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Exhibitions

Exhibitions Instagram

“The Marchioness of Santa Cruz”

“The Marchioness of Santa Cruz”, 2014. Oil on linen 72 x 36″.

From my current exhibition “The World Stage Haiti” now on view at Roberts and Tilton Gallery in Los Angeles. #robertsandtilton #theworldstagehaiti #kehindewiley #conceptualpainting #oilpainting #haiti #art #historicalquotation #kehindewileystudio #

Exhibitions Instagram

“The Sisters Zénaïde and Charlotte Bonaparte”

“The Sisters Zénaïde and Charlotte Bonaparte”, 2014. Oil on linen, 83.5 x 63 inches.

From my current exhibition “The World Stage Haiti” now on view at Roberts and Tilton Gallery in Los Angeles. #theworldstagehaiti #kehindewiley #conceptualpainting #oilpainting #art #haiti #robertsandtton #historicalquotation #kehindewileystudio83.5 x 63 inches

Exhibitions Instagram

“Gossiping Women”

“Gossiping Women”, 2014. Oil on linen 67.5 x 108 inches.

A very large painting from my current show “The World Stage Haiti” now on view at Roberts and Tilton gallery in Los Angeles. #kehindewiley #conceptualpainting #haiti #theworldstagehaiti #robertsandtilton #womeninart #painting #haitian #art #oilpainting #historicalquotation #portraiture

Exhibitions Instagram

“Gossiping Women”

Events Exhibitions Instagram

Kehinde Wiley #WorldStageHaiti opens September 13, 2014! Roberts and Tilton Gallery #haiti #lookagain

[if-insta-location]Haiti[/if-insta-location]

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Exhibitions

The World Stage France @ Galerie Daniel Templon

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Exhibitions

The World Stage Jamaica @ Stephen Friedman Gallery

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Exhibitions

MEMLING @ Phoenix Art Museum

“Wiley references Memling’s painting as part of his larger project to explore the place of the individual within society by reevaluating questions of how young men of colour are seen and defined. Presented in elaborate frames, Kehinde’s portraits place his modern sitters at the heart of culture and history. Despite their intimate size, Wiley’s portraits loose none of their impact and power. The smaller scale demands close inspection and personal engagement. The active gaze of his sitters—a departure from Memling’s work—leads the viewer to think more carefully about the individual lives and experience behind the individuals depicted in the images.”

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