News

10.03.2015

The African artist Ouattara Watts From April 10th to June 27th, Galerie Boulakia, Paris

About

Galerie Boulakia

10, Avenue Matignon

75008 Paris


Top:
Ouattara Watts, The woman of magic power
 
Above:
Ouattara Watts, Sans titre, 1996
 

 

From April 10th to June 27th, 2015, Galerie Boulakia will be presenting an exhibition of works by the African artist Ouattara Watts. Fifteen years after his first solo exhibition at the Galerie Boulakia, this artist from the Ivory Coast will once again return to the Paris spotlight.

Born in 1957 in Abidjan, Ouattara was raised and educated in a way that is reflected in the imagery of his art that lies somewhere between tradition and modernity.

At the end of the 1970s, Ouattara moved to Paris to attend the Écôle des Beaux Arts. January 1988, he is discovered by Jean Michel Basquiat. Basquiat was so impressed by Ouattara’s work that he invited him to come back to New York with him. Ouattara accepted. Propelled by a common interest for African culture, philosophy and spirituality, the two travelled and worked together up until the premature death of Basquiat in August of 1988.

That event brought a new direction to Ouattara’s work. The artist abandoned his earlier exploration in favour of developing a body of work. The canvases, ever increasing in size, became covered in cryptic ideograms, symbols of a lost religion and complex equations. So many signs that only he, the artist can decipher, like a homage to the one he considered to be a kindred spirit.

On the canvas Ouattara places thick paint that evokes the ancestral earth of Africa, mixing it with objects recovered in the course of his different travels. Even though the critics of the time attempted to include him in the neo expressionist group, the work of Ouattara escapes all comparison.

Just as a jazzman, Ouattara is a master of improvisation. He begins at the middle of the canvas, allowing his brush to be guided from East to West, from North to South, by his multitude of influences. He says that he is most touched by artists who, in their style of painting, are able to open new windows on the world like Picasso or Cy Twombly. Just like them, Ouattara is an intercessor, standing between two worlds that he has invited to live together on his canvas.

 

ABOUT GALERIE BOULAKIA

Accustomed to all areas of art from an early age, Fabien Boulakia opened up his own gallery in 1971, on rue Bonaparte, in Paris.

Since its opening, the gallery has displayed the eclectic taste of its owner, mixing Masters and young talented artists.

Galerie Boulakia expressed a great interest in the CoBRa artists (Karel Appel, Corneille, Asger Jorn) and offered strong support towards their cause, against the predominance of Abstract art in the seventies. Between 1980 and 1990, the Gallery hosted historical exhibitions: Rauschenberg in 1989, Jean Michel Basquiat in 1990 and Karl Lagerfeld in 1995.

Established on avenue Matignon since 2002 (8th Arrondissement), the gallery continues to mix classic and contemporary artists: Raoul Dufy in 2002, Marc Chagall in 2003, Jean Dubuffet in 2007, Voyage au bout du tracé: 40 drawings by Picasso in 2011, and more recently, in 2014, the Brazilian artist Goncalo Ivo.

The gallery is a great support to these artists not only in France, but also abroad, and attends the largest and most prestigious art fairs in the world such as TEFAF Maastricht, Masterpiece in London, The Salon in New York and the Biennale des Antiquaires in Paris.


Top:
Ouattara Watts, The woman of magic power
 
Above:
Ouattara Watts, Sans titre, 1996
 

 

About

Galerie Boulakia

10, Avenue Matignon

75008 Paris