The ICA San José is pleased to present the first and largest West Coast exhibition of work by Conrad Egyir. Egyir is a Ghanaian artist based in Detroit, working in figurative narratives of the African Diaspora. His work blends religious and West African folk iconography within domestic scenes, portraying a deep understanding of the history of portraiture. He utilizes shaped canvases and relief elements to reference stamps and postcards as metaphors for migration; journals, books, binder tabs, and chapters as metaphors for time and the archiving of ideas.
Egyir’s portraits portray close friends and sometimes the artist himself, exploring the assumptions and presumptions made when looking at others. The artist connects the theme of identity and book imagery through the age-old idiom “don’t judge a book by its cover.” Conrad Egyir: Chapters of Light will premiere a series of monochromatic works in which Egyir blends the subject’s clothing, surroundings, and background with a nod to the graphic style of Pop Art. In addition to paintings, the exhibition will feature a charcoal drawing, a large vinyl installation, and an interactive portrait room where visitors can build their own scene for a self-portrait.
This exhibition will be on view in the ICA San Jose’s Main Gallery and will open on October 1st, 2021 in conjunction with Conrad Egyir: A Chapter of Love, a Facade Project at the ICA San José.
Conrad Egyir: A Chapter of Love and Conrad Egyir: Chapters of Light are generously supported by program partner Facebook Open Arts, The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Pamela and David Hornik, Tad Freese and Brook Hartzell, and Applied Materials.