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In Conversation | Toyin Ojih Odutola and Zadie Smith 

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Join us for a conversation between writer Zadie Smith and artist Toyin Ojih Odutola, whose work is on view at The Drawing Center until February 3, 2018 in the exhibition For Opacity: Elijah Burgher, Toyin Ojih Odutola, and Nathaniel Mary Quinn. On the heels of Smith’s essay on Ojih Odutola in British Vogue, this dialogue explores the “Afroternative” present that permeates Ojih Odutola’s drawings, and how that alternative collides with our reality.
Toyin Ojih Odutola (b. 1985, Nigeria) distinguishes herself by the range of materials she uses, including graphite, white and black charcoal, ballpoint pen, pastel, color pencil, and marker, each of which she employs both in the service of articulating her subjects-that is, quite specifically, their variegated skin tones and clothing textures-and as a means of ensuring obfuscation. In Ojih Odutola’s hands, the line remains an intentional mark both delineating skin and surface and exposing it as an unstable socially-coded terrain.
In recent years, solo exhibitions of Ojih Odutola’s work have been mounted by the Savannah College of Art and Design Museum of Art, GA; the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; the Museum of the African Diaspora, San Francisco; the Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis; and the Indianapolis Museum of Contemporary Art.
Zadie Smith’s first novel, White Teeth, was the winner of The Whitbread First Novel Award, The Guardian First Book Award, The James Tait Black Memorial Prize for Fiction, and The Commonwealth Writers’ First Book Award. Her second, The Autograph Man, won The Jewish Quarterly Wingate Literary Prize. Zadie Smith’s third novel, On Beauty, won the Orange Prize for Fiction, A Commonwealth Writers’ Best Book Award and was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize. Her fourth novel, NW, was shortlisted for the Royal Society of Literature Ondaatje Prize and the Women’s Prize for Fiction. Her most recent novel, Swing Time, was shortlisted for the National Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction and longlisted for the Man Booker 2017. Her first essay collection, Changing My Mind, was published in 2009 and her second, Feel Free, in 2018.
Zadie Smith is a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and has twice been listed as one of Granta’s 20 Best Young British Novelists. She writes regularly for the New Yorker and the New York Review of Books and is a tenured professor of creative writing at New York University.

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6 дек 2018

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Комментарии : 5   
@MattCharnock
@MattCharnock 5 лет назад
I could watch these to quip and comment and think back-and-forth for hours.
@JibRealtalk
@JibRealtalk 5 лет назад
Top exchange!
@33akachi10
@33akachi10 2 года назад
omg this conversation is #truth. wow
@PaulRamnora
@PaulRamnora 3 года назад
I just think it's, most unfortunate, that even in these so called highly 'enlightened' times/so called, 'modern age...; black artists cannot talk about their work...as just, simply, "art for art's sake"...but, instead, most of the whole conversation has to be devoted to 'blackness', instead. When I see 'white' people's art...or, see/read an article/book about 'white' artists: David Hockney/Matisse/Picasso/Dali/Miro/-etc. I find myself just simply talking about art...the matter of the artist's 'whiteness' doesn't even actually ever come up...? It just seems to me people are so hung up on 'race'...especially, if a coloured person becomes 'famous' for creating art...it's like how really strange/how odd/how unusual and 'rare'; and, then, I find myself thinking that 'coloured' people all over the world...including Native Americans...have always created art for, literally, 100's and 100's of years; thus, proving there's nothing particularly strange/or, 'rare' about it at all; for us coloured people it's really quite 'normal and ordinary' to create art.
@christinanwabugo9591
@christinanwabugo9591 3 месяца назад
Really dislike when art workers cannot pronounce names. it is not hard to pronounce lynettes full name.
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