VIP Preview: Wednesday 16 - 17 April, 2pm - 9pm
Friday 18 - 19 April, 2pm - 9pm
Sunday 20 April, 10am - 6pm (VIP Hours: 10am - 12pm)
Vigo Gallery will be attending Art Dubai this year, with a group presentation of works by Jordy Kerwick, Henrik Godsk, Johnny Abrahams, Erin Lawlor and Ibrahim El-Salahi.
Johnny Abrahams (b. 1979, Tacoma, WA) lives and works in London and New York. He has exhibited extensively in the UK and internationally, in the US, Korea, Denmark and Belgium. Deceptively simple, Abrahams' paintings present a unique vocabulary of satisfying meditative yet rhythmic shapes rendered with a rich texture which plays strongly with the negative space of the raw canvas. The symbols within Abrahams’ practice exist under a certain formalism, the different planes conveying near-musical patterns, oscillating between comfort and dissonance to form melodic variants. The forms within the compositions and the variations between individual paintings are experienced in the way microtones are experienced by a musician using a twelve-tone scale. The shapes seem familiar yet slightly askew, creating tension and drama through the disruption of self-imposed structures. This play of chance reflects the artist's interest in the meeting of atoms; the contact between paint and canvas exacting a game of destiny. Thinking through this rhythm and phasing, the artist continues his exploration of balance without symmetry.
Henrik Godsk (b. 1975, Hjørring, Denmark) lives and works in Denmark. Godsk is of seventh generation travelling heritage, having grown up among the world of his family’s funfair in Denmark and Norway. His practice reflects pride in his upbringing and cultural identity, fusing folkloric and high art, using portraits and ‘creatures’ as vessels for his exploration of colour and form. The formal components of the artwork are a direct result of the artist's time spent as a child painting and renovating the panels and façades of these rides. At twelve, he began to design and paint them himself; at fifteen, he came across books about Picasso and Modigliani, the latter’s elongated necks and distorted, flattened proportions heavily influencing Godsk’s current oeuvre. Then at 23 he left fairground life to become an artist. The controlled brushwork, geometric lines, flat surfaces, and tight compositions of his cubistic portraits act as a conduit for his personal exploration of classically modernist forms. By playing with artistic conventions of the past, Godsk offers a refreshing take on portraiture through the lens of his cultural upbringing and love of twentieth-century modernism.
Ibrahim El-Salahi (b. 1930, Sudan) is one of the most important living African artists. A key figure in the development of African Modernism, he grew up in Omdurman, Sudan and studied at the Slade School in London. On his return to Sudan in 1957, he established a new visual vocabulary which arose from his pioneering integration of Sudanese, Islamic, African, Arab and Western artistic traditions.
Erin Lawlor (b. 1969, Epping, England) received her Bachelor of History of Art in 1992 from Paris-Sorbonne University, France. She has had numerous solo exhibitions nationally and internationally. Recent solo exhibitions include "Ariadne's thread" At Fox Jensen, New Zealand (2024), "Invincible Summer" at Wellington Arch, London (2023), "Earthly Delights" at Vigo Gallery, London (2023) and "Erin Lawlor" at Miles McEnery Gallery, New York (2022).