Jadé Fadojutimi - New Now London Thursday, December 9, 2021 | Phillips

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  • Jadé Fadojutimi’s Typhoon (2015) marks an important and pivotal moment in the artist’s astronomical rise to success and worldwide recognition. Typhoon was executed during the artist’s final year at the Slade School of Art and exhibited at her degree show in 2015, where it was acquired by the current Private Collector. In 2019, Jadé became the youngest artist in the prestigious Tate Collection at the age of 27 years old. Recently celebrated with her solo show at Pippy Houldsworth Gallery (September – October 2020), she also currently forms part of the group exhibition Present Generations: Creating the Scantland Collection of the Columbus Museum of Art through May 2022. Jadé was included in Tate Liverpool, Liverpool Biennial this year and is working towards solo exhibitions at the Hepworth Wakefield, ICA Miami and Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Turin in 2022.

    'I remember when I started at the Slade I wanted to paint the indescribable, because the spectrum of what I was experiencing I couldn’t translate into language.'
    —Jadé Fadojutimi 

    Gestural and energetic, Jadé’s mastery and exploration in paint sits on the spectrum between abstraction and figuration, creating her own distinctly personal visual language. The works obtain their colours, shapes and forms from Japanese anime, soundtracks, clothes, memories and experiences - elements that Jadé has collected and compartmentalised since childhood: ‘I feel my art has always been related to my personal interests, and I have always wanted to question them through working […] When I started at the Slade I was really interested in sound and soundtracks, and the things I was drawn to as a kid. I might have been translating them differently, as I was using them more as a way to understand a relationship with paint and colour, but as time went on my works came to understand a more personal relationship with colour that I see within the things that I surrounded myself with personally, such as objects, clothing and animations I was watching.’i

     

    Jadé was born and raised in East London, the daughter to Nigerian parents. This cultural duality of being British with Nigerian heritage raised continuous questions for the artist around identity and the idea of self.  For Jadé, Japanese anime became a of form of escapism, an opportunity for complete transportation and absorption: ‘Japan was my Disneyland; it was a form of escapism.’ii  Jadé would find herself taking inward journeys whilst listening to anime soundtracks, whisked away to a vivid fantastical land. 


    It was during her studies at the Slade that the artist was preoccupied with painted ‘environments’. Through the eddying dynamic handling of paint, Typhoon calls into question how the location depicted could be constructed in real life. Working from her bank of stored knowledge and imagination, Jadé creates these mysterious landscapes attempting to create her own form of reality which is parallel to but separate from the physical world. 

     

    Expressing onto the canvas an organic amalgamation of memory and feeling, her titles similarly derive from natural associations: ‘whilst I am working if there is a sentence or a word that comes to mind or reminds me of something or something I have said in the past is brought to the surface, that will usually be the title […] My titles are very natural relationships to the work and they really capture how I speak. I think that I have a bit of a dark sense of humour as well.’iii Typhoon, a title that conjures a giant rotating storm, bringing with it wind, rain and destruction, is conveyed in swirling tones of blue, green and purple, energetically applied to the canvas with large gestural brushstrokes. Shadows, figures, and features are partially visible through the enigmatic painterly washes. A figure, reminiscent of Japanese anime, emerges at the centre of the work, clinging steadfastly to a vertical rod, a lifeline. Typhoon can be viewed as a literal representation of the artist’s inner exploration, her way of physically deciphering and mentally computing.

    'When you live in a bubble, the outside world becomes something you can create.
    I’m understanding more and more what happens when you are unable to diversify your encounters, maybe. The imagination can manifest itself in miraculous ways.
    Whilst I’m painting, the harmonious unity of my senses becomes apparent. They muddle together, chitter-chattering about their newfound warmth as though it’s their first connection. This first meeting seems to happen almost every day.'
    —Jadé Fadojutimi

    Marking the foundation to an artistic career that has taken the world by storm, within Typhoon we see Jadé exploring notions of identity and placement fuelled by a myriad of personal influences. Through a uniquely gestural and expressive handling of paint, Jadé raises the concerns that form the basis of her most celebrated works. 

     

    Jadé Fadojutimi in her studio, 2021. Courtesy of the Liverpool Biennial. 

     

    i Jadé Fadojutimi in interview with Isabella Rose Celeste Davey, ’Painting the Indescribable: Jadé Fadojutimi’, Love magazine, 9 October 2020, online 
    ii Jadé Fadojutimi in interview with Georgia Mackie, in ‘Creative Hub: Who is Jadé Fadojutimi’, 4 March 2021, online 
    iii Jadé Fadojutimi in interview with Isabella Rose Celeste Davey, ’Painting the Indescribable: Jadé Fadojutimi’, Love magazine, 9 October 2020, online

    • 來源

      Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner

    • 過往展覽

      London, Slade School of Art, BA/BFA Degree Show, 23 - 28 May 2015

    • 藝術家簡介

      Jadé Fadojutimi

      Jadé Fadojutimi is a British contemporary artist who lives and works in London. A recent graduate of the Royal College of Art, Fadojutimi has seen a precipitous ascent to success: she is the youngest artist represented in the collection of the Tate, London, and has upcoming exhibitions planned for the Hepworth Wakefield and the Liverpool Biennial. Fadojutimi’s work is immersive and all-encompassing, featuring tightly woven lattices of ecstatic pigment and electric line. The raw but bubbly energy of her paintings reflects aspects of the artist’s own interiority, as she treats each canvas as an opportunity to explore undiscovered or under-interrogated aspects of her individuality. Fadojutimi believes that color and personality mingle and encourage one another; the matrices of line and color resemble the psychedelic spindles of neural networks, actualizing the artist’s investigative efforts as visual translations of the artist’s explorations of identity and fluidity.

      Fadojutimi brings a frenetic energy to painting, as many of her works are completed in late-night bursts of creativity; what may start the night as a blank canvas often emerges in the morning as a finished work. Describing her practice in environmental terms, Fadojutimi strives to incorporate the ineffable associations of memory absorbed from the warm moments and special objects of life; taken against the societal backdrop of their creation, Fadojutimi’s paintings shine out as optimistic beacons for dark times.

       
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5

Typhoon

signed and dated 'Jadé Fadojutimi 2015 Jadé Fadojutimi' on the overlap
oil on canvas
80.5 x 80.2 cm (31 3/4 x 31 5/8 in.)
Painted in 2015.

Full Cataloguing

估價
£15,000 - 20,000 

成交價£126,000

聯絡專家

Simon Tovey
New Now主管暨專家
+44 20 7318 4084
STovey@phillips.com

New Now

倫敦拍賣2021年12月9日