Guernsey Press

Edinburgh hosts first retrospective of African artist who calls the city home

The exhibition of Everlyn Nicodemus’ ‘visionary’ work will occupy the ground floor of the Modern One gallery.

Published

The first retrospective of an artist whose works communicate “the most complex subjects with unwavering compassion” opens at an Edinburgh art gallery on Saturday.

For more than four decades, Tanzania-born artist Everlyn Nicodemus has been producing drawings, collages, paintings and textiles engaging with themes including the oppression of women, the impact of racism and her own personal trauma and recovery.

Her works, which are described as “joyful, defiant and searingly honest”, are characterised by their bold use of colour, form, light and shade, and as invitations to viewers to explore their own understanding of identity, belonging and faith.

For the first time, the Modern One gallery in Edinburgh is staging a retrospective that brings together more than 80 works from across Nicodemus’ career, along with a series of new artworks created especially for the exhibition.

She continued: “It’s especially meaningful to me that it’s happening here in Edinburgh, a place that truly feels like my home.

Everlyn Nicodemus standing in front of a row of her paintings
Everlyn Nicodemus with works from her new series, Lazarus Jacaranda (2022–24), which was created for the exhibition (Neil Hanna/PA)

“It’s a rare and unique experience for any artist, and especially for a Black African woman artist, to witness a retrospective of their own, and of this scale, so I feel incredibly lucky.

“This exhibition is a journey through my whole artistic life, and I hope it resonates deeply with those who experience it.”

The retrospective, which will occupy the entire ground floor of the gallery, charts the entirety of Nicodemus’ career, beginning with her very first painting, After The Birth (1980).

At over two metres in width, this oil on bark cloth painting depicts a large-scale image of a mother and child.

The exhibition also debuts her new work, Lazarus Jacaranda (2022-24), a series of paintings recalling the colour palettes and subjects of her earlier works, and which explore themes of cyclical life, and Nicodemus’s belief that “art is resurrection”.

Everlyn Nicodemus standing in front of one of her paintings
The artist with her 1991 work, The Wedding 45, which was recently acquired by the National Galleries of Scotland (Neil Hanna/PA)

“Everlyn’s exceptional artwork harnesses her incredible ability to communicate the most complex subjects with unwavering compassion.

“Her work serves to empower and inspire, but also sensitively demonstrates the therapeutic and healing powers of creativity.

“This exhibition also marks Everlyn’s return to painting after a 25-year break with the unveiling of a new series of work which we are excited to share with our audiences for the first time.

“We are thrilled to bring this exhibition to the people of Scotland and celebrate Everlyn’s remarkable career in the city she calls home.”

Visitors will be able to experience a free audio tour led by Nicodemus herself, which will guide them around the exhibition as she highlights selected works and delves deeper into her inspirations, experiences and creative process.

For senior curator Stephanie Straine the exhibition is an opportunity for visitors to encounter the artist’s “astonishing creative practice”.

Senior curator Stephanie Straine sitting in front of Set Free by Everlyn Nicodemus
Senior curator Stephanie Straine alongside a 1985 acrylic painting titled Set Free (Jane Barlow/PA)

“I feel truly honoured to have had the opportunity to work closely with the artist over the past three years to develop her exhibition and its accompanying publication.

“It’s been a privilege to be a part of this incredibly rewarding collaborative process that has time and again emphasised Everlyn’s rigorous scholarship, commitment to and celebration of art making, and deeply empathetic perspective on the complexities of our shared humanity.”

To mark the opening of the exhibition, National Galleries of Scotland has acquired two of Nicodemus’ earlier works.

The Wedding 45 (1991) is part of a series she created during her recovery from a mental health breakdown, while Eva (1981) declares the artist’s support for global reproductive rights.

Everlyn Nicodemus opens at Modern One in Edinburgh on October 19 2024, and runs until May 25 2025. Admission is free.

Sorry, we are not accepting comments on this article.