Close Menu
Rate My ArtRate My Art
  • Home
  • Art Investment
  • Art Investors
  • Art Rate
  • Artist
  • Fine Art
  • Invest in Art
What's Hot

Art student’s murals showcase Liverpool’s ‘rich heritage’

June 8, 2025

Of art exhibitions and spaces

June 8, 2025

US-based dissident artist critical of China’s President Xi allegedly targeted by British businessman accused of being a Chinese spy

June 8, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Get In Touch
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
Rate My ArtRate My Art
  • Home
  • Art Investment
  • Art Investors
  • Art Rate
  • Artist
  • Fine Art
  • Invest in Art
Rate My ArtRate My Art
Home»Artist»Why Trendsetting Galleries Are Betting on Rising Artist Luke Agada
Artist

Why Trendsetting Galleries Are Betting on Rising Artist Luke Agada

By MilyeOctober 28, 20248 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


In his Chicago studio, Nigerian-born artist Luke Agada gives form to adaptation. His paintings, surrealistic scenes painted in sunburnt hues of rust browns and tans, are elusive and chimerical. In these paintings, figurative beings hover at the threshold of recognizability, tendon-like entities suspended between worlds. Agada admits he’s consumed with visualizing a “Third Space”—a term defined by the Indian writer and scholar Homi Bhabha to describe the place where the two-way influences of the colonizing and the colonized culture meet. These spaces are both physical and psychic, and Agada’s paintings take on the metamorphic ambiguity of memory.

Installation view “Between Two Suns” 2024. Courtesy of Robert Projects, Los Angeles. Photo: Paul Salveson.

He paints these works in his studio in a large 14-story landmark building in the Pilsen neighborhood of Chicago. Now operated by Mana Contemporary, the building was originally a warehouse and garage for Commonwealth Edison’s Fisk Generating station and included a 198-foot-high radio tower “as the communication system to dispatch emergency equipment” he explained. Agada just moved into the space this year, a larger space that has allowed him to scale up with larger square footage, high ceilings, and monumental windows.  “The large windows give the space a brilliant influx of natural light,” he added. “The studio has allowed me more space for working comfortably on multiple things all at once. I like to have a fairly organized space when working, that allows me to walk easily around without stepping on or bumping into things.”

His painting process embraces gesturalism and automatism but is also informed by writing, and the thinking of literary, scientific, and socio-political writers is distilled and overlaid in his fluid, shape-shifting scenes. These works have earned him the support of influential galleries. In 2023, opened his first U.S. solo show, Arms, Feet, and Fitful Dreams,  with moniquemeloche gallery, who represents him in Chicago. Right now, his first L.A. solo show is on view in “Between Two Suns” at Roberts Projects, (on view through November 2, 2024). Following the opening of the exhibition, the gallery announced they’d be representing Agada on the West Coast. Of the exhibition, Agada said “Living ‘between two suns’ is a constant pursuit of balance that can only be achieved by continuous movement. Nothing is ever really in a state of rest; it’s a law of nature.”

Recently we caught up with Agada at his Chicago studio and dove into his myriad inspirations.

In your new show at Roberts Projects, the work tries to reach a “Third Space” a term defined by writer Homi K. Bhabha. What is this space and how does it manifest in your works? 

The “Third Space” is a psychological and conceptual realm, an in-between space where different cultures meet, interact, and give rise to new, hybrid identities and meanings. The Bhabhaian concept of identity as a process of negotiation and transformation is articulated through the adaptation of forms within this space.

The paintings explore the Third Space as a non-representational zone of expression. It eludes structuralist definitions, functioning as a space of ambiguity that resists dominant narratives and challenges binary oppositions such as self/other or colonizer/colonized. This in-between zone is neither wholly one thing nor the other, but a site of fluidity and transformation.

Within my work, it is emerging from the intersection of memory, imagination, and observed reality. I focus on organic and biomorphic forms that sit at the border between the representative and the prefigurative image. These forms inhabit the Third Space, reflecting its capacity to blur boundaries and generate hybrid identities.

I am particularly interested in how this Third Space, situated between globalized constructs of culture, nationality, and other such categories, engenders ambiguous identities within these forms. The inherent instability of the Third Space mirrors a continuous search for balance, as one navigates conflicting cultural expectations, values, and identities. This constant redefinition of self, belonging, and place in the world often leads to feelings of dislocation, ambiguity, and tension.

What other writings have influenced your work? 

African literature has also had a profound impact in my work and has served as an early source of inspiration. More recently, the works of the Nigerian novelist Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. In her book Americanah she delves into themes of identity, displacement, belonging, and the immigrant experience, particularly for Africans in the West, as they navigate their relationship with “home.”

an artist studio with brushes inside and a rolling tray with paints on them

Inside Luke Agada’s studio. Photograph by the artist.

How does your home city of Lagos shape your work? I’m thinking in terms of your color palette, but I’m curious about any other ways as well. 

Every city or region in the world has its own unique spectral color effect from the way the sunlight filters through the upper atmosphere due to factors relating to geographical location.

Every city retains a unique color palette, even as light bounces off the landscape of human activities. Lagos, Nigeria, is located close to the equator, which means the sun is typically high in the sky and can appear quite intense, warm, and bright. The sunburnt hue observed on the landscape of Lagos and many other Nigerian cities is one that I have often drawn from because working within that color palette feels close to home.

