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Wednesday, January 14, 2026 |
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| Titus Kaphar to exhibit new paintings and sculptures at Gagosian Paris |
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Titus Kaphar, Kinfolk, Breath is my Precious Inheritance (Sarah Johnson), 2025. Tar and oil on linen, 60 x 60 inches (152.4 x 152.4 cm) © Titus Kaphar. Photo: Owen Conway. Courtesy Gagosian.
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PARIS.- Gagosian announced Titus Kaphars first exhibition in Paris, The Fire This Time, opening at the rue de Ponthieu gallery on January 29, 2026. The exhibition features new paintings and hand-carved wood sculptures that extend the artists engagement with how history and representation impact collective memory.
The exhibition title refers to James Baldwins civil-rights-era masterpiece, The Fire Next Time (1963), which charts the authors struggle withand ultimate rejection ofthe racial politics of America. In relocating to Paris, Baldwin joined a community of American expatriate artists and thinkers, including Miles Davis, Nina Simone, and Richard Wrightfigures who refused what Baldwin called the American madness. Jesmyn Wards anthology The Fire This Time (2017) carries those concerns into contemporary America, more than fifty years later.
Kaphars new paintings and sculptures reflect on the symbolic role of the American presidency at a moment when that madness is again at center stage. As the United States approaches the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independencealongside national No Kings protestsKaphar offers a form of homage and redress by foregrounding faces and voices that have long existed in the shadows of power.
In several new canvases, he revisits the formats and media of the Tar (2012) and Whitewash (2013) paintings for which he is known, advancing the formal conversations that anchor his practice. These portraits depict people who orbited the founding American presidents yet who were consigned to the margins of the historical record. By bringing them into the frame, Kaphar emphasizes their presence and agency, restoring dignity for individuals whose stories were once erased or obscured. Many of these subjects were enslaved people connected to George Washington: members of his household staff, fighters in the American Revolution, and women who remained enslaved years after his deathmany whose histories are only now being recovered.
Partially inspired by Kaphars recent work in narrative film, his new Drawer paintings (2025) conceal inset panels behind the main canvas that reflect on what is suppressed, or omitted from sanctioned records. When opened for the viewer, the hidden component of Celia: Embers, Bone, and Ash (2025) gradually reveals Celias story as a journey from victimization to empowerment.
The exhibition also debuts a major series of hand-hewn wood sculptures portraying friends and familysaints who sustained the artist in his personal life. Influenced by Byzantine and Renaissance Italian art and prompted by a transformative visit to Florence, each sculpture is charred to seal the wood and to ornament the surface. Their blackened finish echoes Kaphars extended use of tar in paintings such as The Jerome Project (2014).
For Kaphar, the fire still burns.
The Fire This Time coincides with Kaphars participation in Titus Kaphar: Pictures More Famous than the Truth at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond (February 14July 26, 2026) and America 250: Common Threads at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas (March 14July 27, 2026).
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