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I don't want to tackle the end. I want to create a story.
A world of conquering, where the blacks are going to conquer.
— Godwin Champs Namuyimba
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Ten larger-than-life portraits comprise this cycle of paintings, constituting a sort of pantheon across the gallery walls. Measuring at around 250 x 200 cm each, the works evoke a bodily response from the viewer, as though one were standing before real individuals. This subtle tactic draws us in, stoking our curiosity into these mysterious characters, who address us with their unflinching gaze from an array of richly patterned domestic interiors, rendered via many thin, watery layers of acrylic paint.
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Upon sustained observation, however, the viewer may notice that the architectural perspectives are ever so slightly skewed. The realistically depicted scenes of African domesticity that we easily took for granted begin to fragment and flatten. The compositions take on a collage-like quality, an apt metaphor for personal identity that at first glance appears singular and legible, but is in fact infinitely complex and kaleidoscopic, contradictory and ever-evolving.
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Godwin Champs Namuyimba
Seated in Glorious Places, 2022Acrylic on canvas
256.5 x 203 cm -
This idea is echoed through the artist’s choice of subject matter, as well. The reference material for Namuyimba’s fictional figures is sourced from images of white people on Pinterest, which he then transfigures and situates in settings derived from his surroundings in Uganda.
Pinterest is a website built on and fueled by people’s aspirations for every aspect of their lives: from their homes and weddings to their wardrobes and cosmetic surgery. Many of the trending lifestyle #aesthetics that proliferate on social media like Pinterest are overwhelmingly incarnated by white and affluent people, which reinforces distorted norms, and even fabricates desire and longing for a certain unattainable existence.
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The title of the exhibition, Inner Circle, evokes this exclusive, aspirational air, while also alluding to the ways that imposed beliefs about identity, and the incongruence between how we are perceived and how we see ourselves, are often deeply internalized. The artist plays with this duality: the subjects are recognizable but chimeric, drawing us close but then not any closer.
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The oblique symbols borrowed from Christian and Egyptian iconography that recur throughout his paintings – both diegetically, worked into the wallpaper of Majesty (2022), or diagrammatically, as seen in the backgrounds and borders framing Flying Golfer (2022) and The Naked Esteem (2022) – reinforce this sense of the profound unknowability of the other, and potentially, even ourselves.
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Godwin Champs Namuyimba
Majesty, 2022Acrylic on canvas
253.5 x 202.5 cm -
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