Cinthia Sifa Mulanga
(1997
)

Vulnerable, 2022

Direct gravure with photogravure on gampi chine colled onto Hahnemuhle, Natural White, 300 gsm paper, Edition of 25

15.9 × 20 in

 20 x
 15.9

 in

 51 x
 40.5

 cm

This work is approximately $840.00 USD and is shipped from South Africa. Please enquire for shipping quote. 

plus shipping & taxes


About the work

In this work entitled Vulnerable by Cinthia Sifa Mulanga, the viewer has a glimpse into the private space of a woman in her sitting room. The room contains traditional markers of femininity as portrayed in western art history, including a mirror for reflection (but not quite the sitter’s reflection), and a classical nude portrait on the wall. However, the main figure in this painting is distinctly African as marked by the blanket and symbols that the artist has identified as traditional in some African cultures. The scene indeed captures a vulnerable moment where the central figure wraps herself in a blanket and covers her head and seems to be taking refuge in the chair. This etching was created by the direct gravure technique where Mulanga draws and paints onto frosted film with charcoal, HB pencil, and India ink. The drawing is then etched onto a copper plate and printed onto paper.

Medium Prints
Signature Signed
Frame Unframed
Condition Excellent
Seller Artist
Location South Africa
Provenance The Artist

Cinthia Sifa Mulanga

Congolese
(1997
)

Cinthia Sifa Mulanga (b. 1997 in Democratic Republic of the Congo) is an independent contemporary artist from the Democratic Republic of the Congo but whose practice is deeply rooted in her experiences growing up in South Africa. After her studies, Mulanga became preoccupied with painting and collage, mediums that have come to define her practice. They serve a dual interest in engaging with the history of western art and popular culture thus delving into African art. The focus of Mulanga’s practice is on the representation of Black women. Through their depiction, she looks to engage with different personas, emotions, or states of mind.

Through her practice, Mulanga juxtaposes several different women in her paintings, thereby highlighting the complexities of female identity, the stream of varying consciousnesses that occupy a single space, identity or moment in time. Representing female bodies within a variety of architectural spaces and contexts, her work operates as multi-perspectival portraits while the spaces allow her to create open conversations and interrogate the notions of beauty. This polyphonic character is amplified through the introduction of additional female subjects via the inclusion of painted or collaged artworks hanging on the walls of the rooms occupied by my subjects.

These images of women, typically sourced from popular culture or the history of western painting, serve as a reminder of how the structures of the female gender and beauty are reinforced and bear down on her subjects. In this way, she dialogues with the tradition of western painting, challenging the absence of black female subjects and the representation of women at the hands of male artists. At times she references well-known artworks or those produced by South African contemporaries. They are intended as tributes to their work, and playful acts of recontextualisation. This referential element is also driven by her own desires, to plot spaces beyond reach or that of my viewers. This is further complemented by furniture and decorative pieces in the interiors that evoke aspirational lifestyles advanced by decor magazines.

Mulanga trained as an artist at the Artist Proof Studio in Johannesburg. She has participated in a variety of exhibitions which includes her solo exhibition In The Becoming at Goodman Gallery Johannesburg (2022). She has taken part in group exhibitions at international galleries such as Bill Brady Gallery, Miami (2021); exhibition Liminality in infinite spaces curated by Azu Ngwaghugo (2020); The Artroom Gallery (2020), among others. Mulanga has also been recognised for her work by the Normal Sovereign African Art Prize (2023); The British Fashion Council’s New wave Creatives and collaborated with Fashion House Gucci, to reimagine the iconic Diana Tote Bag (2022). Cinthia Sifa Mulanga lives and works in Johannesburg, South Africa where she is supported and advised by Latitudes Online.

source: https://bode.gallery/artists/134-cinthia-sifa-mulanga/overview/

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