Posing, presentation and construction are cornerstones of Kayode Ojo’s artistic practice, who was born in 1990, Cookeville, USA. Many of the materials employed over and over again in his works are cheap: fast fashion, fake luxury brands jewellery, faux-fur coats, metal music stands, copies of modernist furniture, mirrors, or polished ornaments. Ojo’s artistic universe plays with the rules of representation, he focuses with these items on the values they give to a subject and the lifestyle they project. But maybe, he is applying a kind of glossy reflection as a strategy to distort identitarian imagery, which by extension, can be understood as a distorted reflection of our time. Or not! Emerging originally out of photography, some of his pictures are like party photos à la Nan Goldin. And like his sculptures, they are filled with signifiers of certain types of success.
But wait a minute, fast fashion is supposed to be bad for the environment, bad for Africa and Asia, bad for everything. The question is whether Kayode cares about this. In any case, I think contemporary culture’s alleged chronic distress over these issues is not real; it is a false concern; it’s all just posing.
By using aqueous, metallic, lustrous, and glossed materials, Ojo creates highly personal sculptures. In his fancy assemblages: instruments, garments, and ornaments extracted from their original function allow spectator speculation. That is, in choosing to compose ready-mades, meanings and associations cannot be fully controlled. However, the logic of his constructions rarely hold back the dialogue between the parts and its symbols maintain their autonomy and power.
Although Kayode is not a performance artist per se, the idea of performance is essential to his work. The artist arranges wigs, make- up, and clothes to take on roles and personality traits that ultimately became part of his configuration settings. Because Ojo’s photographic and sculptural practice is like art directed set design. The mise-en-scène becomes the protagonist of his aesthetic experience. As a provocateur, a few of his pieces carry out some of his personal experiences, but what interests him the most is the psychology behind the objects, not their history. Kayode is aware of artworks as commodification and that they circulate on the market as names. The apparent nonexistent trace that Ojo leaves in his work emphasises and embarrasses the hunger for artists’ bodies and biographies.
Our material culture reveals much about the desires and images motivating us. Steel, glass, plexiglass, crystal, rhinestones, the artist includes these materials to capture the visual attention, despite the duality of shine: luminosity but also blindness, bedazzlement. Surface and superfluous, what glitters has the function of distraction! Is it excess against itself?
But wait a minute, fast fashion is supposed to be bad for the environment, bad for Africa and Asia, bad for everything. The question is whether Kayode cares about this. In any case, I think contemporary culture’s alleged chronic distress over these issues is not real; it is a false concern; it’s all just posing.
By using aqueous, metallic, lustrous, and glossed materials, Ojo creates highly personal sculptures. In his fancy assemblages: instruments, garments, and ornaments extracted from their original function allow spectator speculation. That is, in choosing to compose ready-mades, meanings and associations cannot be fully controlled. However, the logic of his constructions rarely hold back the dialogue between the parts and its symbols maintain their autonomy and power.
Although Kayode is not a performance artist per se, the idea of performance is essential to his work. The artist arranges wigs, make- up, and clothes to take on roles and personality traits that ultimately became part of his configuration settings. Because Ojo’s photographic and sculptural practice is like art directed set design. The mise-en-scène becomes the protagonist of his aesthetic experience. As a provocateur, a few of his pieces carry out some of his personal experiences, but what interests him the most is the psychology behind the objects, not their history. Kayode is aware of artworks as commodification and that they circulate on the market as names. The apparent nonexistent trace that Ojo leaves in his work emphasises and embarrasses the hunger for artists’ bodies and biographies.
Our material culture reveals much about the desires and images motivating us. Steel, glass, plexiglass, crystal, rhinestones, the artist includes these materials to capture the visual attention, despite the duality of shine: luminosity but also blindness, bedazzlement. Surface and superfluous, what glitters has the function of distraction! Is it excess against itself?