Modupeola Fadugba is a self-taught Nigerian multi-media artist, living and working in Nigeria.
Education
Modupeola Fadugba studied engineering, economics, and education. She has received an MA in Economics from the University of Delaware, and holds an MEd from Harvard University. Her parents were Nigerian Diplomats, and the artist spent most of her youth in England and the United States. She is a self-taught artist. Her recent series Dreams from the Deep End, which she developed during a residency at the in New York, was included in a recent solo exhibit at Gallery1957.
Career
Her solo shows include Heads Up, Keep Swimming at Temple Muse in Lagos in 2017, Synchronised Swimming & Drowning at Ed Cross Fine Art in London in 2017, Prayers, Players & Swimmers at the in 2017, and Dreams from the Deep End in New York in 2018, which was reviewed in ArtForum International She has participated in numerous group shows, including the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition in London in 2017, Afriques Capitales in Lille, France in 2017, and the Art Energy in London in 2015. Her work was selected in the 2016 , where she was awarded a Grand Prize from the Senegal Minister of Communication. Her project The People’s Algorithm received the 2014 El Anatsu’s Outstanding Production Prize. Modupeola Fadugba's painting Teach Us How To Shoki In Pink appeared on the front cover of Arabia's Harper's Bazaar in April 2018. Her work is included in the collection of the University of Delaware, the Sindika Dokolo Foundation and the Liberian President, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf
''Dreams from the Deep End'' and The Harlem Honeys & Bears
In the summer of 2018, Modupeola Fadugba spent some time with the Harlem Honeys & Bears, while attending a residency program at the International Studio and Curatorial Program in New York. Dreams from the Deep End was the resulting painting series and installation, first shown at Gallery 1957 in Accra, Ghana. The Harlem Honeys & Bears is an all black synchronized swim team for senior citizens that meets at the Hansborough Recreation Center in New York City. The team has been in existence since 1979, and as of 2018, had 24 active members with ages ranging from 58 to 95, who met and competed on a regular basis. The painting series based on Fadugba's research with the group, is both personal and tied to identity politics of Black America. Swimming is intertwined with race, and social justice in the US. Research from the CDC shows that drowning among black children is 1.4 times higher than the rate of white children. The rate climbs to a 5.5 times difference when the research considers swimming pool drowning deaths. The disparity is a legacy of segregation in the US, where black communities were denied access to public swimming pools. For the artist, swimming is tied to a childhood fear of the ocean, which she only overcame when she was 11, and was forced to take swimming lessons in school. Dreams from the Deep End depicts the Harlem Honeys & Bears swimmers in and around the swimming pool. In some of the paintings, the figures remain faceless, and the artist tends to use pastel colors, and her signature burnt technique. In others, she shows the faces of the swimmers on which the paintings are based, sometimes using the burning method, sometimes without. The pool water is usually monochromatic: dark blue, black, or gold, making the swimmers stand out starkly from the background.