MASTERPIECE III

CURATED BY

MELVIN A. MARSHALL

A GROUP EXHIBITION
9 JULY - 6 AUGUST 2022

FEATURING WORKS BY

Alanis Forde, B. Robert Moore, Bianca Walker, DannyWonders, Kaloki Nyama, Nina Satie, Oluseye Ogunes, Richard Mensah, Ronald Mugabe, Talita Long, Wayne Linsey, Wesley Bwambale, Yrneh Gabon & Tony Ramos.

Band of Vices is pleased to present MASTERPIECE III: An Ode to Okwui Enwezor(“MIII”).MIII is the third exhibition in a series of annual group shows conceived of and curated by Band of Vices Senior Curator, Melvin A. Marshall. This year, Mr. Marshall is pleased to partner with independent curator Raphael Dapaah, an emerging force in the global art market with a particular emphasis on artists in Africa and of the African diaspora. The goal of MIII is to shift and shatter outdated relations between African art and contemporaneity by collaborating with top international artists to enlarge and expand the art world’s understanding of African and Black artists. The homage references arguably the most significant curator of our generation, the late great Okwui Enwezor of Nigeria. Mr. Enwezor, who recently passed at the early age of 55, left a curatorial legacy that was so tremendous and extensive, it still carries a profound impact on contemporary art as we know it today. Mr. Enwezor was a rare and unparalleled thinker and as the globe transitioned to the 21st century, he was a leading voice in shaping what direction global curating would take and he chose the direction of inclusion. Thus, his curatorial practice gave contemporary African and other marginalized artists greater global visibility and exposure by including them on equal footing with Western artists from Europe and America. MIII’s themes include the trans-Atlantic slave trade, globalization, immigration, displacement and diaspora, joy, spirituality, pandemics, and racial reckoning, among other topics that are timely and urgent. The Exhibition seeks to redress the cultural, racial, socio-political, economic, and national biases of the past and to develop a more inclusive and equitable approach to understanding our current contemporary art world.

Okwui Enwezor, in full Okwuchukwu Emmanuel Enwezor,
(born October 23, 1963, Calabar, Nigeria—died March 15, 2019, Munich, Germany), Nigerian-born poet, art critic, art historian, and curator who helped bring global attention to African art.Enwezor was raised in Enugu in easternNigeria. In the early 1980s, he relocated to the United States to attend Jersey City State College (now New Jersey City University), where he earned a B.A. in political science. His foray into the art world began as an observer. At various exhibits, Enwezornoticed the absence of artists from Africa and started critiquing the shows. He began writing widely for art magazines and even launched one of his own—Nka: Journal of Contemporary African Art, founded in 1994 and published in concert with the AfricanaStudies and Research Center at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York.(Photo credit: Manuel Braun, 2012)As a curator, Enwezor became known for his work on an exhibit of African photography at the Guggenheim Museum SoHo, New York City, in 1996; at the “Africus” SecondJohannesburg Biennale in 1997; and as an adjunct curator (1998–2000) of contemporary art at the Art Institute of Chicago. Later exhibits curated included a group that traveled through Europe and Canada and a showing of the work of South African photographer David Goldblatt in 2000. A frequent lecturer and member of many art juries, Enwezor also coedited, along with Olu Oguibe, Reading the Contemporary: African Art from Theory to the Marketplace (1999).In 2002 Enwezor mounted his first major show, “The Short Century: Independence and Liberation Movements in Africa, 1945–1994,” at P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center in Queen’s, New York. He put into practice his theory of art as an expression of social change when from 1998 to 2002 he was the artistic director of “Documenta 11,” the 11th in a series of international exhibitions held in Kassel, Germany, for three months every five years. Ambitious in size and scope, Documenta exhibitions have been described as“the Olympics of contemporary art.” Enwezor was the first non-European to host theexhibition. He prepared for it with a series of seminars on international issues. He did and not shy away from political issues, including globalization, and was understandably comfortable looking beyond American and European traditions into African arts. His emphasis on ideas over objects—in contrast to the “art for art’s sake” philosophy—was evident in his development of the “The Short Century” exhibit, which was also the title of the book that preceded his gallery exhibit in New York City. In 2006 Enwezor organized “Snap Judgements: New Positions in Contemporary AfricanPhotography” at the International Center of Photography, New York City. Intended to address a trend he termed “Afro-pessimism,” the exhibit contradicted negative contemporary Western attitudes and stereotypical ideas of Africa.In 2011 Enwezor became the director of Haus der Kunst, a non-collecting contemporary art museum in Munich. During his tenure, he was commended for offering a more global exhibition program, which included “Postwar: Art Between the Pacific and the Atlantic,1945–65” (2017). The extensive survey, which included a range of media, considered the fallout of World War II on such frequently overlooked countries as Iran, China, Mozambique, and Mexico. As the director of Haus der Kunst, however, Enwezor also contended with years of budget shortfalls and a scandal wherein a human resources manager was accused of attempting to recruit staff members to the Church of Scientology, which is highly monitored in Germany. Meanwhile, in 2015 Enwezor became the first African curator of the Venice Biennale. Enwezor resigned from the Haus der Kunst in 2018, citing health reasons. The following year he died from cancer.