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Yinka Shonibare CBE

Earth Pictures

Goodman Gallery Johannesburg 

5 June - 24 July 2025

 

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“I deal with post-colonialism in my work and the environmental issue is of course closely related to this… The poorest countries emit the least pollution into the environment and they suffer the consequences disproportionately”

Shonibare speaking to The Art Newspaper, July 2024

Goodman Gallery is pleased to present Yinka Shonibare’s Earth Pictures, an exhibition that explores the profound impact of Western colonisation and industrialisation on nature and climate change across the African continent. Through his masks and a new series of quilts, Yinka Shonibare draws attention to endangered species and the abundance of nature, while also highlighting how human actions negatively affect our planet. The exhibition runs concurrently with the artist’s first major exhibition on the African continent, Safiotra [Hybridités/Hybridities] on view at Madagascar’s Fondation H. 

Yinka Shonibare CBE | Earth Pictures -  - Viewing Room - Goodman Gallery

Yinka Shonibare

African Flower Magic (Aloe Erinacea), 2025

Patchwork, appliqué, quilting, hand dyed silk, linen and cotton and Dutch wax fabric

Work: 150 x 120 cm (59.1 x 47.2 in.)

Frame: 153.3 x 123.4 x 5.4 cm (60.4 x 48.6 x 2.1 in.)

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Yinka Shonibare CBE | Earth Pictures -  - Viewing Room - Goodman Gallery
Yinka Shonibare CBE | Earth Pictures -  - Viewing Room - Goodman Gallery

Yinka Shonibare

African Flower Magic (Conophytum Smorenskaduense), 2025

Patchwork, appliqué, quilting, hand dyed silk, linen and cotton and Dutch wax fabric

Work: 200 x 160 cm (78.7 x 63 in.)

Frame: 203.3 x 163.3 x 5.4 cm (80 x 64.3 x 2.1 in.)

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Yinka Shonibare CBE | Earth Pictures -  - Viewing Room - Goodman Gallery
Yinka Shonibare CBE | Earth Pictures -  - Viewing Room - Goodman Gallery

Yinka Shonibare

Earth Picture (Zanzibar Red Colobus), 2025

Patchwork, appliqué, quilting, hand dyed silk, linen and cotton and Dutch wax fabric

Work: 200 x 150 cm (78.7 x 59.1 in.)

Frame: 203.5 x 153.3 x 5.4 cm (80.1 x 60.4 x 2.1 in.)

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Yinka Shonibare CBE | Earth Pictures -  - Viewing Room - Goodman Gallery
Yinka Shonibare CBE | Earth Pictures -  - Viewing Room - Goodman Gallery

Yinka Shonibare

Earth Picture (Golden Crowned Sifaka) II, 2025

Patchwork, appliqué, quilting, hand dyed silk, linen and cotton and Dutch wax fabric

Work: 150 x 107.4 cm (59.1 x 42.3 in.)

Frame: 153.5 x 110.7 x 5.4 cm (60.4 x 43.6 x 2.1 in.)

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Yinka Shonibare CBE | Earth Pictures -  - Viewing Room - Goodman Gallery

A new series of quilts produced for the exhibition titled Nature Works will make their global debut in Johannesburg and underscores the polluting consequences of extractive processes. Through striking composition, vivid colour and intricate needlework, Shonibare creates beauty in ultimately dystopian landscapes that illustrate the consequences of industrial over-exploitation in Africa. The history of colonisation on the continent has always centred on the extraction of both human 

and natural resources. The series of quilts here, portray landscapes as a genre which is to be analysed and debated. Human intervention in the landscape, whether it be the burning of gas flares in Nigeria or the damage to surface soil through the oil well drilling in Algeria, contribute to environmental destruction and the broader impacts of climate change and its disproportionate impact on the Global South

Yinka Shonibare CBE | Earth Pictures -  - Viewing Room - Goodman Gallery

Yinka Shonibare

Nature Works (Copper and Cobalt Mine, DRC), 2025

Patchwork, appliqué, quilting, hand dyed silk,
linen and cotton and Dutch wax fabric

Work: 140 x 200 cm (55.1 x 78.7 in.)

Frame: 143.3 x 203.3 x 5.4 cm (56.4 x 80 x 2.1 in.)

Unique

 

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Yinka Shonibare CBE | Earth Pictures -  - Viewing Room - Goodman Gallery
Yinka Shonibare CBE | Earth Pictures -  - Viewing Room - Goodman Gallery

Yinka Shonibare

Nature Works (Gas Flare, Nigeria), 2025

Patchwork, appliqué, quilting, hand dyed silk,
linen and cotton and Dutch wax fabric

Work: 175 x 250 cm (68.9 x 98.4 in.)

Frame: 178.3 x 253.3 x 5.4 cm (70.2 x 99.7 x 2.1 in.)

