Olalekan Jeyifous (born 1977), commonly known as Lek (pronounced "Lake"), is a Nigerian-born visual artist based in Brooklyn, New York. He is currently a visiting lecturer [1] at Cornell University, where he also received his Bachelor of Architecture in 2000. [2] Trained as an architect, his career primarily focuses on public and commercial art. [3] His work has been newly commissioned for the Reconstructions: Architecture and Blackness in America exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York along with Amanda Williams, Walter Hood, and Mario Gooden. [4] The exhibition explores the relationship between architecture and the spaces of African American and African diaspora communities and ways in which histories can be made visible and equity can be built. [5]
Jeyifous' work confronts social issues through installations, large scale murals, large-scale public artwork and 3D computer models reflecting ideas about Afrofuturism and architectural dystopias. [6] Jeyifous has an interest in urban issues and the changing role cities play in politics, art, pop culture, and the collective imagination. [7] For his exhibition featured in the Museum of Modern Art's show, “Reconstructions: Architecture and Blackness in America,” Jeyifous explores dystopian realities rooted in the black diaspora and the disappearing urban ephemera and architecture of Brooklyn. [8]
In 2020, The New York Times named Jeyifous as one of five artists to follow on Instagram among fellow artists Kara Walker, Phyllis Galembo, Laylah Amatullah Barrayn, Alex Webb and Rebecca Norris Webb. [9]
Crown Ether was a 50-foot-tall sculpture at the 2017 Coachella Valley Music and Art Festival. Jeyifous was one of five artists chosen for the exhibition. [10] The elevated art piece was inspired by the relationship between connection and separation. The artist separated the mythical sky-bound luxury high-rise from the less upscale but heritage-rich community below, while connecting the two communities through the benefits of safety and shade. [11]
“Protest!” (2017) is a 10-foot-tall public art piece consisting of four large sculptures in Public Square in downtown Cleveland, Ohio. Inspired by the history of protest, peace rallies, and civic gatherings that have taken place in Public Square, Jeyifous painted vivid orange and yellow steel silhouettes that depict protesters shouting into bullhorns, handing out leaflets, and embracing. [12] The piece represents protest as a democratic right by welcoming visitors to sit on or gather around the built-in seating platforms at the metal base of each piece. [13]
The Boom and the Bust (2019) is a 25-foot-tall sculpture that resembles an abstracted high-rise building with a cage-like structure in the center holding a collection of small red houses. The piece references the challenges of housing discrimination and urban inequality, past, and present. [14]
Wrought, Knit, Labors, Legacies (2020) is an installation on Alexandria Virginia's waterfront that frames Alexandria's African-American history through the lens of the city's industrial and merchant history from the 17th to 20th centuries. [15]
Our Destiny, Our Democracy (2020) will be a collaborative piece with artist Amanda Williams for the inaugural She Built NYC. The piece commemorates Shirley Chisholm, the first black woman to serve in Congress. [16] The artist designed the piece to redefine the 21st-century monument, honor Shirley Chisholm's legacy of bringing people together, and discuss the long arc of democracy. [17] It will be constructed in Brooklyn's Prospect Park at the corner of Ocean and Parkside Avenues. [18]
Canyon Dreamscape (2021) is a large aluminum panel mural made in collaboration with the Los Angeles County Department of Arts and Culture and TFN Architectural Signage. It is located on the Olive View Restorative Care Village in the Olive View–UCLA Medical Center in Sylmar, Los Angeles. It is inspired by the landscape and vegetation of surrounding Wilson Canyon and is based on the connection between nature and well-being. Jeyifous used a "playful and vibrant" color palette "without being harsh and distracting" sublimated onto ALTO Aluminum panels. [19] [20] [21]
Shirley Anita Chisholm was an American politician who, in 1968, became the first black woman to be elected to the United States Congress. Chisholm represented New York's 12th congressional district, a district centered in Bedford–Stuyvesant, Brooklyn for seven terms from 1969 to 1983. In 1972, she became the first black candidate for a major-party nomination for President of the United States and the first woman to run for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination. Throughout her career, she was known for taking "a resolute stand against economic, social, and political injustices," as well as being a strong supporter of black civil rights and women's rights.
The College of Architecture, Art, and Planning (AAP) is the school of architecture at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. It offers 20 undergraduate and graduate degrees in five departments: architecture, art, urban planning, real estate, and design technology. Aside from its main campus in Ithaca, AAP offers programs in Rome, Italy and in New York City, New York.
The Tyler School of Art and Architecture is part of Temple University, a large, urban, public research university in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. Tyler currently enrolls about 1,350 undergraduate students and about 200 graduate students in a wide variety of academic degree programs, including architecture, art education, art history, art therapy, ceramics, city and regional planning, community arts practices, community development, facilities management, fibers and material studies, glass, graphic and interactive design, historic preservation, horticulture, landscape architecture, metals/jewelry/CAD-CAM, painting, photography, printmaking, sculpture and visual studies.
