Serge Attukwei Clottey: Solo Chorus


Solo Exhibition | Nov. 15, 2019-Jan. 18, 2020

This is a past exhibition.

 

Ghanaian artist Serge Attukwei Clottey creates an immersive installation that explores colonial histories and their echoes in environmental and economic issues of our time.

About the Exhibition.

TMR is pleased to present Serge Attukwei Clottey: Solo Chorus, the Ghanaian artist’s first institutional solo exhibition in the United States. Clottey's work highlights the dense network of relationships—personal and bodily, political, economic, and ecological—that index themselves through his primary source material, the plastic Kufuor Gallon used by families throughout Ghana for their daily water supply. Solo Chorus focuses on the activation of this network - the interplay between collectivism and individuality in Clottey’s practice, which nimbly operates across the intersections of social activism and abstract formalism. The installation interweaves his sculptural wall works, many of them newly created for this exhibition, with free-standing three-dimensional objects in wood and bronze, works on paper, video, and performance to map the issues of land ownership, dynamics of gender, and environmental awareness in Ghana. Through inventive solutions of shape, texture, composition and narrative across these diverse disciplines, a distinct vocabulary emerges, mixing singular and plural to pose questions of the interrelationship of political agency and artistic authorship. What are the kinships and tensions between social and aesthetic change? Over the passage of time, be it the life of a person, nation, or culture, does any of these limits truly exist, or is it more accurate to speak of cycles, variations, and iterations on themes of hardship and hope?  

About the Artist.

Serge Attukwei Clottey (b. 1985, Ghana) lives and works in Accra, Ghana. Working across installation, performance, photography and sculpture, Clottey explores personal and political narratives rooted in histories of trade and migration. Based in Accra and working internationally, Clottey refers to his work as “Afrogallonism”, a concept that confronts the question of material culture through the utilisation of yellow gallon containers. Cutting, drilling, stitching and melting found materials, Clottey’s sculptural installations are bold assemblages that act as a means of inquiry into the languages of form and abstraction. Clottey attended the Ghanatta College of Art and Design in Ghana before studying at the Escola Guinard University of Art in Brazil and has completed multiple fellowships abroad. He works in a variety of media including performance, photography, video, painting, drawing, and sculpture. Recent exhibitions include KUBATANA at Vestfossen Kunstlaboratorium, Vestfossen, Norway; Current Affairs at Fabrica Gallery and Gold Standard at Ever Gold Projects, San Francisco. His work is in the collection of the Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art (Overland Park, Kansas), the Museum of African Contemporary Art Al Maaden (Marrakech, Morocco), the Nubuke Foundation (Accra, Ghana), the Seth Dei Foundation (Accra, Ghana), Modern Forms (UK), and The World Bank Collection (Washington D.C.), as well as a number of international private collections.

Related

 

Press

Dec. 27, 2019 | Serge Attukwei Clottey at The Mistake Room | Contemporary Art Daily

Credits

Serge Attukwei Clottey: Solo Chorus is organized by TMR and curated by César García-Alvarez, TMR Executive and Artistic Director, with Nicolas Orozco-Valdivia.

This exhibition is part of Histories of a Vanishing Present, TMR’s 2019-2020 curatorial cycle exploring the global dynamics of postmemory. Major support for this cycle is provided by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.

TMR's program is made possible with the support of its Board of Directors, Big Mistake Patron Group, International Council, and Contemporary Council.

Support for this exhibition is provided by ICM Partners and 1:54 Contemporary African Art Fair.

 

Photo Credit: Injinash Unshin. Copyright 2019. The Mistake Room Inc.