I believe that our minds interpret memories in colors, and our lived experiences influence the colors of our memories. These colors come together to compose solid forms with different levels of clarity, depending on how vivid these memories are. The parts of the paintings that lack such clear definition are the memories that remain obscure and become that which is almost forgotten.

A distorted, abstract painting depicts a seated figure and surrounding furniture, with melted, fluid forms and muted earth tones blending together in a surreal, dreamlike scene

Luke Agada, Night Sweats (2024). Courtesy of the artist and Roberts Projects.

Your figures in this show are surrealistic, ghostly, even alien, hovering at the limits of recognizability. Tell me about that. How have your figures transformed over time? 

At the early stage of my practice, I was strongly influenced by the European surrealists and old masters. Max Ernst, Yves Tanguy, and René Magritte were my most common references. The academy’s approach to figure drawing and painting formed a foundation for me. I began to closely observe the evolution of the human figure depicted in the work of many modernist art movements. The shift in perception, technique, and expression, often challenging traditional representations, became interesting to me as I sought ways to further push the limits of representation without going fully abstract in my work. Yet that did not happen immediately.

When I moved to the United States for my MFA program at SAIC, my process and approach to painting gradually changed due to the change in environment and everything associated with it. The straightforward representation of the human form was not satisfying to me any longer, I was interested in what else was going on around the figure and how the form was responding to the space. I came across the works of Arshile Gorky, Roberto Matta, Willem De Kooning, and other New York school painters. There was something interesting about them that drew my attention. They had this shift and approach to painting that challenged our mundane perceptions of reality and disrupted figuration. Their preoccupation with investing meaning in forms that relate to the whole human experience opened a door to me in my own work and allowed me entry into some of the conversations I was interested in.

a rolling artist palette with pigment paint on top

Inside Luke Agada’s studio. Photograph by the artist.

What kind of atmosphere do you prefer when you work? Is there anything you like to listen to/watch/read/look at etc. while in the studio for inspiration or as ambient culture? 

I mostly like it quiet when I work, because it helps me think and write down thoughts when I need to. But sometimes I listen to podcasts or artist lectures especially when preparing surfaces for painting. I rarely ever listen to music, and if I do it’s often just instrumentals played on repeat to avoid distractions.

When you feel stuck while preparing for a show, how do you get unstuck? 

I’ve learned to set aside a painting and move on to something fresh or another work in progress whenever I hit a block. There have been times when I needed to step away from the studio after obsessing over a problem for too long. Often, the best solution is to take a break and focus on something else before returning to it.

What tool or art supply do you enjoy working with the most, and why? Please send us a snap of it. Or is there anything in your studio that a visitor might find surprising? 

Over the past two years, I’ve replaced many of my nylon synthetic brushes with bristle ones. They are excellent for moving semi-wet paint around, and I enjoy how they create striking accidental gestures, revealing the underpainting in certain areas of a piece.



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticlePennon shares record investment plans with customers at Plymouth’s state-of-the-art treatment site
Next Article American Folk Art Portrait Sits At Top For CRN

Related Posts

Artist

US-based dissident artist critical of China’s President Xi allegedly targeted by British businessman accused of being a Chinese spy

June 8, 2025
Artist

The brilliant artist whose paintings will be enjoyed more than ever before.

June 7, 2025
Artist

Mrs. GREEN APPLE Tops Three Billboard Japan 2025 Mid-Year Charts

June 7, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

Art student’s murals showcase Liverpool’s ‘rich heritage’

June 8, 2025

Masha Art | Architectural Digest India

August 26, 2024

How can I avoid art investment scams?

August 26, 2024
Monthly Featured

Artist who ‘let people do anything to her’ explained reason she had nine orgasms in public for performance – Celebrity News

MilyeMay 12, 2025
Art Rate

Raise Your ‘Art’ Rate for Sport Relief at Canary Wharf, in Association with Fitbit – 17.03.16

MilyeOctober 14, 2024
Fine Art

Washington County Museum of Fine Arts Art in Bloom history, schedule

MilyeApril 27, 2025
Most Popular

Work by renowned Scottish pop artist Michael Forbes to go on display in Inverness

August 28, 2024

Work by Palestinian artist to open NIKA Project Space’s Paris gallery

August 28, 2024

Woordfees: Printmaking exhibition explores human rights in democratic SA

October 12, 2024
Our Picks

Art investment: Millennials discovering recession-resistant asset of super-rich

October 14, 2024

Mayer Brown Advises Art-Invest Real Estate On The Acquisition Of A Residential Real Estate Portfolio | News

October 24, 2024

Soli Corbelle Art Expands Advisory Services For Art Investment And Collection Management

May 1, 2025
Weekly Featured

To Keep Young Artists in London, an Upstart Group Is Offering Them Cut-Rate Studio Space in the City’s Ritziest Neighborhood

October 15, 2024

Beijing’s Caochangdi Village Mixes First-Rate Art and Live Poultry

October 18, 2024

Amid Uptick in Censorship, National Coalition Helps Artists Fight Back

October 24, 2024
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
  • Get In Touch
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
© 2025 Rate My Art

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.