Kehinde Wiley (born 1977) is a New York-based portrait painter who is known for his highly naturalistic paintings of black people in heroic poses.
The Columbus Museum of Art, which hosted an exhibition of his work in 2007, describes his work with the following: "Kehinde Wiley has gained recent acclaim for his heroic portraits which address the image and status of young African-American men in contemporary culture."
Early life and education
Kehinde Wiley was born in Los Angeles, California in 1977. His father is Yoruba from Nigeria, and his mother is African-American.
As a child, his mother supported his interest in art and enrolled him in after-school art classes.
At the age of 12, he spent a short time at an art school in Russia.
Wiley did not grow up with his father, and at the age of 20 Wiley traveled to Nigeria to explore his roots and meet him.
He earned his BFA from the San Francisco Art Institute in 1999 and his MFA from Yale University, School of Art in 2001.
Art
He often references Old Masters paintings for the pose of the figure.
Wiley’s paintings often blur the boundaries between traditional and contemporary modes of representation.
Rendered in a realistic mode—while making references to specific Old Master paintings—Wiley creates a fusion of period styles, ranging from French Rococo, Islamic architecture and West African textile design to urban hip hop and the "Sea Foam Green" of a Martha Stewart Interiors color swatch.
Wiley's slightly larger than life size figures are depicted in a heroic manner, as their poses connote power and spiritual awakening.
Wiley’s portrayal of masculinity is filtered through these poses of power and spirituality.
Wiley's Napoleon Leading the Army Over the Alps (2005) is based on Napoleon Crossing the Alps (1800) by Jacques-Louis David, often regarded as a "masterpiece", now restaged by Wiley with an African rider wearing modern army fatigues and a bandanna.
Wiley "investigates the perception of blackness and creates a contemporary hybrid Olympus in which tradition is invested with a new street credibility".
His portraits are based on photographs of young men whom Wiley sees on the street.
He has painted men from Harlem’s 125th Street, as well as the South Central Los Angeles neighborhood where he was born.
Dressed in street clothes, his models were asked to assume poses from the paintings of Renaissance masters, such as Tiziano Vecellio and Giovanni Battista Tiepolo.
Wiley describes his approach as "interrogating the notion of the master painter, at once critical and complicit." Wiley’s figurative paintings "quote historical sources and position young black men within that field of power.”
In this manner, Wiley’s paintings fuse history and style in a unique and contemporary manner.
His work is found in many public collections throughout the world, including
the Toledo Museum of Art;
the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond, Virginia;
San Antonio Museum of Art; Minneapolis Institute of Art;
Brooklyn Museum; Columbus Museum of Art;
the DIA - Detroit Institute of Arts in Detroit, Michigan;
Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Missouri;
Oak Park Public Library in Oak Park, Illinois;
Studio Museum in Harlem in New York, New York;
The Jewish Museum (New York) in New York, New York; High Museum of Art in Atlanta, Georgia;
Phoenix Art Museum in Phoenix, Arizona;
Los Angeles County Museum of Art in Los Angeles, California;
Hammer Museum, in Los Angeles, California;
Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota,
Mint Museum in Charlotte, North Carolina,
North Carolina Museum of Art in Raleigh, North Carolina,
Nasher Museum of Art in Durham, North Carolina, and Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, Connecticut.
Wiley had a retrospective in 2016 at Seattle Art Museum.
In May 2017, Wiley had an exhibit, Trickster, at the Sean Kelly Gallery, NYC. The exhibit featured 11 paintings depicting contemporary black artists.
Recognition and honors
In October 2011, Wiley received the Artist of the Year Award from the New York City Art Teachers Association/United Federation of Teachers.
He also received Canteen Magazine's Artist of the Year Award. Two of Wiley's paintings were featured on the top of 500 New York City taxi cabs in early 2011 as a collaboration with the Art Production Fund.
Wiley is featured in a commercial on the USA as a 2010 Character Honoree.Puma AG commissioned Wiley to paint four portraits of prominent African soccer players.
Patterns from his paintings were incorporated into Puma athletic gear.The complete series, Legends of Unity: World Cup 2010, was exhibited in early 2010 at Deitch Projects in New York City.
His work was exhibited in the National Portrait Gallery as part of the Recognize exhibit in 2008.
Kehinde Wiley: A New Republic, a retrospective at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (Richmond, VA), in the summer of 2016 (June 11–September 5) assembled nearly 60 of his paintings and sculptures.
Exhibitions
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.