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FAHAMU PECOU x Backslash gallery

FAHAMU PECOU x Backslash gallery

FAHAMU PECOU

I KNOW WHY THE CAGED BIRD BLINGS

 

from June 11 to July 25, 2015

opening on Thursday June 11, from 5 to 9 pm

closed from June 23 to July 1 included

 

 

“But a caged bird stands on the grave of dreams His shadow shouts on a nightmare scream His wings are clipped and his feet are tied So he opens his throat to sing.”

Maya Angelou

 

On thursday, Backslash Gallery presents a new solo exhibition of works by American  artist Fahamu Pecou. The artist’s exploration of the representation of  black people in the United States takes the form of a wholly new series  of paintings paying homage to the great American writer, Maya Angelou.  Her life, from the cotton fields to the civil rights movement, was  devoted to a ceaseless combat to change people’s attitudes and fight  apartheid in South Africa. 

 

Fahamu Pecou has been preparing a PhD since 2013 on black culture in America and its  struggles with recognition, specificity and exposition. Following on  from works more explicitly rooted in hip-hop culture, he has recently  turned his focus to creating images featuring the fight waged by key  figures from the civil rights movement. Maya Angelou’s autobiography, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, has been a big influence on Pecou, who has modified the title slightly to give it a modern twist. I Know Why The Caged Bird BLINGS looks at the excesses of young African American black men who use  ostentatious displays of wealth to assert an image; some of them become  trapped in this system of values and, like Maya Angelou’s caged bird,  find themselves unable to break free.

  

Pecou also  sheds light on these young men’s desire to reflect more deeply on the  splendour of the black soul and the regal heritage of African cultures.  He reminds us that BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL. The gold- and jewellery-laden  bodies signify a desire to be seen as something other than victim or  threat, with a nod to recent brutal police attacks on members of the  black community, in Ferguson in particular. 

 

 Fahamu Pecou’s work has been exhibited worldwide, including this year at the  Museum of Contemporary Art and the High Museum of Art, both in Atlanta,  USA. Pecou is a highly active conference contributor and organiser  across Europe and the USA. His works can be found in a wide range of  public collections around the world.