SAN FRANCISCO, CA.- Nigerian artist Nengi Omukus first solo US exhibition, Nengi Omuku: The Gathering, opened at the de Young museum on June 27, 2026.
The Gathering brings together paintings that imagine new worlds shaped by beauty, community, and resilience amid social challenges. Omukus paintings unfold in lush, otherworldly landscapescelestial skies, flowering fields, and botanical bounty. This botanical sensibility is deeply personal, shaped by her mothers horticultural work and her own experience as a florist, and it animates the imaginative worlds she creates. Omukus figures gather in fields, beneath trees, and along the waters edgeplaces where nature becomes a witness to human experience. Drawing on the language of botanical illustration, she treats nature as a gathering place for healing, kinship, and renewal. Working on handwoven sanyan cloth, a historic Yoruba textile once made of silk and cotton, Omuku revives a material tradition tied to memory, ceremony, and cultural knowledge.
Presented in the de Young museums Arts of Africa galleries, eight new and recent paintings by Omuku appear in dialogue with sculptures and textile works from the historical collection of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. Seen together, the historical and contemporary works show how imagination and resilience have long served as responses to disruption, sustained by the creative and communal practices of African and diasporic life.
At the center of the exhibition is The Gathering, a painting that distills her approach: bodies held in quiet relation, a landscape that gathers rather than surrounds, and a sense of care that arises through closeness. Within these environments, figures hover between dream and memory, as Omuku traces the emotional terrain of young people navigating the challenges of contemporary urban life in Lagos.
Omukus paintings are deeply political, not because they depict crisis, but because they insist on possibility, shared Natasha Becker, Curator of African Art at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. In dialogue with the historical collection, her work shows how African artists have long harnessed imagination as a way to survive rupture and to dream beyond it.
Sanyan, a Yoruba textile once used for ceremonial attire, has declined in production due to deforestation, overharvesting, and the rise of synthetic substitutes. By sourcing vintage cloth and collaborating with contemporary weavers, Omuku revives this enduring yet vulnerable tradition. On her canvases, sanyan becomes a living archive of resistance and cultural continuity. Its presence in the de Youngs Arts of Africa galleries echoes the carved wood, cast metal, and woven fiber of the historical works nearbymaterials chosen not only for their physical properties but also for their spiritual and symbolic resonance.
The Gathering deepens this conversation, echoing artworks shaped by ancestry, nature, and community. Through material and imagery, Omukus paintings trace how people stay connected to one another, to the land, and to the stories that guide generations. This gathering of artworks opens a conversation across time, offering new ways of seeing and being together.
Nengi Omuku has earned numerous scholarships and awards, including the British Council CHOGM art award presented by HM Queen Elizabeth II. Commissions include a 2018 mural in an intensive care psychiatric ward at the Maudsley Hospital, London, from the Arts Council England. In 2021, she received a World Trade Organization Residency organized by African Art Foundation in Geneva. In 2025, she was selected to join the inaugural Artist Council of the Museum of West African Art, Benin City in 2025.
The artist has previously staged solo institutional exhibitions at Hastings Contemporary, Hastings, UK, and Arnolfini, Bristol, UK (2023-24). She has participated in group exhibitions at the ICA San Francisco (2024), Lentos Kunstmuseum Linz, Austria (2024), DAK'ART, Biennale of Contemporary African Art, Dakar, Senegal (2024), Dulwich Picture Gallery, London (2024), Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester, UK (2023-24), Saint Louis Art Museum, Saint Louis, MO (2023), and Bangkok Art Biennale (2022-23). In 2023, she was awarded the Civitella Ranieri Residency in Italy (2024) to follow a 2022-23 residency at Black Rock Senegal. Omuku's work can be found in international public and private collections including the Baltimore Museum of Art, the Newark Museum of Art, the ICA Miami, the HSBC Art Collection, and the Loewe Art Collection, among others. Omuku's work can be found in international public and private collections including the UK Government Collection, the Baltimore Museum of Art, the Newark
Museum of Art, the ICA Miami, the Norton Museum of Art, the HSBC Art Collection, and the Loewe Art Collection among others.