Ruth Ige
Ruth Ige | |
---|---|
Born | 1992 (age 32–33) |
Education | Auckland University of Technology |
Known for | painting |
Ruth Ige (born 1992 Ilé-Ifẹ̀, Nigeria) is a Nigerian-born painter based in Auckland, New Zealand.[1] Her work was part of the major group exhibition Aotearoa Contemporary at Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki in 2024.[2] She has been part of multiple solo and group exhibitions, notably participating in several international exhibitions.
Background
[edit]Ige is of Yoruba descent on her father's side and Igbo descent on her mother's side.[3] In 2016, she graduated with a Bachelor of Visual Arts from the Auckland University of Technology.[4][5] One year after graduating, in 2017 she participated in her first group exhibition at Artspace in Auckland.
Art
[edit]Ige's work centers the black figure and explores blackness in relation to representation, art history, documentation, and existence. Though firmly rooted in history and the present, her paintings often delve into future imaginings. Where past, present and future collide, converse and coexist within the same space. Where the figures, roam between dimensions of history and fiction. In almost a shapeshifting manner the familiar and fantastical are constantly interchanging. She is interested in exploring the movement between two things and their coexistence: figuration and abstraction, the familiar and otherworldly, stillness and movement, beauty and pain, certainty and uncertainty, etc. Especially using secrecy and mystery as a form of empowerment in the portrayal of blackness through the constant concealing and revealing that occurs by moving between abstraction and figuration. The figures are powerfully seen, but also seem to be lovingly protected and hidden. As such, Ige aims for her works to be difficult to stereotype due to their abstract, mysterious qualities, creating narratives within her paintings that are enigmatic and unexpected.[6] She describes her works as a love letter to the black diaspora and motherland, her paintings being a tool of healing, escape, resistance and empowerment.[7]
Typically, Ige uses thick, gestural brushstrokes of blue, black, and white to create compositions that present figures void of features.[8] In an interview with the Art Paper magazine, Ige explained that she has a deep love of blue, and by using it as her main colour, the viewer can become more immersed in the space.[3] She also connects with the cultural significance of blue, which has been a colour to carry language and symbolise legacy, dignity and protection, which therefore envelopes the figures in her works, protecting them.[3] She has recently been using West African Indigo and various Nigerian dried leaves used by Igbo and Yoruba as painting pigments with her paintings.[9]
Exhibition history
[edit]Year | Exhibition | Location | Solo or Group |
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2024 | Aotearoa Contemporary | Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, Auckland | Group |
2024 | And you are of the heavens of the earth | Stevenson, Cape Town | Solo |
2024 | Summer Paintings | Gow Langsford, Auckland | Group |
2022 | Between Two Dimensions | Robert Projects, Los Angeles | Solo |
2021 | The poetic notions of blue | McLeavey Gallery, Wellington | Solo |
2021 | My Whole Body Changed into Something Else | Stevenson, Cape Town | Group |
2020 | A Place Apart | City Gallery, Wellington | Duo |
2020 | Three Painters | McLeavey Gallery, Wellington | Group |
2019 | Group Show | Karma, New York | Group |
2019 | Two Oceans at Once | ST PAUL St Gallery, Auckland | Group |
2019 | Pleiades: Seven Sisters of New Zealand | Gow Langsford, Auckland | Group |
2019 | On the Verge of Blue | SPA_CE, Napier | Group |
2018 | The Silence Before the Morning | Weasel Gallery, Hamilton | Solo |
2018 | Never an Answer: 12 Abstract Painters | The Vivian, Matakana | Group |
2018 | LISTE Art Fair Basel | Switzerland | Group |
2017 | Dirt Future | Artspace Aotearoa, Auckland | Group |
References
[edit]- ^ eloise (24 November 2020). "RUTH IGE | Aotearoa Art Fair". Retrieved 7 January 2025.
- ^ "Aotearoa Contemporary". Auckland Art Gallery. 6 July 2024. Retrieved 7 January 2025.
- ^ a b c "Meet Ruth Ige". The Art Paper. Retrieved 7 January 2025.
- ^ eloise (24 November 2020). "RUTH IGE | Aotearoa Art Fair". Retrieved 7 January 2025.
- ^ a b "Melanie Roger Gallery: Ruth Ige". melanierogergallery.com. Retrieved 7 January 2025.
- ^ "Ruth Ige". SPA_CE. Retrieved 7 January 2025.
- ^ STEVENSON. "STEVENSON". STEVENSON. Retrieved 7 January 2025.
- ^ "Artist Ruth Ige Gives Freedom the Capacity to Dream in Paint". www.culturedmag.com. Retrieved 7 January 2025.
- ^ https://mcleaveygallery.com/exhibitions/the-poetic-notions-of-blue-a-haven/
- ^ "Ruth Ige". SPA_CE. Retrieved 7 January 2025.
- ^ "Ruth Ige, The Astronomer, 2021". Gow Langsford. Retrieved 7 January 2025.
- ^ "Ruth Ige CV" (PDF). BODE. Retrieved 8 January 2025.