'Otobong Nkanga: What Are You Going to Do?' – ArtReview
17 September 2024
Resembling the trunks of palm trees scorched by some apocalyptic conflagration, three ceramic works rise up in the main space of Nigerian artist Otobong Nkanga’s first solo exhibition at Lisson, London. Inspecting their blackened, carbonised surfaces, we get to thinking of the devastating blazes that, in our age of global heating, are razing more and more of the world’s forests, laying waste to ecologies and choking our shared skies. Perhaps what Nkanga is presenting in her Beacon works (2024) is a vision of an imminent future, in which this trio of charred forms are all that remains of Earth’s arboreal life. At the base of each of these works the artist has placed steel and ceramic vessels containing dried medicinal plants, like offerings before an idol or flowers on a tomb. Get close to Beacon – Prominence, for example, and our nostrils are met with the scent of lavender, an herb used to treat anxiety and depression. Is this enough to cure humanity of its self-destructive impulses, or is it too little, too late?
In the show’s titular installation, We Come from Fire and Return to Fire (2024), a thick, hand-braided rope, threaded with huge smoked-raku ceramic beads, descends from the high gallery ceiling and snakes across a hand-tufted rug that – with its ashy blues and purples enlivened by flashes of volcanic red – evokes a simmering pool of magma. Resting among the rug’s fibres are polished spheres and jagged fragments of semi-precious stone, among them shungite and tourmaline, which some alternative healers claim possess protective and purifying qualities (mainstream Western science strongly disagrees). It’s a work that employs the argot of tasteful, high-end domestic decor to seduce us into thinking about the millennia-long process of geological formation, and humanity’s rapacious, often environmentally devastating extraction of minerals from the earth; about different models of knowing, and valuing, the natural world.
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