In Tate Modern
Biography
Uzo Egonu (listen) (25 December 1931 – 14 August 1996) was a Nigerian-born artist who settled in Britain in the 1940s, only once returning to his homeland for two days in the 1970s, although he remained concerned with African political struggles. According to Rasheed Araeen, Egonu was "perhaps the first person from Africa, Asia or the Caribbean to come to Britain after the War with the sole intention of becoming an artist." According to critic Molara Wood, "Egonu's work merged European and Igbo traditions but more significantly, placed Africa as the touchstone of modernism. In combining the visual languages of Western and African art, he helped redefine the boundaries of modernism, thereby challenging the European myth of the naïve, primitive African artist."
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Read full Wikipedia entryArtworks
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Uzo Egonu Woman in Grief
1968 -
Uzo Egonu Northern Nigerian Landscape
1964
Sketches, letters, etc.
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Uzo Egonu, recipient: Ronald Moody Memorandum from Uzo Egonu to members of the art sub-committee
27 January 1975 -
Uzo Egonu, recipient: Ronald Moody Letter from Uzo Egonu to Ronald Moody
12 May 1975 -
Uzo Egonu, recipient: Ronald Moody Letter from Uzo Egonu, deputy chair of the Visual Arts sub-committee, to Ronald Moody
12 July 1975 -
Gadd & Pen, publishers, recipients: Ronald Moody, Uzo Egonu Letter from Gadd & Pen, publishers, to Uzo Egonu
12 November 1976