'Cassi Namoda: A gentle rain is dying' now on view at 303 Gallery

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, May 17, 2024


'Cassi Namoda: A gentle rain is dying' now on view at 303 Gallery
Cassi Namoda, Rhapsodic flood of Namacurra, 2023. Oil on cotton poly, 60 x 96 inches, (152.4 x 243.8 cm).



NEW YORK, NY.- 303 Gallery recently opened A gentle rain is dying, New York-based painter and visual artist Cassi Namoda’s inaugural solo exhibition in our project room.

Not unlike the many origin stories and founding myths, Mozambican artist Cassi Namoda’s A gentle rain is dying begins with a flood. In one of the exhibition’s key artworks, The last metical of Senhora Fatima (2023), a woman in traditional dress and headscarf faces a dilemma. The titular Fatima holds before her the last remaining bills of currency to her name. Balanced atop her head is a bright yellow valise, presumably containing the small handful of belongings she’s chosen for the long voyage ahead. In another work, Existential migrations in Mecufi (2023), three young men in rubber sandals shroud themselves with geometric red blankets, the final relics of life now certainly past––in the artist’s words, “a comfort.” To the familiar viewer, vignettes such as these are squarely aligned with the sort of exilic vantage through which much of Namoda’s narration is fashioned.

By a myriad of lenses––memory, nostalgia, nativity, exodus, magic realism, postcolonial theory, photographic record, art canons, world literatures, and not least the rear-view of history––Namoda has cultivated in her practice a kind of filmic collision space through which she interpolates, often from both literal and imagined peripheries, narrativized visions of African time and place. In the same breath, Namoda’s newest exhibition is one directly poised at matters of current affair. Even in its title, A gentle rain is dying addresses candidly, even ineluctably the impact of climate change on the global precariat––in particular, Subsaharan Africa's disproportionate burden of climate-driven natural disaster and forced migration. The exhibition’s only portrait, Shazia flees and arrives in Mocuba (2023), depicts a migrant woman in a cascading, pale-blue veil. Her composition and vitiligo complexion recall the tenebrism of high-baroque Spanish painting. She is, one cannot forget, a displaced woman in crisis.

At its heart, A gentle rain is dying comprises stories told across three primary divisions, almost like acts or passages. United by Namoda’s loose, rhapsodic storytelling voice, each division offers its own unique narrative identity by way of palette, composition, timbre, and subject matter. Adjoining Namoda’s migratory images are a series of large-scale numbered landscapes, the first of their kind in the artist’s practice.

In hues of violet, deep green, and pale sea foam, Namoda imagines nighttime scenes above a lagoon in far northern Mozambique: “these images explore the gestational aspects of the moonrise; they’re testaments to the beauty and power of the African landscape.”

In the final suite of lilac paintings, Namoda turns to communal life, envisaging through the glass of the magic-real aspects of ephemerality and resilience in postcolonial African society. Ancestral trauma in Sagrada familia (2023) shows a group of men, women, and children in a cemetery, wandering amidst strange, colossal grisaille statues––vestiges of colonial regime. In Aquipa and Musa find temporary settlement on the road to Xalala (2023), a handful of children in bright white dresses pause for a lively game of jump-rope between legs of their long migration. Together, the images in A gentle rain is dying put forward tender, sometimes elusive glimpses of African life and the natural world––the latter a force inextricably bound to the spiritual, aesthetic, and, in an increasingly pivotal way, the existential identity of the continent.

Cassi Namoda’s work explores the history and culture of post-colonial Africa, especially the exchange between vernacular traditions and Portuguese colonialism in the Lusophone continent. Namoda's work is collected by several important museums, including The Pérez Art Museum in Miami, The Studio Museum in Harlem, Jumex in Mexico City and X Museum in Beijing, and she has held solo exhibitions at a number of notable galleries, including Xavier Hufkens and Goodman Gallery. Namoda was born in Maputo, Mozambique, in 1988, and has also lived in Kenya, Uganda, Benin, Haiti, Indonesia, the Dominican Republic and the United States. Currently she divides her time between New York City, East Hampton and The Berkshires, MA.

303 Gallery
Cassi Namoda: A gentle rain is dying
September 8th, 2023 - October 21th, 2023










Today's News

September 12, 2023

"Pause/Connect: Photography in the WAM Collection" on view at Warehouse Art Museum

Jack Shainman Gallery presents works by Emanoel Araújo

Gagosian presents landmark Tetsuya Ishida survey curated by Cecilia Alemani

Blockbuster sale of Chinese, Japanese and other Asian works of art now live on iGavelAuctions

Sotheby's Germany announces Modern & Contemporary Discoveries auction at the Palais Oppenheim in Cologne

Phillips' New Now sale kicks off fall auction season in New York with 20th Century & Contemporary Masters

National Gallery of Art acquires works by Robert Adams and Richard Misrach

Mourners gather in Ground Zero to remember 9/11 victims

Bortolami opens an exhibition of works by Barbara Kasten

Spider-Man 2's New York is a web of skyscrapers and brownstones

'Cassi Namoda: A gentle rain is dying' now on view at 303 Gallery

Julien's Auctions & TCM present 'Legends: Hollywood & Royalty' auction results announced

'Stop Making Sense' is back, and Talking Heads have more to say

Richard Davis, gifted bassist who crossed genres, dies at 93

Andrew Lanyon brings 16th century literary giants to 18th century Cornwall in his new book

A cornucopia of gallery exhibitions and auctions for Asia Week New York Autumn 2023

'The Soul Cries Out: The Art of Samson Tonton now on view at La Grua Center

Belgian contemporary artist Joris Van de Moortel now on view in Paris at Galerie Nathalie Obadia

Ambrose Akinmusire learned to let go (with help from Joni Mitchell)

Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi opens 'Harlequin' by Richard Rezac

The oeuvre of Dora García reflected in 'Insect, History, Mirror, Revolution' her new solo exhibition

Debra Priestly's art inspired by materials of everyday life, now on view at June Kelly Gallery

Spotlight on Northern VA: Unveiling the Cutting-Edge Trends in Kitchen and Bathroom Remodeling

Emergency Vehicle Operation in South Florida: A Deep Dive into EVOC Training, Certification, and Courses for Firefighter

Contactless vs Cash: What do the numbers tell us?

The Indelible Impact of FM Radios on the Music Industry

5 Reasons to Hire a Brain Injury Lawyer

The Top 3 Overhaul Mods for ARK: Survival Evolved

Business Law Intricacies: Navigating Through Corporate, Art, and Real Estate Domains

The Evolution of Bluetooth Speaker Connectivity: Past, Present, and Future

How Art Influences Real Estate Values In Cities

Salesforce Training for Administrators: Tips and Best Practices




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

sa gaming free credit
Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful