Je tire le premier

Kura Shomali

Je tire le premier, 2009120 x 85cmSign in to view price
Details
Material
colle, gouache, encre à dessin, paillettes, poska, aquarelle sur papier canson
Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.

This contemporary artwork features a whimsical figure dressed in a black suit, cowboy hat, and holding a globe-shaped head. The vibrant colors and playful composition create a striking visual contrast, drawing the viewer's attention to the central symbol of the world. The artwork appears to employ a collage-like technique, combining various elements to craft an imaginative, almost surreal character. This imaginative piece likely reflects the artist's commentary on globalization, power dynamics, and the human experience within an interconnected world. ...

Colonel Crochet
Artist
Kura Shomali
B.1979, Congolese

Kura Shomali’s work is instantly recognizable for its dynamic lines, ink splashes, and vibrant energy, reflecting the bustling, chaotic life of Kinshasa that inspires him at every turn. His practice captures the city’s rhythm and disorder, translating its sounds, movements, and textures into vivid, layered visual compositions. Although he has experimented with video, installations, puppetry, and found materials, Shomali ultimately refined his signature style through drawing. Working primarily on paper, he combines gouache, ink, felt-tip pens, charcoal, and collage, creating pieces with distinctive textures and a lively, expressive quality. His early drawings, made with urgency and immediacy, drew inspiration from the circulation of hand-to-hand magazines and the energetic pulse of the city, embodying Kinshasa’s vibrant megacity life. In recent works, Shomali reinterprets iconic images from African photographers such as Samuel Fosso, Malick Sidibé, and Jean Depara, infusing them with humor and a contemporary perspective. He also continues to create puppets from found objects, animating them in videos to comment on corruption, conflict, and social issues, blending critique with playfulness. Across the media, his work combines spontaneity, satire, and observation to portray the vitality, contradictions, and resilience of contemporary Congolese life. ...