Insistent Presence: Contemporary African Art from the Chazen Collection, on view from February 7 to May 10, 2026, presents a compelling exploration of the human figure as a site of memory, resistance, and imagination. Spanning sculpture, painting, ceramics, printmaking, and photography, the exhibition brings together forty works by twenty-two artists whose practices reflect both lived experience and broader social realities. Across diverse visual languages, the artists assert the figure as a powerful means of addressing history, identity, and spiritual continuity in an ever-shifting contemporary world.
The exhibition unfolds through three thematic sections that consider how the body is represented, implied, or deliberately withheld. “The Body in Society” examines how individuals exist within collective structures, revealing how proximity, isolation, and shared space shape personal and political identity. “The Artist is Present” turns inward, foregrounding artists who use their own bodies as tools of inquiry, performance, and testimony. In contrast, “The Absent Body” removes figuration entirely, inviting viewers to sense human presence through objects, clothing, and symbolic traces that evoke what is unseen but deeply felt.
Artists represented come from across the African continent and its global diaspora, including voices connected to Tunisia, Egypt, Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa, Senegal, Ghana, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and beyond. Despite the diversity of materials and approaches, the works share a commitment to affirming humanity in the face of political instability, colonial legacies, and social transformation. Emotional intimacy coexists with sharp critique, allowing everyday gestures, rituals, and expressions to carry broader cultural and historical weight.
Drawn from the Chazen Museum of Art’s Contemporary African Art Initiative, the exhibition reflects a sustained effort to deepen the understanding of modern and contemporary African artistic production. By foregrounding the figure—whether visibly present or subtly implied—
Insistent Presence encourages reflection on how bodies carry memory, belief, and resilience. The exhibition ultimately invites viewers to reconsider their own relationships to identity, community, and the shared human condition, emphasizing presence not as something static, but as something continually asserted and reimagined.
Image:
Nana Yaw Oduro (Ghanaian, b. 1994) PHILIP, 2019, inkjet print, 19-5/8 x 29-1/2 inches. Sara Guyer and Scott Straus Contemporary African Art Initiative made possible by the Straus Family Foundation, 2021.28.3 © Nana Yaw Oduro