Set It Off
Nneka Osueke
Oil paint, glass and plastic beads, and fabric on canvas
Original Painting, 140 x 155 x 1 cm
Nneka Osueke
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About Nneka Osueke
As a West-African woman born and raised in America, I experienced an identity crisis early on in life: I was torn between being both Black American and Nigerian. These groups, vastly different in culture in many ways and so misunderstood of each other, tugged at me on both ends. Worn out from this push and pull, I went searching, and in the most beautiful, eye-opening ways, I found the history everybody had missed out on. I found out there wasn't much separation between my bloodline and my birthplace.
My work is rooted in the visual depictions of Ancient African spirituality before colonialism and Christianity. Using 24 karat Gold, age-old African practices with glass beading, and communication through fabric and clothing, I consecrate the symbols of our spirituality that modern religion used to turn Black people against ourselves. It's important to me that Africa and its closest descendants are finally credited for their immense impact on the global unconscious mind and spirit. After all, she birthed humanity.
As of now, I am only interested in all things centered around reminding Africa and the African diaspora of its Divinity, in whatever way possible. Period. This is meticulous, yet rewarding, and overall, spiritual. I want to get back to making it about the essence of the process, just like my ancestors did. With this, I hope my visuals trigger something inside the viewer that nags and gnaws and pulls them into their own tug of war to go searching for the truth-- their Truth.
Nneka Osueke is a painter and sculptor who depicts themes of African history, spirituality, Black empowerment, and the human mind. A first generation Nigerian born and raised in Dallas, Texas, she received her Bachelor's in Fashion Merchandising from Sam Houston State University in 2013. Shortly after, Nneka moved to Los Angeles, CA to begin her career in design, but surprisingly, found herself pursuing a Master's in Clinical Psychology and her artistry full-time. Thus, she discovered the golden bridge between her purpose and her passion: merging art, African psychology, and mental health advocacy together.
Osueke’s work has exhibited in Italy, Jamaica, Thailand, and across the U.S. in Miami, Houston, Dallas, and Los Angeles. She has presented on and participated in discussions about African Spirituality and the connections between mental health and creative expression. She is the author of Blooming Abroad, the owner of In Bloom Therapeutic, and is the is the CEO and founder of The Prodigy Vanguard Gallery. Nneka currently works as an artist and art therapist in Chiang Mai, Thailand.About the Product
“In November of 1929, thousands of Igbo women congregated at the Native Administration centers in Calabar and Owerri as well as smaller towns to protest both the warrant chiefs and the taxes on the market women. Using the traditional practice of censoring men through all night song and dance ridicule (often called “sitting on a man”), the women chanted and danced, and in some locations forced warrant chiefs to resign their positions. The women also attacked European-owned stores and Barclays Bank and broke into prisons and released prisoners. They also attacked Native Courts run by colonial officials, burning many of them to the ground. Colonial Police and troops were called in. They fired into the crowds that had gathered at Calabar and Owerri, killing more than 50 women and wounding over 50 others. During the two month “war” at least 25,000 Igbo women were involved in protests against British officials.
The Aba Women’s war prompted colonial authorities to drop their plans to impose a tax on the market women, and to curb the power of the warrant chiefs. The women’s uprising is seen as the first major challenge to British authority in Nigeria and West Africa during the colonial period.”My great-grandmother, Regina (depicted by my cousin, Jennifer) was one of the thousands of women fighters in the two-month long Women’s War.