Fragments (I)

Jess Atieno

Fragments (I), 2023118.5 x 87cmSign in to view price
Details
MaterialGallery
sérigraphie sur toile serigraph on canvasGalerie Cécile Fakhoury
Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.

This bold black and white artwork features a striking collage composed of various photographic elements. The composition is dominated by a large, textured fragment that resembles a rock or natural formation, contrasted against the ghostly silhouettes of human figures. The overall aesthetic creates a sense of fragmentation and displacement, with the subjects appearing almost ethereal against the rugged, abstracted background. The artist's use of photographic techniques and layering evokes a sense of historical displacement and social commentary, hinting at the work's potential to explore themes of identity, memory, and the human condition. The piece showcases the artist's skilled manipulation of visual elements to convey a thought-provoking and evocative contemporary statement. ...

Similar Artworks
Untitled
Bunny RogersUntitled, 2020
220.3 x 173.3 x 7.5cm
Rose Joan on mud blanket
Bira
Kudzanai-Violet HwamiBira, 2019
180 x 150cm
Ghost Joan 5
Untitled (Eva)
Simone Kennedy DoigUntitled (Eva), 2018
80 x 60cm
Medicine man
Kudzanai-Violet HwamiMedicine man, 2019
120 x 120cm
Untitled
Kudzanai-Violet HwamiUntitled, 2019
45 x 50cm
Sitting by Sekuru’s grave
Lying in the still waters of erasure
Turtle Cam
Erin Jane NelsonTurtle Cam, 2025
25.4 x 21.6 x 24.8cm
Speaking in tongues
Kudzanai-Violet HwamiSpeaking in tongues, 2019
18 x 30 x 30cm
Falling
Miserable Wretch
Dear Bonnie
Simone Kennedy DoigDear Bonnie, 2020
190 x 160cm
Fallen Sakura
The Hours After
Lost
Yoora LeeLost, 2021
30.5 x 30.5cm
Untitled
Kudzanai-Violet HwamiUntitled, 2019
30 x 30cm
Sunflower Self
Erin Jane NelsonSunflower Self, 2025
24.1 x 29.8cm
Green Elevation
You Will See Through It
Iliodora MargellosYou Will See Through It, 2022
112 x 88 x 5.5cm
Bruce
Simone Kennedy DoigBruce, 2020
153 x 112.1cm
Flimsy Screen
Veronika PausovaFlimsy Screen, 2024
45.7 x 38.1 x 3.5cm
With all your friends
Osefei
Mulenga JestinaOsefei, 2016
60 x 40cm
Long Afternoon
Crossing Point
Sunflower Cam
Erin Jane NelsonSunflower Cam, 2025
62.2 x 61 x 39.4cm
Jess Atieno
Artist
Jess Atieno
B.1991, Kenyan

Jess Atieno maintains a practice informed by inquiries on place, home and dispossession through the lens of the postcolonial. Atieno sees herself as carrying inscriptions of a colonial past. Studying as an adult in the US made her increasingly unable to situate herself in a static reality of belonging. With this inspiration, Atieno time travels into history through its material remains: historical photographs, maps and documents, employing them in prints, installations and tapestry. She turns to the idea of place as the transformative site of hybridity that offers alternative strategies for and models of representation within the post-colonial. ...

Jess Atieno: Artworks
Bikra
Jess AtienoBikra, 2023
147 x 106cm
Hauntings I
Hauntings II
Ibada
Jess AtienoIbada, 2023
163 x 107cm
Past is Prologue
Trance I
Trance II
Fragments (I)
Fragments (III)
Fragments (II)
Galerie Cécile Fakhoury
Gallery
Galerie Cécile Fakhoury
Abidjan, Paris, Dakar

Galerie Cecile Fakhoury opened its doors in Abidjan, Ivory Coast in September 2012. In May 2018, the gallery inaugurated its second space in Dakar, Senegal and a showroom in Paris, France. Shortly after, in March 2020, a new project space dedicated to emerging artists from Africa opened in Abidjan. In October 2021, Galerie Cecile Fakhoury inaugurated another gallery, opening in the 8th arrondissement of Paris on Avenue Matignon. The gallery promotes contemporary art from Africa and the Diaspora by providing visibility to the artistic diversity and creative spirit from the continent. Through its programming of solo and group exhibitions, participation in international art fairs, biennales, and collaboration with international galleries, Cecile Fakhoury is a leading force putting contemporary African art on the global map. The artists represented by the gallery are distinguished by their cultural identities and stories, they create a new language that crosses geographical boundaries and familiarities. They are observers of the world they live in, critics of society, and committed to their positions living within complex histories. In turn, they ask us to reconsider our own relation to the world. ...

Unlock Price & Inquiry Access