Black Migrant

Black Migrant

507 W. 24th Street New York, NY 10011, USA Tuesday, February 25, 2020–Saturday, April 18, 2020 Opening Reception: Thursday, March 5, 2020, 6 p.m.–8 p.m.


migrant: studio study iv by serge alain nitegeka

Serge Alain Nitegeka

Migrant: Studio Study IV, 2020

Price on Request

Marianne Boesky Gallery is pleased to present Black Migrant,  Johannesburg-based artist Serge Alain Nitegeka’s fourth solo exhibition  with the gallery. Throughout his career, Nitegeka has sought to evoke  the physical and emotional experiences of forced migration through  abstract experimentations with color, form, and space. With his upcoming  presentation, which will feature new paintings, a large-scale  site-specific installation, and a voice recording, Nitegeka reasserts  both the figural and the personal in his work. Together, the works  examine the particulars of being a black migrant as distinct within the  dialogues of the African refugee. Black Migrant will be on view  at the gallery’s 509 W. 24th Street location from February 25 through  April 18, 2020. An opening reception will be held on March 5, from  6:00-8:00 PM, to coincide with Armory Art Week. 

Underlying Nitegeka’s practice is his own history with forced  migration. Born in Rwanda, he and his family traversed several African  countries to escape civil war. Through his paintings, drawings, and  installations he has mined this experience, examining notions of  barriers, both physical and psychological. With the upcoming exhibition,  Nitegeka transitions from the broad exploration of these issues, which  have occupied his work over the last several years, to a more intimate  reflection of his time spent moving across land and borders. This is  most deeply felt through a voice recording of Nitegeka reading an  excerpt from a journal entry he wrote in 2012. 

The exhibition will also feature a large-scale installation comprised  of soil and handmade and found objects, such as pots, buckets, various  containers, firewood and small personal effects. The installation  captures the essential needs—the “tools of the trade” as Nitegeka refers  to them—of one attempting a land crossing and also communicates the  limitations of what one can bring when traveling by foot. For Nitegeka,  this balance is an essential aspect of the black migrant experience, and  the work speaks to the particular needs of moving across the African  continent. While the individual is visually absent from the  installation, the sense of human life is vividly active within the work,  connoting the emotionality of leaving one’s home for an unknown place  by an equally unknown route. 

The individual and the body take on their boldest presence in  Nitegeka’s newest paintings—a selection of which are included in the  upcoming exhibition. This reintroduction of the figure is the first in  Nitegeka’s practice since his early career drawings. Disjointed, cut,  and obscured by colorful geometric forms and bold lines, the figure  appears trapped and restricted within the broader abstract field of the  canvas. The tangle of representational and abstract elements amplifies  the sensation of a body under stress, physically and psychological, and  freshly reasserts the importance of the individual within Nitegeka’s  conceptual and formal explorations. 

Together, all of the works in the exhibition convey a powerful  tension between presence and absence and between movement and  restriction. These dualities are all the more present in Nitegeka’s own  life. For several years now, he has been unable to travel out of the  country, from his home base in Johannesburg. The artist’s imposed  absence from the opening of his upcoming show thus results in the most  poignant driving theme within it, producing an incredibly personal study  of a relentless figure that is the African refugee. 

About Serge Alain Nitegeka 

Serge Alain Nitegeka (b. 1983, Rwanda) creates paintings, sculpture,  large-scale installations, and figurative drawings that repurpose  modernist preoccupations with line and the picture plane to address  larger cultural and political issues. Nitegeka’s work has been shown  throughout Europe, Senegal, South Africa, and the United States,  including at the Baltimore Museum of Art, Berkeley Art Museum and  Pacific Film Archive at University of California, Nasher Museum of Art  at Duke University, Perez Art Museum Miami, and SCAD Museum of Art,  Savannah, GA. Nitegeka was also included in the South African Pavilion  at the 56th international Art Exhibition of the Venice Biennale in 2015  and at the Göteborg International Biennial of Contemporary Art,  Gothenburg, Sweden in the same year. His work is slated to be part of  the group exhibition, Ubuntu, A Lucid Dream, at the Palais de Tokyo in  Paris, opening in June 2020. Nitegeka currently lives and works in  Johannesburg. 

For more information about Serge Alain Nitegeka, please contact  gallery Partner and Director Ricky Manne at [email protected] or  212.680.9889. For press inquiries, please contact Aga Sablinska, PAVE  Communications and Consulting, at [email protected]