LONDON.- Vigo Gallery is presenting an exhibition of Lakwena Macivers Jump Paintings, abstract portraits of some of the most inspiring basketball players, both past and present.
London based artist Lakwena is internationally renowned for her joy- inducing palette, dynamic designs and profound, succinct messages. Her public art commissio ns and installations include those at Tate, Somerset House, The Bowery (NYC) the Southbank Centre, Covent Garden, and other large scale architectural installations in Munich, Miami, New York, LA, Dubai and London. Most recently her acclaimed
Back in the Air: A Meditation on Higher Ground has brought to life the half-acre roof terrace on top of Temple Underground Station.
The origins of these Jump paintings stem from two full-size courts painted in 2020 in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, to honour Senator Flowers, whose impassioned 2019 speech against proposed Stand Your Ground legislation went viral and inspired Lakwena in the wake of the Black Lives Matter movement the following year. Entitled Ill bring you flowers, the defiantly joyful paintings used the universality of the basketball court as a canvas to speak of hope in the face of oppression and blessing through adversity.
For these new paintings, Lakwena took physical and biographical references as a starting point. Each is titled with the first name of the player and is the same height as the individual. They are painted on bespoke slim wooden panels and given a seductive, almost mirror-like gloss. This idea of reflection adds a personal interactive element to the viewing experience.
Lakwena says I like the notion of the basketball court as a platform or a stage where the players become almost like superheroes
The heights that they soar to
its like they are flying, somehow able to rise above the limitations of this world. This is especially poignant for me given that basketball is indisputably dominated by African Americans, and their style of play has shaped the game.
Im interested in what brings us closer together, so for me these paintings are about being aspirational, dreaming, and the connection between people, but also about the link between heaven and earth and ourselves as individuals in relation to a higher power.
The politicisation of the game is something Im interested in exploring. The slam dunk for instance, one of Basketballs great crowd pleasers, could be seen as a physical manifestation of black power. So much so that it was banned in 1967 for 10 years, coincidentally after a year of Lew Alcindors domination of the game. I see these paintings as an opportunity to celebrate black power, joy, and self-expression.
Lakwena Maciver was born in London (1986) to an English mother and Ugandan father and spent formative years of her childhood in East Africa. She studied graphic design at the London College of Communication graduating in 2009. The name Lakwena - meaning Messenger in the Acholi language of northern Uganda - is reflected in the artists practice, which is concerned with the dissemination of messages. Her work explores and gently subverts ideas relating to decolonisation, redemption, escapism, afrofuturism and utopia. She has been undertaking public art commissions internationally for over a decade and has recently exhibited with solo exhibitions at Hastings Contemporary and Somerset House. She lives and works in London and is represented by Vigo Gallery