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Yinka Shonibare CBE | Earth Pictures -  - Viewing Room - Goodman Gallery

Alongside, the artist will present an ongoing series of quilt works dedicated to wildlife and endangered species on the African Continent. Depicting the Red Colobus (Genus Piliocolobus), a species of monkey threatened with extinction found in forests from Senegal in the west, to the Zanzibar archipelago in the east. Red Colobuses are among the most vulnerable mammals to be targeted from heavily hunted forests. African Flower Magic (2025) depicts flora also facing ecological erasure and native to Southern Africa, specifically South Africa’s Northern Cape and Namibia’s arid regions.

Displayed in dialogue with the quilts, are Shonibare’s carved reproductions of African ancestral masks - here hand painted in the hallmark batik employed across his works. The sculptures offer a glimpse into the pre-industrial African spiritual beliefs which coalesced harmoniously with nature. At a time of environmental crisis, the masks present in both the quilts and sculptural works exist as symbolic protectors of vulnerable flora and fauna. 

Earth Pictures maps a concerning topography: one of ever-changing landscapes and environments shaped by extraction, greed and the lingering legacy of colonialism. The exhibition also highlights the urgent need to confront the consequences of Western colonial industrialisation and its role in the degradation of Africa’s environment.

Yinka Shonibare CBE | Earth Pictures -  - Viewing Room - Goodman Gallery

Yinka Shonibare

Nature Works (Oil Well, Algeria), 2025

Patchwork, appliqué, quilting, hand dyed silk,
linen and cotton and Dutch wax fabric

Work: 150 x 200 cm (59.1 x 78.7 in.)

Frame: 153.3 x 203.3 x 5.4 cm (60.4 x 80 x 2.1 in.)

Unique

 

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Yinka Shonibare CBE | Earth Pictures -  - Viewing Room - Goodman Gallery
Yinka Shonibare CBE | Earth Pictures -  - Viewing Room - Goodman Gallery

Yinka Shonibare

Hybrid Sculpture (Satyr on Stilts), 2024

Fibreglass and wood sculpture, hand-painted with Batik

pattern, and steel base plate or plinth

Work: 277 x 70 x 66 cm (109.1 x 27.6 x 26 in.)

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Yinka Shonibare CBE | Earth Pictures -  - Viewing Room - Goodman Gallery
Yinka Shonibare CBE | Earth Pictures -  - Viewing Room - Goodman Gallery

Yinka Shonibare

Hybrid Mask (Zamble Guro), 2024

Hand carved painted wood and brass

Work: 19 x 17.5 x 32 cm (7.5 x 6.9 x 12.6 in.)

Unique

 

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Yinka Shonibare CBE | Earth Pictures -  - Viewing Room - Goodman Gallery
Yinka Shonibare CBE | Earth Pictures -  - Viewing Room - Goodman Gallery

Yinka Shonibare

Hybrid Mask (Walu Dogon), 2024

Hand carved painted wood and brass

Work: 61.5 x 17.5 x 15.3 cm (24.2 x 6.9 x 6 in.)

Unique

 

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Yinka Shonibare CBE | Earth Pictures -  - Viewing Room - Goodman Gallery
Yinka Shonibare CBE | Earth Pictures -  - Viewing Room - Goodman Gallery

Yinka Shonibare (b. 1962, UK) examines race, class, and the construction of cultural identity through a sharp political commentary on the tangled interrelationship between Africa and Europe and their respective economic and political histories. 

Currently on view at Fondation H, Madagascar, is Safiotra [Hybridités/Hybridities], the artist’s first major survey on the African continent. A central work in the show is Shonibare’s iconic The African Library- first shown on the continent at Goodman Gallery Johannesburg in 2018 as part of his first African gallery exhibition. 

In 2024, Shonibare presented his first solo exhibition in over 20 years at a London public institution—Suspended States at the Serpentine Gallery. An edition of his Refugee Astronaut was also included in the main exhibition at the 2024 Venice Biennale, Stranieri Ovunque – Foreigners Everywhere. Additionally, the artist participated in the group exhibition Nigeria Imaginary at the Nigerian Pavilion, curated by Aindrea Emelife, Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at MOWAA. In 2019 Norval Foundation in Cape Town presented Trade Winds: Yinka Shonibare CBE, a celebration of sculptures, photographs and major installations created between 2008 and 2018. Shonibare’s large-scale sculpture Wind Sculpture, SG III (2018) is now part of the Foundation’s permanent display. 

Survey exhibitions and retrospectives include Yinka Shonibare CBE: Planets in My Head, Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park, Michigan (2022) and Yinka Shonibare CBE: End of Empire, Museum der Moderne, Salzburg (2021).

Collections include: Tate, London; the National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institute, Washington D.C; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Guggenheim, Abu Dhabi; Moderna Museet, Stockholm; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; Zeitz MOCAA, Cape Town and Norval Foundation, Cape Town.