, 132 x 101.6 cm (52 x 40 inches), Courtesy the artist and Luce Gallery, Turin
Ludovic Nkoth, Untitled Mask #5, 2020, acrylic on wood panel, 165.1 x 88.9 cm (65 x 35 inches), Courtesy the artist and Luce Gallery, Turin
Ludovic Nkoth, Untitled Shell #1, 2020, watercolor on paper, sheet size 76.5 x 57.5 cm (30.1 x 22.6 inches), Courtesy the artist and Luce Gallery, Turin
Ludovic Nkoth, Untitled Shell #2, 2020, watercolor on paper, sheet size 76.5 x 57.5 cm (30.1 x 22.6 inches), Courtesy the artist and Luce Gallery, Turin
YOU SEA US
LUDOVIC NKOTH
LUCE GALLERY
Turin
from March 4 to April 27, 2021 (extended)
With online exhibition walkthrough
Exhibition view, You Sea Us, Ludovic Nkoth solo show, Luce Gallery, Turin, 2021, Photo Andrea Ferrari, Courtesy the artist and Luce Gallery
In Turin, from March 4 to April 27, 2021, Luce Gallery is proud to present You Sea Us, Ludovic Nkoth’s first European solo show with the gallery.
In the artist’s native land - Cameroon - water is not only the symbol of life and rebirth, but it also represents how countless African migrants start their journeys to Europe in search of a better life, all too often to find nothing but closed doors, hostility, and in the worst case, death. The human rights situation of migrants and refugees at the Mediterranean Sea is desperate, dangerous, and the numbers of lost lives at the hand of European authorities are unjustifiable and one of our century’s biggest tragedies.
“My idea was to travel to Europe and create these works on European land to show them everything they are refusing to face in their own backyard. I lived in Spain for a couple of months during the pandemic because I wanted to experience what it would even feel like to walk around that part of the world as a migrant of color,”Nkoth explained.
The exhibition features six works on canvas portraying people forced to face the unknown. The large-scale painting “Lighthouse” depicts a sinking boat, an image we are often confronted with daily, but this time, the viewer has to observe and contemplate these desperate scenes and therefore becomes part of it as a witness.
Nkoth uses an array of mediums in this body of work, including wood panels of the masks that almost work as sculptures, works on paper, metal, shells, sand, fishing rods, and more. He uses raw materials such as sand to evoke different dimensions - literally but also on a deeper spiritual level.
Throughout the show, Nkoth thoughtfully waves in different symbols such as shells, passengers, and fallen angels as part of a complex and personal investigation of the African continent that suggest a sense of depth and discovery. Shells were traditionally used as currency and are also associated with the spirits of the water. Here, Nkoth uses them to represent the bodies that were lost at sea. The painting “Do They Hold Me Down” is a self-portrait, and the shadow coming through the body stands for all those souls lost in the Mediterranean Sea. According to the artist, those “fallen angels”who were once on that same trajectory are now returning to protect new passengers through this horrifying experience and to guide them to the shore safely. The show’s centerpiece, “The Gates Of No Return”, in which Nkoth depicts the menacing routes asylum seekers are forced to take given the lack of legal paths to enter Europe.
In the piece “The Light In Me”, Nkoth explores the relationship between black bodies and water more joyfully and positively as a counterpoint to current narratives.
Ludovic Nkoth(1994, Yaoundé, Cameroon) lives and works in New York.
He holds a BFA from the University of South Carolina and is an MFA candidate at Hunter College in New York.
Recently, he had a solo show at François Ghebaly in Los Angeles. His works have been exposed in group shows at Anthony Gallery, Chicago; CFHILL, Stockholm; Ross + Kramer Gallery, New York, among others.
The video featuring the exhibition walkthrough is available online at www.lucegallery.com/video.php.
You Sea Us
Ludovic Nkoth
Luce Gallery
Turin, from 4 March to 27 April 2021 (extended)
Largo Montebello 40, Italy
Hours: Tuesday to Friday, 3:30 - 7:30 pm
+39 011 18890206 / info@lucegallery.com
Instagram: lucegallery / Facebook: Luce Gallery
Online videos featuring the exhibitions walkthroughs guided by the artists: www.lucegallery.com/video.php
Press Office
THE KNACK STUDIO / Tamara Lorenzi
tamara@theknackstudio.com / +39 347 0712934
info@theknackstudio.com / www.theknackstudio.com
Ludovic Nkoth, The Gates of No Return, 2020, mixed media on Belgium linen, 121.9 x 434.3 cm (48 x 171 inches), Courtesy the artist and Luce Gallery, Turin
Ludovic Nkoth, Lighthouse, 2020, acrylic on Belgium linen, 198.1 x 248.9 cm (78 x 98 inches), Courtesy the artist and Luce Gallery, Turin
Ludovic Nkoth, Do They Hold Me Down, 2020, mixed media on Belgium linen, canvas size 152.4 x 121.9 cm (60 x 48 inches), overall size 191.2 x 121.9 cm (75.2 x 48 inches), Courtesy the artist and Luce Gallery, Turin
Ludovic Nkoth, The Last Note, 2020, acrylic on Belgium linen, 152.4 x 121.9 cm (60 x 48 inches), Courtesy the artist and Luce Gallery, Turin
Ludovic Nkoth, The Light In Me, 2020, acrylic on Belgium linen, 182.8 x 121.9 cm (72 x 48 inches), Courtesy the artist and Luce Gallery, Turin
Ludovic Nkoth, Untitled Mask #6, 2020, acrylic on wood panel, 132 x 101.6 cm (52 x 40 inches), Courtesy the artist and Luce Gallery, Turin
Ludovic Nkoth, Untitled Mask #5, 2020, acrylic on wood panel, 165.1 x 88.9 cm (65 x 35 inches), Courtesy the artist and Luce Gallery, Turin
Ludovic Nkoth, Untitled Shell #1, 2020, watercolor on paper, sheet size 76.5 x 57.5 cm (30.1 x 22.6 inches), Courtesy the artist and Luce Gallery, Turin
Ludovic Nkoth, Untitled Shell #2, 2020, watercolor on paper, sheet size 76.5 x 57.5 cm (30.1 x 22.6 inches), Courtesy the artist and Luce Gallery, Turin