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    Product ID: 54900

     

    10.8" W x 9.1" H

    view in metric units

     

    Weight:  0.2 lbs

     

    Card paper

    Arrives unframed

     

    Ships from NOVICA Office in Ghana.

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    'Bakota Masks'

    Bakota masks appear on card paper evoked through Rolland Eyram Wemegah’s sublime artistic powers as he experiments on diverse media. Bakota masks are traditionally worn by the people of Gabon, they represent a particular village’s spirit and essence - conferring on whomsoever wears it the knowledge of rules and deserved punishments. Wemegah’s passion for art and culture find harmony through this composition, evidencing the versatility of the artist....

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    'Bakota Masks'

    Bakota masks appear on card paper evoked through Rolland Eyram Wemegah’s sublime artistic powers as he experiments on diverse media. Bakota masks are traditionally worn by the people of Gabon, they represent a particular village’s spirit and essence - conferring on whomsoever wears it the knowledge of rules and deserved punishments. Wemegah’s passion for art and culture find harmony through this composition, evidencing the versatility of the artist. A piece resounding in mystical tradition for an elegant setting.

    Wemegah’s artistic furor takes him to experiment on a diversity of media and techniques such as Scorched Aesthetics, a term the artist coined for the process of using hot irons in the creation of beauty. Wemegah uses various sized iron tips, his composition acquiring forms as he scorches the paper without a predetermined image in the pursuit of a balance between the abstract and the figurative.

    Arrives unframed.

     

    An artisan story card will be included with your purchase.

    Your Price: $162.95
    Retail Value: $330.95
     
    NO LONGER AVAILABLE
     

    Rolland Eyram Wemegah

    "I particularly love the sea, there's this mystique with it, the birds and the music from the waves gives me much pleasure."
    "I was born in London on May 7, 1970. My parents were living in England. My father was having his education. I didn't have any formal education there. I was told by my parents that I was brought to Ghana when I was 5 years old....

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    Rolland Eyram Wemegah

    "I was born in London on May 7, 1970. My parents were living in England. My father was having his education. I didn't have any formal education there. I was told by my parents that I was brought to Ghana when I was 5 years old. When they moved back my parents resettled in Kpando in the Volta region of Ghana. I practically had all my education in the Volta Region.

    "Instead of completing Middle School, I enrolled at a Secondary School in 1984, Anfoega Secondary School in the Volta Region of Ghana. After a year's stay, I transferred to Kpando Secondary School, where I acquired both my Ordinary and Advanced Level Certificates. Afterwards, I did my National Service at the Kpando District library in 1993. I was admitted into the College of Art at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology in Kumasi in the Ashanti Region of Ghana in 1994. I took a course in art specializing in painting. I'm presently undertaking my National Service at the Garden City Radio in Kumasi in the Ashanti Region of Ghana.

    "I realized as early as age 8 that I had a profound interest in drawing. Thus during my entire education I never left art as a subject out. This interest spurred me on to develop my natural talent into a skill. I'm into 'Figurative Expression,' which has to do with representing figures with strokes. I use large brush strokes without a definite definition, thus using a few strokes to represent my ideas. I've also developed my drawing abilities.

    "In search of an identity and character for my work and myself, I've developed certain techniques, the Cowrie Aesthetics and the Scorching Aesthetics. The Cowrie Aesthetics has to do with motifs that are developed from cowries, abstract Adinkra symbols, ancient Ashanti architectural symbols and abstract symbols that I've developed. The architectural symbols are employed as decorative pieces on the buildings of ancient Ashanti, the same idea is employed here, except this is on paper. I use black Indian ink for this work.

    "As I developed this style, I came up with another that I call 'Scorching Aesthetics.' In Scorching Aesthetics I use hot iron to create symbols on paper. In developing this idea, I first thought of the possibility of burning the paper with a hot iron. When I tried it out, I realized the paper had a certain level of resistance. Scorching is the art of using hot iron or metal tips to create an art piece through partial burning of the material being used. Aesthetics has to do with a level of beauty and creativity. Thus Scorching Aesthetics has to do with using hot irons to create motifs or designs of beauty. When I begin to scorch, my mind is vague as to the motifs I'll represent. As I go on scorching the motifs are gradually woven into the work. I use various iron tips, which gives the work freedom of identity and creativity. As time goes on I perfect my work, thus I create a balance between abstract and figurative expression.

    "I use watercolors and acrylics. I'm fascinated with seascapes, rivers, landscapes, and the forest. I particularly love the sea, there's this mystique with it, the birds and the music from the waves gives me much pleasure. I travel to Cape Coast in the Central Region of Ghana to take photos of the sea. I have an extensive collection of seascape paintings. The Kpando Tokor is a river in Kpando in the Volta Region of Ghana. I have an extensive collection of paintings of this river. I'm planning on a tour of the North African region, to study the people, their culture, and their arts. These themes I hope to paint.

    "I'm a D.J. and a radio presenter at Garden City Radio in Kumasi, located in the Ashanti Region of Ghana, as part of my national service."

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