Works Exhibited

About

We are all beauty, and that is what is encapsulated by the word life.
—Jadé Fadojutimi

In her paintings, which are often monumental in scale, Jadé Fadojutimi orchestrates color, space, line, and movement in the service of fluid emotion and the quest for self-knowledge. She interprets everyday experience in ways that reflect a drive to understand more completely the perpetually intertwined ideas of identity and beauty.

Fadojutimi was born in 1993 in London, where she lives and works. She graduated with a BA from the Slade School of Art, London, in 2015, and an MA from the Royal College of Art, London, in 2017 (also receiving that year’s Hine Painting Prize). Her solo exhibition The Numbing Vibrancy of Characters in Play opened at Peer, London, in 2019, and Yet, Another Pathetic Fallacy at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami, in 2021. In 2022, she will have a solo exhibition at the Hepworth Wakefield, England. Fadojutimi has also participated in several major group exhibitions and biennials including Jahresgaben 2020 at Bonner Kunstverein, Bonn, Germany; The Stomach and the Port, Liverpool Biennial, England (2021); Mixing It Up: Painting Today at the Hayward Gallery, London (2021); and The Milk of Dreams at the 59th Biennale di Venezia (2022).

Making use of key visual elements from twentieth-century painting such as grids, layers, and disparate marks, Fadojutimi conjures a sense of continual transformation. Her compositions can suggest plants, microbes, or marine landscapes, but edge consistently toward abstraction. Described by the artist as “environments,” these complex arrangements are built up with layers of oil paint, sometimes interrupted by lines of oil pastel. Fadojutimi also combines elements of clothing—swatches of fabric and the shapes of stockings and bows—with ambiguous outlines to reflect the trauma of displacement.

Fadojutimi draws inspiration from specific locations, cultures, objects, and sounds, especially Japanese anime, clothing, and soundtracks (she traveled to Japan after graduating from the Slade, then again for a residency in 2016, and now returns to the country several times a year). Writing, too, is key to her process—sometimes she uses it to help articulate the subtleties of her painting; at other times she positions it in parallel to the visual by adopting a more poetic approach. For Fadojutimi, her roles as artist and writer are equally important aspects of her creative practice.

A portrait of Jadé Fadojutimi
Photo: Anamarija Ami Podrebarac
#JadeFadojutimi
Walter De Maria: The Singular Experience

Walter De Maria: The Singular Experience

Join exhibition curator Donna De Salvo as she discusses her selection of the artist’s rarely seen sculptures, drawings, films, and archival materials in Walter De Maria: The Singular Experience at Gagosian, Le Bourget. Chief among these is Truck Trilogy (2011–17), De Maria’s final sculpture and the centerpiece of the exhibition.

Gagosian Quarterly Fall 2025

Now available
Gagosian Quarterly Fall 2025

The Fall 2025 issue of Gagosian Quarterly is now available, featuring Andy Warhol’s Blue Liz as Cleopatra (1962) on the cover.

Glenn Brown: Time Machine

Glenn Brown: Time Machine

Join Glenn Brown in his London studio as he discusses his presentation for the Studio section of Frieze Masters 2025, which explores the idea of the artist’s studio as a time machine: a space in which historical memory fuels creativity, manifesting in artworks that look to the future. Brown speaks about the featured works, which range from new paintings, drawings, and a sculpture to historic works on paper from the Brown Collection.

Nathaniel Mary Quinn: What You See Is Grace

Nathaniel Mary Quinn: What You See Is Grace

On the eve of ECHOES FROM COPELAND, an exhibition of new paintings at Gagosian, New York, Nathaniel Mary Quinn met with Ashley Stewart Rödder to discuss the genesis of the works he’s been creating, their literary origins, and his evolving approach to the practices—and intersections—of painting and drawing.

Cady Noland: Obscene

Cady Noland: Obscene

Jordan Carter, curator and cohead of the curatorial department at Dia Art Foundation, New York, engages with the new artist’s book Cady Noland: Polaroids 1986–2024.

Christopher Kulendran Thomas & Joshua Citarella

Christopher Kulendran Thomas & Joshua Citarella

Christopher Kulendran Thomas spoke with artist, writer, and podcaster Joshua Citarella inside Kulendran Thomas’s exhibition Peace Core at Gagosian, Park & 75, New York. The pair discussed the makings and meanings of the exhibition, which juxtaposed a video work of infinite duration that continually remixes and reedits American television footage from the morning of September 11, 2001, with six expressionistic paintings based on AI-generated images depicting a largely undocumented massacre in Sri Lanka in 2009, perpetrated in the wake of the “war on terror.”

Jenny Saville and Douglas Stuart

In Conversation
Jenny Saville and Douglas Stuart

Ahead of her exhibition over the summer at the National Portrait Gallery, London, Jenny Saville met with the novelist Douglas Stuart to discuss Glasgow, the beauty and blemishes of bodies, and their respective creative processes.

Choreographing Rhapsodies

Choreographing Rhapsodies

Maximiliane Leuschner speaks with South Africa’s most-sought-after emerging choreographer, Mthuthuzeli November.

At the Movies with Andy Warhol

At the Movies with Andy Warhol

Carlos Valladares tracks the artist’s engagements with Hollywood glamour, thinking through the ways in which the star system and its marketing engine informed his work.

The Art of Biography: James Schuyler

The Art of Biography: James Schuyler

The celebrated New York School poet and Pulitzer Prize–winner James Schuyler is the subject of Nathan Kernan’s new biography, A Day Like Any Other: The Life of James Schuyler. Kernan narrates the wild turns in the poet’s life with great skill, from his peripatetic youth, through his years in the influential circle of W. H. Auden, on to his critical friendships with poets and artists such as John Ashbery, Jane Freilicher, Frank O’Hara, and Fairfield Porter. Here Raymond Foye, a friend of Schuyler’s (and the poet’s literary executor), talks with Kernan about the genesis of the project and some of the breakthroughs and challenges he encountered in its construction.

Hans Ulrich Obrist’s Questionnaire: Marina Tabassum

Hans Ulrich Obrist’s Questionnaire: Marina Tabassum

In this ongoing series the curator Hans Ulrich Obrist has devised a set of thirty-seven questions that invite artists, authors, musicians, and other visionaries to address key elements of their lives and creative practices. Respondents select from the larger questionnaire and reply in as many or as few words as they desire. For the third installment of 2025, we are honored to present Marina Tabassum, the architect behind this year’s Serpentine Pavilion in London, A Capsule in Time.

A Foreign Language: Part Three By Catherine Lacey

A Foreign Language: Part Three By Catherine Lacey

The third installment of a short story by Catherine Lacey.

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Jadé Fadojutimi

Cover of the book Jadé Fadojutimi: Jesture

Jadé Fadojutimi: Jesture

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Cover of the book To Bend the Ear of the Outer World

To Bend the Ear of the Outer World: Conversations on contemporary abstract painting

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Cover of the book Great Women Painters with dust jacket

Great Women Painters

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