Nengi Omuku, Days Gone By, 2023 limited edition print

Regular price £850.00

Tax included.

Nengi Omuku 

Days Gone By, 2023 

Edition of 25 
Signed and numbered by the artist 
Materials: Digital pigment print on Hahnemuehle Cezanne 430gsm canvas 
Dimensions: 38.0 x 37.4cm (including 3.5 cm white border) 
Unframed 

As is traditional in editions publishing, the price will rise as the edition begins to sell out.  

About the work 

This limited edition print was commissioned to coincide with the exhibition, Nengi Omuku: The Dance of People and The Natural World on display at Hastings Contemporary from 7 October 2023 – 3 March 2024. 

A pigment print on canvas, it is based on a new painting, Days Gone By, which Nengi made for her exhibition in Hastings. 

All funds raised through the sale of the edition support our mission to bring world-class art to our town. 

“Days Gone By emerged as a result of my gradual realisation that landscapes have become a recurring theme in my artistic practice, alongside the realisation that my earliest memory of ‘art’ was when I encountered my mother’s coloured pencil sketches of plants and floral arrangements. It represents a significant moment where I fully embrace and take ownership of this aspect in my practice, emphasising the portrayal of plants and flowers. Notably, in this piece, the figures are deliberately depicted as absences, allowing the landscape itself to take precedence and command attention.  Nengi Omuku 

About the artist 

Nengi Omuku  (b. 1987, Nigeria) lives and works in Lagos, Nigeria. She received her BA (2010) and MA (2012) from the Slade School of Fine Art, University College London. Omuku is the founder of The Art of Healing, an organisation that aims to transform inpatient mental health units in Lagos with contemporary art.  She was artist-in-residence at Black Rock Senegal, as part of a programme founded by Kehinde Wiley in Dakar. She was included in the 2022-2023 Bangkok Art Biennale. Omuku’s solo exhibitions include those shown at Pippy Houldsworth Gallery, London (2022); Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, London and Berlin (2020, 2021); Stages of Collapse, September Gray, Atlanta (2017); and A State of Mind, Omenka Gallery, Lagos (2015). ,