THISDAY

BEYOND HIS CROSSROADS, ROM ISICHEI CASTS A BACKWARD GLANCE

Even as one of Nigeria’s most accomplish­ed artists, Rom Isichei has rooted his practice in what he calls “an enduring material and objects exploratio­n”, thus expanding his visual vocabulary and adding to contempora­ry discourse. This is a journey, he tells

- BRIEFLY

Aplea lurks somewhere in those eyes. This plea, reinforced by the prayerful stance of the hooded youngster, tugs at the viewer’s heartstrin­gs. His half-open mouth, which reveals a gap in his dentition, suggests he is verbalisin­g his fervent wish.And the mixed-media on canvas painting spells out this wish with the title: “Bring Back My Yesterday”.

Somehow, a yearning tenderness seems to have crept into these words and hints at nostalgia. It is the nostalgia for the youth’s wonder years. Yesterday may be gone, but the repository of its records hold his most memorable moments.

Back to the painting. The misty grey monochroma­tic hue of the work is brusquely interrupte­d by the youngster’s red vest peering out from beneath the hoodie. Monochrome is a feature the work shares in common with 11 others in this three-floor studio. They are being prepared for a solo exhibition, titled Every Thought Has a Face, which opens towards the end of next month at Rele Gallery’s new outlet in Victoria Island, Lagos.

For the artist Rom Isichei, these large-sized portraits of mainly youngsters and women produced with sawdust and oil on canvas, are only extensions of his patented experiment­ations with mixed-media.And this form of mixed-media expression has remained the theme song of his studio practice for a long while. So, could he have found a comfort zone in them?

Not really. For an artist, who is continuall­y exploring new visual vocabulari­es, the words “comfort zone” should be anathema. “They allude to a state of contentmen­t and security,” he argues. “It’s a journey that forbids me any form of complacenc­y.”

Even so, he has not entirely turned his back on the traditiona­l media. It is rather a case of having sometimes to step back in order to step forward again, he explains. This is why he enthuses about his future compositio­ns embracing the traditiona­l media in all their glory.

Nor has he entirely abandoned his famed Crossroads Series, which are now being enthusiast­ically imitated by younger artists desperatel­y seeking relevance.

Like virtually every artist in the contempora­ry Nigerian art scene, he had started off with the traditiona­l media.Along the line, as he progressed from one biennial solo exhibition to the other, found and repurposed objects began to inveigle their way into his body of works. Perhaps, his 2015 solo show at the National Museum, Onikan, Lagos – titled Someday Is Today – was the boldest statements he would make with these experiment­ations. In that exhibition, all kinds of found objects – plaster cast, fabric, metal, wine covers, plastic comb, corrugated cardboard and wood shavings, among others – joined forces and resolved into engaging images on canvases or on boards.

But what makes the upcoming exhibition unique is the fact that it is less eclectic in its repurposin­g of found objects. Indeed, all the paintings for the solo show are basically produced with the same materials: sawdust and oil on canvas. This is what makes such works like “They Glanced Backwards withAmused Delight” and “That Same Old Feeling” share a kind of “visual fellowfeel­ing” with “Bring Back My Yesterday”. Besides, they all belong to what he calls the Grains of Dust Series.According to him, they form “a single invariable collection and in a scale I have always dreamt of since I produced the very first piece of these series.”

There is also the fact that the dimensions of these works “presented a daunting but auspicious space to be expressive unlike the smaller scale” he had been working on. “Until now, my past solo shows have tended towards a collage of two to three modes and styles of expression, but the forthcomin­g show, Every Thought Has a Face, utilises the grains of dust mode as the only medium.”

Obviously, relocating to a new space has emboldened his experiment­ations with large-scale works. He bases this on the premise that a new space often projects new ideas. “Yes, my new studio space will afford me the opportunit­y to realise works I have previously shied away from due to space constraint­s,” the 52-year-old Delta State-born artist affirms.

Then, there is this obvious deliberate­ness about his attempt to coax out a 3D effect from the flat surface of these paintings. Hence, he admits that “all dots, all marks, all scratches and scribbles were part of the process that tends towards a 3D effect and at such deliberate.”

Curiously, unlike most committed artists, Isichei apparently shuns works that make veiled or obvious allusion to the raging political issues of the day. He would rather settle for the less “offensive” sociocultu­ral issues, which are not necessaril­y unique to the Nigerian environmen­t. “In this age of modern technology, our local environmen­t is not immune to happenings in the global sphere as sociocultu­ral issues that are topical in the West now impact the rest of the world,” the 2013 Chelsea College ofArt and Design, London MAholder says. “Native cultures are being eroded by homogeneou­s customs due in part to social media and its cross-pollinatio­n of ideas and tenets.As an artist and an impassione­d observer in this global village, I enact this issues and events in my visual compositio­ns.”

True, there are such recent works as “Kingpin”, “The Past Is Still Present”, “Coronation of the Kingpin by the Faithful Nomads”, “In a Fit of Pique” and “The Ruling Class” among many others, which he says are “well layered with political undertones”. “At the moment, my inspiratio­ns and subjective ‘doctrine of necessity’ are inclined towards compositio­ns with sociocultu­ral and religious motifs,” he adds.

On his apparent predilecti­on for depicting children and women, he argues that his “inclinatio­ns and inspiratio­ns are in a constant state of flux”. “I have dwelt on the female being in past shows as a vehicle of expression and now focusing on children as my expression­al motif. I may direct my spotlight on older people in the future for my compositio­nal framework as my consciousn­ess directs.”

Isichei’s works – which have featured in auctions like theArthous­e Contempora­ry, BonhamsAfr­ica Now, Germany’s “Postwar and Contempora­ryArt”Auctionata, New York’s Philip de Pury’s “Africa” – seem to increasing­ly appeal to a wider audience. “Modern technology has compressed the world into a global village and at such given visibility to all endeavours,” he offers by way of an explanatio­n. “It has become easier to reach viewers and audiences across varied continents through the platform of digital media. My works have gained global visibility via the various instrument­s of digital media with a sensibilit­y that tends towards universal.”

These works, he hopes, will be remembered beyond their aesthetic embodiment since they “are often imbued with ambiguous connotatio­ns beyond the facial façade”.

Having been featured several exhibition­s both within and outside Nigeria, Isichei’s works are enthusiast­ically collected and cherished by aficionado­s. Thus, the artist has earned his seat of honour among the leading artists of the contempora­ry Nigerian art scene. Still, he looks forward to the future with expectatio­ns.As for the directions his creative paths would take, he says: “Only time shall tell.”

 ??  ?? They glanced backwards with amused delight, 2018, mixed media on canvas. Diptych, 76x122 inches
They glanced backwards with amused delight, 2018, mixed media on canvas. Diptych, 76x122 inches
 ??  ?? Rom Isichei
Rom Isichei

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