FIVE - Emerging Artist Exhibition

FIVE - Emerging Artist Exhibition

Thursday 28th July 2022  7:00 AM

TERN Gallery is pleased to present “FIVE”, an exhibition supporting the work of five emerging
Bahamian artists, Brent Fox, Amaani Hepburn, Dyah Neilson, Matthew Rahming, and Keith
Thompson curated by Jodi Minnis. This exhibition aims to highlight the work of painters,
sculptors, and printmakers whose work expands and defies our ideas of “island-life” and pushes
our understanding of the limitations of visibility. “FIVE”, the emerging artist exhibition, will be on
view from July 28 to August 27, 2022, with an opening reception on Thursday, July 28 at 7 pm.

Ranging from realism to abstraction, the works in this exhibition reflect the artists’ developing
practices and experimentations. It also seeks to unearth this grouping’s experiential intersection
in a space where most Bahamians are either invisible or hyper-visible in relation to the brand of
tropicality that The Bahamas exists in.

Working primarily in acrylic paint, Dyah Neilson (she/her) often uses imagery of flora and fauna
indigenous to The Bahamas in sly and often opaque ways. Neilson’s symbolism holds personal
meanings which “explore the complexities of spirituality, relationships and femininity.” The
beautifully rendered paintings lull the viewer in while holding space for Neilson’s coded
compositions. Brent Fox’s (they/them) practice is honest and tender in its offering to the viewer.

Fox is a multi-media artist working primarily in drawing, painting and photography. In this
exhibition, their charcoal renderings of abstracted figures display a confidence in mark-making
and intuitive channeling of energy into the work. Though these pieces are experimental, its
sensitivity is seen throughout the breath of Fox’s budding practice. Thematically, Fox centers
ideas of intimacy and masculinity.

Amaani Hepurn (she/her) is an oil painter who renders her immediate environment, the relics,
fauna, flora, and people in those spaces. In contrast to Fox’s practice, Hepburn’s practice “uses
the matriarch as a lens for exploring her community and re-examing her own femme identity.”
Hepburn’s broad brush-strokes create a vibrancy in her intimate under-paintings. The decision to
“leave things bare” while relaying scenes of her immediate environment creates a direct path for
connection and nostalgia to the audience. The objects within the space carry personality and
visible history that is common in Caribbean yards. This tenderness, intimacy and rigor is apparent
in the work of Matthew Rahming. Rahming (he/him) is an interdisciplinary artist who uses
everyday materials like paper, concrete, rope and clay to craft works of contemplation. Rahming’s
practice calls forth discussions on “agency, identity, conflict, tenderness, and Bahamian
ethnography” while demanding an understanding of duality. His black and white mono-type prints
ebb and flow between dense and textural embossments of fiber to visceral and minimal
moments.

Like Rahming, Keith Thompson (he/him) tethers moments of vulnerability, tenderness, and
demands nuance and contemplation. Thompson’s tightly rendered paintings broach his
experience “growing up in a neighbourhood rife with crime and gang-culture. His portraits and
self-portraits exercise his own dread of easily falling into criminality.” This personal history
coupled with traversing an “elitist” industry such as the art world inspired this new body of work.
Together, these five artists represent different facets of Nassuvian life, the honesty in their
practices either directly contradict, expand and one anothers. It is our hope that within these
nuanced experiences, a wider understanding of “island-life” is gained.

For more information on the exhibition, please email Jodi at jodi@terngallery.com.

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