WINCHESTER.- This February, Hampshire Cultural Trust will present an exhibition of the work of internationally acclaimed British artist Yinka Shonibare CBE RA (b.1962) at The Arc in Winchester.
Shonibares interdisciplinary practice uses citations of Western art history and literature to question the validity of contemporary cultural and national identities within the context of globalisation. Through examining race, class and the construction of cultural identity, his works comment on the tangled interrelationship between Africa and Europe, and their respective economic and political histories.
Designed to tempt in as well as confront, Shonibare is best known for the bright, colourful fabrics and patterns that adorn his sumptuous scenes themselves, a statement of power. Through beauty and humour, Shonibare strikes up a serious conversation.
The exhibition will feature over 40 artworks spanning 20 years of the artists career. Prints from Shonibares recent woodblock project, Ritual Ecstasy of the Modern, will be on display, along with a new series of screenprints, African Flower Magic (2025), on loan from Cristea Roberts Gallery, London.
The centrepiece of the display will be The Crowning, (2007) an early, large-scale sculpture on loan from the Arts Council Collection. This mixed-media sculpture features two life-sized headless sculptures reclining in a colourful tableau. The postures of these figures, and their costumes are modelled on those of a romantic couple in a painting by 18th-century painter Jean-Honoré Fragonard, The Progress of Love: The Lover Crowned (177172, The Frick Collection). Shonibares The Crowning offers a witty, critical commentary on postcolonial identity as well as the wealth and excesses of contemporary and historic aristocratic society.
Kirsty Rodda, Visual Arts Exhibitions Manager at Hampshire Cultural Trust says, We are thrilled to be able to showcase both critically acclaimed and brand-new works from such a significant artist as Yinka Shonibare here in Hampshire.
Yinka Shonibare (b. 1962) in London, UK, studied Fine Art at Byam Shaw School of Art, London (1989) and received his MFA from Goldsmiths, University of London (1991).
In 2004, he was nominated for the Turner Prize and in 2008, his mid-career survey began at Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, travelling in 2009 to the Brooklyn Museum, New York and the Museum of African Art at the Smithsonian Institute, Washington D.C. In 2010, his first public art commission Nelsons Ship in a Bottle was displayed on the Fourth Plinth in Trafalgar Square, London and is in the permanent collection of the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London
In 2013, he was elected a Royal Academician and was awarded the honour of Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 2019. His installation The British Library was acquired by Tate in 2019 and is currently on display at Tate Modern, London.
Shonibare was awarded the prestigious Whitechapel Gallery Art Icon Award in 2021. A major retrospective of his work opened at the Museum der Moderne, Salzburg in the same year followed by his co-ordination of The Royal Academy Summer Exhibition, London which opened in September 2021.
In November 2022, Shonibare hosted the international launch of Guest Artists Space (G. A. S.) Foundation, a non-profit founded and developed by the artist. The Foundation is dedicated to facilitating cultural exchange through residencies, public programmes and exhibition opportunities for creative practitioners from around the world. The live/work residency spaces are set across sites in Lagos and a rural working farm in Ijebu, Ogun State.
To mark Sharjah Biennial's 30th anniversary in February 2023, Shonibare was commissioned to create a series of new works for the exhibition. He also unveiled a new outdoor sculpture commissioned by the David Oluwale Memorial Association in Aire Park, Leeds as part of Leeds 2023.
In 2024, the Serpentine, London UK, presented a solo exhibition of works in their Serpentine South gallery titled Suspended States. Shonibare's work is also featured at the Venice Biennale 2024 as part of the Nigerian Pavilion, in the group show: Nigeria Imaginary. In 2025, Yinka showcased his first major solo exhibition on the African continent Safiotra [Hybridités/Hybridities] at Foundation H, Madagascar.
Shonibares works are in notable museum collections internationally, including Tate, London; Victoria and Albert Museum, London; National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institute, Washington, D.C; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Moderna Museet, Stockholm; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; National Gallery of Modern Art in Rome and VandenBroek Foundation, The Netherlands.