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Stacey Gillian Abe:

Shrub-let of Old Ayivu (Unit London)


  • Hurtwood
  • by Stacey Gillian Abe. Texts by Dr Flavia Frigeri, Serubiri Moses, Catherine E. McKinley. Design: Billie Temple
Ugandan painter Stacey Gillian Abe's first monograph explores ideas of shared memory, matrilineal inheritance and feminine power in her striking indigo-skinned figures. The debut monograph of Stacey Gillian Abe's work is created to accompany her first London solo show at Unit London. Featuring works spanning her career to date, the book explores the key themes from Abe's work and delves deep into her expressive and symbolic indigo portraits.

ISBN 9780903696685 | EN | HB
€79,95
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Publisher Hurtwood
ISBN 9780903696685
Author(s) by Stacey Gillian Abe. Texts by Dr Flavia Frigeri, Serubiri Moses, Catherine E. McKinley. Design: Billie Temple
Publication date May 2023
Edition Hardback
Dimensions 300 x 235 mm
Pages 208
Language(s) English ed.
Description

Ugandan painter Stacey Gillian Abe's first monograph explores ideas of shared memory, matrilineal inheritance and feminine power in her striking indigo-skinned figures.

The debut monograph of Stacey Gillian Abe’s work is created to accompany her first London solo show at Unit London. Featuring works spanning her career to date, the book explores the key themes from Abe’s work and delves deep into her expressive and symbolic indigo portraits. Abe’s book includes insightful written contributions from Flavia Frigeri, art historian, lecturer and the Chanel Curator at the National Portrait Gallery and Serubiri Moses, renowned writer and curator, alongside a conversation between the artist and Catherine Mckinley, curator and author of the critically acclaimed Indigo: In Search of the Color That Seduced the World and The Book of Sarahs: A Family in Parts. Abe’s work reflects her past and her memories, highlighting her personal experiences and her relationships to her community. The autobiographical dimension of her work confronts traditional depictions of the Black body, challenging the colonial lens. Abe creates imaginary spaces that induce a surreal mystical feel while probing unsettling past and present narratives of identity, gender, spirituality and cultural mysticism. Renowned for her indigo skin-tone paintings, the colour has become crucial in reshaping narratives surrounding the black body. Through the colour, she dives into the past to envision an alternative future for the Black race. To Abe, indigo represents a tribe of people that are not limited to social, economic, cultural, political or historic constraints: ‘it is about being unapologetic’.