Memories We Share: Cornelius Annor
“For me archiving as a form has the potential to open up discussions on lost and forgotten histories and its politics. And I intend to bring into presence these past histories through my works as a way of creating a room of memory which can migrate my audience to a particular moment in time and reflect on themselves. “
Strictly speaking memory is individual as it involves individual consciousness, but sociologists insist that all memory is social. In her essay The Site of Memory, the African American writer Toni Morrison defines memories as the recollection of an image and of the feelings accompanying that picture to reconstruct the world in which her ancestor lived. This reconstruction is based on collective memory when she tries to imagine their world and the private or interior life of the people in it.
This approach on memory is in some way reflected in the work of the Ghanaian artist Cornelius Annor. The exhibition entitled MEMORIES WE SHARE revolves around this reconstruction of memories. Departing from photographs taken by his ancestors, Annor recreates life’s most memorable moments, whether it be everyday sceneries, weddings, baptisms, anniversaries, or family gatherings.
Navigating through Annor’s body of work can be compared to the action of turning the leaves of a family album. Incorporating objects and clothes in his compositions from different periods in time, Annor plays with memory, history, and temporality. His paintings can be seen as hypothetical history writing, merging elements from his family and friends’ archive, from the past and the present.
While some of the photographs he gets his inspiration from were shot during family reunions, some are also a reflection of the African tradition of going to the photo studio, shooting a sitting pose in a fictional space. These studio-like sceneries, rooted in the lineage of West African studio portraiture which were created to give a certain middle-class status to the model, are reminiscent of the ambiance in the photographs of the renown Nigerian photographer Samuel Fosso and the Malian photographer Malick Sidibé. While we recognize similar elements of decor, the settings found in the works of Cornelius Annor create a very personal universe to the artist including hi-fi, televisions, photo frames, posters together with opulent wallpapers, vintage sofas, and wooden cabinets.
The seemingly ordinary moments of intimacy, gathering and entertainment also set the focus on the details of his fabric transfer technique as well as his textile and photography collages merging tradition and contemporaneity in his work. Inspired by the British, Nigerian artist Yinka Shonibare’s body of sculpture using wax fabric, the textiles and motifs found in Annor’s work not only refer to the West African culture but are derived for the most part from his personal archive and as such add a more intimate overtone to his paintings. Annor’s body of work also focuses on the passage of time and how it affects us, our relations, and our history. This idea of passing of time is reflected in the artist’s fabric transfer method. This faded effect that is created through this technique which consists in applying the fabric on the canvas for a few hours before removing it, can in some ways be compared to the untold stories behind the photographs in family albums. These left marks on the canvas become like an absent story of a certain event which remains unknown to the viewer.
Another important element is the disruption of the depth and perspective within the paintings through this use of fabric transfer and textile and photograph collages. These collage- based vibrant compositions in a way remind of Derek Fordjour’s colorful texturized creations. The photographs inserted to the background of the paintings are snapshots of his family members, adding a print of his father, who was a sculptor, in every painting, as a tribute to the man who inspired him to become the artist he is today.
His interest in painting from his family archive came from his desire to reconnect with family members on his father’s side with whom he had long lost touch after the death of his father. This urge to reconnect emerged during his wedding preparation and it is through his paintings that he sought to reestablish a bond with this part of the family. Through his approach, he realized the importance of archiving and began collecting family albums from his ancestors and from friends. Annor invites the viewer to connect with the figures in ambiguous yet completely present and familiar ways, to retrieve their own family histories and memories.
“For me archiving as a form has the potential to open up discussions on lost and forgotten histories and its politics. And I intend to bring into presence these past histories through my works as a way of creating a room of memory which can migrate my audience to a particular moment in time and reflect on themselves. “
Memories we share is an exhibition devoted to memory, whether it is the artist’s own or shared between family members, friends, and the spectators.
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Cornelius AnnorA Bold Gaze, 2022acrylic, fabric and fabric transfer on canvas182 x 121 cm
71 5/8 x 47 5/8 in -
Cornelius Annor“The younger generation” Or Akyiremma, 2022acrylic, fabric and fabric transfer on canvas151 x 121 cm
59 1/2 x 47 5/8 in -
Cornelius Annor, “Aketesia”, 2022
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Cornelius Annor, “ Kwakye Ade3”, 2022
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Cornelius AnnorWomen Affairs, 2022acrylic, fabric and fabric transfer on canvas152 x 121 cm
59 7/8 x 47 5/8 in -
Cornelius Annor, W) ta shi - we have taken our sit, 2022
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Cornelius Annor, Two Black Maidens, 2022
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Cornelius AnnorTena ase dwen - sit and think, 2022acrylic, fabric and fabric transfer on canvas211 x 151 cm
83 1/8 x 59 1/2 in -
Cornelius Annor, Sir Johns, 2021
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Cornelius AnnorSika k)k)) baa - the Golden Lady, 2022acrylic, fabric and fabric transfer on canvas182 x 121 cm
71 5/8 x 47 5/8 in -
Cornelius AnnorReflection, 2022acrylic, fabric and fabric transfer on canvas151.5 x 121 cm
59 5/8 x 47 5/8 in -
Cornelius AnnorMr. Joachim, 2022acrylic, fabric and fabric transfer on canvas210 x 151 cm
82 5/8 x 59 1/2 in -
Cornelius Annor, Mi d)fu pa, 2022
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Cornelius AnnorKwame photooo, 2022acrylic, fabric and fabric transfer on canvas151 x 212 cm
59 1/2 x 83 1/2 in -
Cornelius Annor, Kofi Wayo, 2022
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Cornelius AnnorGuiness Time Writing Time, 2022acrylic, fabric and fabric transfer on canvasdiptych, overall :
152 x 210 cm
59 7/8 x 82 5/8 in -
Cornelius Annor, Daytime Smile, 2022
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Cornelius AnnorA Bold Gaze, 2022acrylic, fabric and fabric transfer on canvas182 x 121 cm
71 5/8 x 47 5/8 in