The Guardian (Nigeria)

Morakinyo, Peters, Adeogun in Synonyms Of Faces

- By Tajudeen Sowole

THREE artists, Seye Morakinyo, Udoakang Promise Peter and Babatunde Adeogun, whose specialisa­tion leans towards portraitur­e, are showing Synonyms Of Faces from April 17 to 24, 2021 at the Alexis Galleries, Victoria Island, Lagos.

The facility is a familiar terrain for Morakinyo, who has had both solo and group shows there.

For Peter, whose career has been shaped by Alexis Galleries’ mentorship, another window comes to keep the relationsh­ip alive.

Adeogun, who is based in Ibadan, said Alexis Galleries’ track record of promoting young artists, is an attraction for him.

On the show’s theme, Morakinyo said that it’s all about like minds of artists coming together.

“It gives us opportunit­y to show our strength together.” Among his works for the exhibition are The Shepherd and the Herd, which he said, looks at “the leaders and the led,” as well as their attitude; The Vulnerable, a narrative on fragility of females and children in Nigeria and another, which is more on retrospect­ion about “how we were doing before the western world came to our land.”

Peter, an artist who uses fabric collage to enhance the textures of his canvas, has penchant for ankara materials as part of the mixed media paintings. Among the works by Peter for the show are Companion, mixed media; Reflect Beauty series and Deconstruc­tion, oil on canvas.

The artist uses beauty as a subject to enhance his paintings that are more than just portraitur­es. Someone he knows ‘ personally’, based on the lady’s natural attraction, Peter said, inspired one of the works in Reflect Beauty series.

The artist, in Retrospect­ion, focuses on the energy of Nigerian youth, noting, “there are potentials abound in youthful,” blood. Peter said: “I like figurative based on my background of crowded environmen­t where human figures speak so much about their environmen­t.”

According to the gallery’s statement, Adeogun’s paintings express daily experience­s of his environmen­t. Patty Chidiac-Mastrogian­nis, founder and director at Alexis, said Adeogun is “challenged to look beyond the current hardship and views a brighter vista.”

The artist’s works, she noted, are of focal expression­s that read the subjects’ inner minds. “He likes to classify people on the basis of their mood and thought,” just as the artist’s works are “focused on the general improvemen­t of humanity and the eradicatio­n of social ills.”

She describes Morakinyo as a multidimen­sional mixed media artist, who works in collages, pebbles, with meticulous linear expression­s on his paintings. “His expression­s are intriguing and spectacula­r!”

Peter’s works, the gallery noted, “are deeply rooted in the black skin and cultures of Africans.” Among the artist’s strength are what Alexis Galleries described as “showing different narratives of happenings, emotions and moods around him and also using his works as a voice for people who cannot speak out from there predicamen­ts.”

Peter and Alexis seemed to have a strong relationsh­ip as the artist recalled how Alexis “mentored me for two years working here.” The gallery, he added, supported his academics when he was at Yaba College of Technology, Lagos.

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