Marcia Kure (born 1970) is a Nigerian visual artist known primarily for her mixed media paintings and drawings that engage with postcolonial existentialist conditions and identities.[1][2]
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Marcia Kure | |
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Born | 1970 Kano State, Nigeria |
Nationality | Nigerian |
Education | University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Haystack Mountain School of Crafts, Deer Isle, ME |
Website | Official website |
Kure was born in Kano State, Nigeria.[3] She trained at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka under painter Obiora Udechukwu and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in painting in 1994.[4][5]
Kure's early work focused on political violence and the agency of women in patriarchal society.[6] Her later work has been concerned with themes related to motherhood, haute couture fashion, and hip-hop aesthetics. [7][8]
Kure had her New York debut at the Skoto Gallery in 1995.[9]
In a 2015 interview for ARTCTUALITE, Kure articulated the influence of space on her work, stating that she "[tries] to make an argument for people who do not have a defined space," and the ways in which she incorporates Western aesthetic techniques alongside those of African:
"I am not interested in either or, in what something is or what it is not; rather, I prefer the grey area that deals directly with oppositions and juxtapositions. I find the ability to inhabit different views very inspiring. I think the assimilation of western forms and techniques in my work allows me to integrate and interpret the world through a prismatic lens much better than one who has a singular view."[8]
Kure has exhibited internationally with solo exhibitions at the Goethe-Institut, Lagos; Purdy Hicks Gallery, London; and Susan Inglett Gallery, New York.[10] Her work has additionally been featured in group exhibitions at institutions such as the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art; the New Museum, New York; the Barbican Art Galleries, London; National Gallery of Art, Lagos; and, the WIELS Contemporary Art Center, Brussels.[3] Her work can be found in the collections of the British Museum; the Centre Pompidou; the National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institution; The Newark Museum; the North Carolina Museum of Art; the Cleveland Clinic; the Sindika Dokolo Foundation, Luanda, Angola; and, the United States Embassy, Abuja.[11] Kure has participated in the La Triennial (2013); the International Biennial of Contemporary Art, Seville (2006), directed by Okwui Enwezor; and the Sharjah International Biennial (2005).[12]
From January through March 2014, Kure was artist-in-residence at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.[13] She was awarded the Uche Okeke Prize for Drawing in 1994.
The artist is represented by Susan Inglett Gallery, New York; Purdy Hicks Gallery, London; and, Officine Dell'Immagine, Milan.[3][2][12]
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