Contemporary Figuration: Between Body & Metaphor

Contemporary Figuration: Between Body & Metaphor

30 Davies Street MayfairLondon, W1K 4NB, United Kingdom Thursday, December 14, 2023–Saturday, January 27, 2024 Opening Reception: Thursday, December 14, 2023, 10 a.m.–1 p.m.


shoulder by han jimin

Han JiMin

Shoulder, 2023

Price on Request

beach scene by ur kasin

Ur Kasin

Beach Scene, 2023

Price on Request

true nature by andrew litten

Andrew Litten

True Nature, 2022

Price on Request

anima: from the daughters of men by mark metcalfe

Mark Metcalfe

Anima: from the Daughters of Men, 2023

Price on Request

bodies #2 by natalia ocerin

Natalia Ocerin

Bodies #2, 2023

Price on Request

bodies #1 by natalia ocerin

Natalia Ocerin

Bodies #1, 2023

Price on Request

unapologetically, stephen  by ayanfe olarinde

Ayanfe Olarinde

Unapologetically, Stephen , 2021

Price on Request

aeroplani o’dabo i (the contentment song) by ayanfe olarinde

Ayanfe Olarinde

Aeroplani o’dabo I (the contentment song), 2023

Price on Request

aeroplani o’dabo iii (the contentment song) by ayanfe olarinde

Ayanfe Olarinde

Aeroplani o’dabo III (the contentment song), 2023

Price on Request

the shadow of life by cathy tabbakh

Cathy Tabbakh

The Shadow of Life, 2023

Price on Request

les couleurs de la nuit by cathy tabbakh

Cathy Tabbakh

Les Couleurs de la Nuit, 2023

Price on Request

varume by tafadzwa tega

Tafadzwa Tega

Varume, 2022

Price on Request

The body is a physical and material being. However, it can also reflect a person’s spirit, sense of ‘self’ or embrace metaphors of our contemporary age. This exhibition seeks to bring together the work of contemporary painters who explore the body as material, and as the embodiment of the immaterial, engaging in themes ranging from the notion of ‘self’, identity, critical race, queer theory and the technological body. It also seeks to shed light on the varying ways in which different artistic styles of figuration can engage with the question: how do we picture the human subject today?In an age where questions of embodied experience are continually accentuated by our relationship with cross-cultural exchange, media, new technologies, and socio- political change, the body has come to signify the transcendental. 

Different painterly styles that range from realism to abstraction, and technologically informed practices, seek to demonstrate the expansive breadth of contemporary figurative painting and its capacity to tell the stories of diverse bodies and their connotations – the polarised, the ‘ideal’, the natural, the technological, the liminal, and more – and help situate them within the nuanced frameworks of posthumanism, feminism, Otherness and diasporic memory.

To encourage an open-minded and all-embracing experience of the exhibition, the curatorial premise is guided by each artist’s personal response to ‘Body & Metaphor’. Both represented artists from the gallery’s roster, and guest artists, have been invited to share their thoughts in the catalogue that accompanies the exhibition to champion an artist-centric model of the gallery space and highlight the gallery as platform, rather than mediator.