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Chief
Jimoh BURAIMOH, 1943
Born in 1943 in Osogbo, Osun State,
Nigeria, Chief Jimoh Buraimoh is one of the most influential artists
to emerge from the 1960s experimental workshops known as the
Osogbo School of Art. Characteristic of the Osogbo movement,
his work intermingles western media and Yoruba style and motif.
Prolific in oil painting and etching, as well as his signature bead
paintings and mosaic murals, Buraimoh is among the artists permanently
displayed at the Smithsonian Museum of African Art in Washington,
DC. In addition to his smaller works, his colorful large-scale mosaic
murals adorn public areas in Nigeria, Europe and the United States.
A pioneer in the history of modern
art in Africa, Chief Jimoh Buraimoh is the continents first
bead painter, having in 1964, created a contemporary art form, inspired
by the Yoruba tradition of incorporating beadwork designs into ceremonial
fabrics and beaded crowns. He represented Nigerian artists at the
First All African Trade Fair in Nairobi, Kenya in 1972 and his work
was presented at the Second World Black Arts Festival (FESTAC) in
Lagos in 1977. In 1983 he became the first Nigerian to be awarded
a membership in the Contemporary World Association of Mosaic Artists
(Associazione Internazionale Mosaicisti Contemporanei) based in
Ravenna, Italy and contributed to a global public-art statement
for world peace in Ravennas Parco Della Pace. The 1996 recipient
of a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Center for African and
African American Art and Culture in San Francisco, California, Chief
Buraimoh has enjoyed international acclaim and worldwide popularity
throughout his career. His 1997 mosaic mural, The Elders, commissioned
by the City of Atlanta, Georgia USA and installed in the Citys
Howell Park, received an Award of Excellence from the Atlanta Urban
Design Commission as The Best Mosaic Mural of the Year.
Jimoh
Buraimohs works, widely exhibited in solo and group presentations,
continue to be shown at the worlds finest galleries: In 2002
Chief Buraimoh was featured in Visions of Yoruba, a two-artist show
at the October Gallery in London, England. Important retrospectives
in the United States include "Colours of Africa, Contemporary
Art from the Continent" at Diggs Gallery at Winston-Salem
State University in North Carolina in 2003; "The World Moves
We Follow: Celebrating African Art" at McClung Museum
in Knoxville, Tennessee in 2002; and "A Concrete Vision:
Oshogbo Art in the 1960s" at the Smithsonian National
Museum of African Art in Washington DC in 2000.
In addition to creating art, Chief
Buraimoh is a dedicated teaching artist. In 1974, as a guest of
the United States government, he taught bead painting and lectured
at schools in New York City, Los Angeles, Boston and Baltimore and
Indiana.
Artwork created by Jimph Buraimoh
and his students in city-sponsored programs are permanently displayed
at Atlantas Hartsfield-Jackson Airport.
source: nigeria-arts.net and "Chief
Buraimoh Organization"
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