Alice Aycock is an American sculptor and installation artist. She was an early artist in the land art movement in the 1970s, and has created many large-scale metal sculptures around the world. Aycock's drawings and sculptures of architectural and mechanical fantasies combine logic, imagination, magical thinking and science.
Janine Antoni is a Bahamian–born American artist, who creates contemporary work in performance art, sculpture, and photography. Antoni's work focuses on process and the transitions between the making and finished product, often portraying feminist ideals. She emphasizes the human body in her pieces, such as her mouth, hair, eyelashes, and, through technological scanning, her brain. Antoni uses her body as a tool of creation or as the subject of her pieces, exploring intimacy between the spectator and the artist. Her work blurs the distinction between performance art and sculpture.
Teresita Fernández is a New York-based visual artist best known for her public sculptures and unconventional use of materials. Her work is characterized by a reconsideration of landscape and issues of visibility. Fernández’s practice generates psychological topographies that prompt the subjective reshaping of spatial and historical awareness. Her experiential, large-scale works are often inspired by natural landscapes, investigating the historical, geological, and anthropological realms in flux. Her sculptures present optical illusions and evoke natural phenomena, land formations, and water.
Diana al-Hadid is a Syrian-born American contemporary artist who creates sculptures, installations, and drawings using various media. She lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. She is represented by Kasmin Gallery.
Maddy Rosenberg is an American artist from Brooklyn, New York. She received a BFA from Cornell University and her MFA from Bard College. Rosenberg is both an artist and a curator.
Paul Ramírez Jonas is an American artist and arts educator, who is known for his social practice artworks exploring the potential between artist, audience, artwork and public. Many of Ramirez Jonas's projects use pre-existing texts, models, or materials to reenact or prompt actions.
Urban Light (2008) is a large-scale assemblage sculpture by Chris Burden located at the Wilshire Boulevard entrance to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA). The 2008 installation consists of restored street lamps from the 1920s and 1930s. Most of them once lit the streets of Southern California.
Tavares Henderson Strachan is a Bahamian conceptual artist. His contemporary multi-media installations investigate science, technology, mythology, history, and exploration. He lives and works in New York City and Nassau, Bahamas.
Peter D. Gerakaris is an American interdisciplinary artist. His work often addresses nature-culture themes through installations, paintings, works on paper, and origami accordion sculptures.
Sondra Perry is an interdisciplinary artist who works with video, computer-based media, installation, and performance. Perry's work investigates "blackness, black femininity, African American heritage" and the portrayal or representation of black people throughout history, focusing on how blackness influences technology and image making. Perry explores the duality of intelligence and seductiveness in the contexts of black family heritage, black history, and black femininity. "Perry is committed to net neutrality and ideas of collective production and action, using open source software to edit her work and leasing it digitally for use in galleries and classrooms, while also making all her videos available for free online. This principle of open access in Perry's practice aims to privilege black life, to democratize access to art and culture, and to offer a critical platform that differentiates itself from the portrayal of blackness in the media". For Perry, blackness is a technology which creates fissures in systems of surveillance and control and thus creates inefficiency as an opportunity for resistance.
Amanda Williams is a visual artist based in Bridgeport, Chicago. Williams grew up in Chicago's South Side and trained as an architect. Her work investigates color, race, and space while blurring the conventional line between art and architecture. She has taught at the California College of the Arts in San Francisco, Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts at Washington University in St. Louis, Illinois Institute of Technology, and her alma mater Cornell University. Williams has lectured at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New Museum, School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and at a TED conference.
Jenny E. Sabin is an American architect, designer and artist who draws upon biology and mathematics to design material structures. Sabin is the Arthur L. and Isabel B. Wiesenberger Professor of Architecture in the Department of Architecture at Cornell University. She focuses on design and emerging technologies, with particular emphasis on the areas of computational design, data visualization and digital fabrication.
Victor George Kord is an American painter and educator. He currently maintains a studio and exhibits in New York City. He previously served as art department chair for several major universities, and remains professor emeritus of painting at Cornell University Department of Art.
Shirley Chisholm State Park is a 407-acre (1.65 km2) state park in southeastern Brooklyn, New York City. It is bound by Belt Parkway and Spring Creek Park to the north and Jamaica Bay to the south, situated atop the former Pennsylvania Avenue and Fountain Avenue Landfills. The first sections of the park opened in 2019.
Jennifer Cecere is an American artist primarily known for her role as an early member of the Pattern and Decoration art movement in New York City during the mid-1970s and early 1980s.
Sean Canty is an American architect, cultural activist and academic. He is currently an Assistant Professor at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design, in Cambridge. Canty is co-Director of Office III, an experimental architectural collective, and founder of Studio Sean Canty based in Boston.
Mark Reigelman is an American artist based in Brooklyn, New York. He is recognized for his large-scale public art, including Manifest Destiny at the Hotel des Arts in San Francisco, California, and Smökers, a series of miniature houses positioned over steam-emitting manholes in New York City.