Close Menu
  • Home
  • Bilingual
  • Children’s Books
  • Children’s Games
  • Africa
  • Spanish
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest WhatsApp
Trending
  • Sydney Monarch’s Wondrous Day | Dedicated Review
  • Bull & Bear Build a Bright Future with Bonds
  • Pedal Pusher: How One Woman’s Bicycle Adventure Helped Change the World
  • I HAVE A CONFESSION – Bilingual Monkeys
  • Tiny Bird, by Sabrina Edralin
  • Drawing Cute Animals Shape by Shape: Learn to Draw Over 100 Adorable Animals Step by Step
  • How To Book and What to Expect During a Harry Potter Tour in Oxford
  • Avoid These First-Time Dog Owner Mistakes for a Happy, Healthy Pup
Sunday, June 22
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest WhatsApp
Cat Fish WaiterCat Fish Waiter
  • Home
  • Bilingual
  • Children’s Books
  • Children’s Games
  • Africa
  • Spanish
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
Cat Fish WaiterCat Fish Waiter
Home » The 1-54 Art Fair Brings Africa and Its Diaspora Into the Global Mainstream
Africa

The 1-54 Art Fair Brings Africa and Its Diaspora Into the Global Mainstream

catfishBy catfishMay 18, 2023No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
Ads

Touria El Glaoui is the founding director of the 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair, which is held every year in London, New York City and Marrakesh. The daughter of a Moroccan artist father and a French mother, El Glaoui was working in telecommunication sales when she founded the fair to give voice to art and artists from the continent and the diaspora, and it remains among the most important on the contemporary scene, introducing talents such as Amadou Sanogo, of Mali, and Johanna Mirabel, of Paris.

This year’s edition of the fair, which runs through Sunday, is mounted in Manhattanville, at 439 West 127th Street (1-54.com), with a pop-up exhibition of Caribbean artists, called “Sparkling Islands, Another Postcard of the Caribbean,” at High Line Nine, 507 West 27th Street, through Saturday. I recently spoke with El Glaoui about her vision and how it has grown. Here are edited excerpts from the conversation.

Why did you start with the focus on Africa?

Ads

When I started in 2013, it was about creating a platform that would represent and give visibility to artists from that particular geography — the African continent and its diaspora. We say “diaspora” because we realize that a lot of artists of African descent were based in Europe or the United States or the United Kingdom.

I’m the daughter of an artist from Africa, Morocco, surprised that this part of the world was not covered at all and not at all present or visible in the mainstream or the international market. It was not my industry, so I didn’t understand why this was happening.‌

Your father is Moroccan, you speak with a French accent, and you were based in London when you started the fair. So how did those three things come together?

I was raised by a Moroccan father and a French mother in Morocco until I was 17 and moved north to study. I came to New York for 10 years. And then I moved to London, to work for a telecom fund and traveled to the Middle East and Africa for sales. I made friends with a lot of artists and also realized how amazing the work was and started collecting myself. ‌I didn’t understand why they were not part of the mainstream of the global stage. There was no question about them not being good enough.

In 2013, in London we were able to [mount] it strategically around Frieze to make sure we had this pool of collectors to come visit‌. Once we had the blueprint, ‌it just made sense to go to New York, ‌with institutions, curators and collectors that can make a real difference in the careers of those artists. In 2015 in Brooklyn, Pioneer Works, this incredible organization, hosted us for four years.‌ [‌This year‌]‌ we were able to negotiate and take over the space called Malt House, ‌the old Gavin Brown space [in Manhattanville].

Is it curated solely by you, or is there a panel?

We have three selection committee meetings a year for the three art fairs, [each with] one art gallery director (a gallery that is not part of the fair), a curator and my team — me and my associate director. It is basically a decision on the quality of a [gallery’s] program, but also the role of the gallery in the country or the city they are working in.

And there’s an educational component to the fair? What’s that?

We created the 1-54 Forum in 2013 — a platform for intellectual debates, artistic panels. One year it was [focused on] the invisible border between North Africa and West Africa, because of the influences of the Arabic world in those regions.

We made these engaging, but also available for free. We published catalogs, really reference book with biographies of artists who had never been published before.

When I started the project there was something much more important that was happening — a first for a lot of those artists to be published, to be part of the mainstream, to be sold in international art fairs. It was an educational platform, not just a commercial platform.

Who are some artists you are excited to showcase this year?

I’m looking forward to encountering the compelling and often provocative creations of Ronald Hall, a Brooklyn-based painter represented by Duane Thomas Gallery. Deftly moving between fictitious compositions and scenes inspired by history, Hall’s narrative works explore the complexity and contemporary experiences of African Americans through the lens of social constructionism. I expect another fair highlight will be Mobolaji Ogunrosoye’s intricate collage works, which splice photographs together to investigate body image and the impact of societal influences on the lives of Nigerian women. Ogunrosoye’s works will be presented by Kó, an art space in Lagos, Nigeria.

Ads
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
catfish
  • Website

Related Posts

In African Publishing, ‘There Is a Renaissance Going On’

January 20, 2025

Kenya: Five abducted young men freed amid uproar

January 18, 2025

Chad FM accuses Macron of ‘contemptuous attitude towards Africa’

January 18, 2025

How Antony Blinken, America’s Top Diplomat, Became the Secretary of War

January 18, 2025

Ghana presidential inauguration: Mahama returns as leader

January 18, 2025

Editor of Somalia’s first all-female media on challenging gender stereotypes

January 18, 2025

Comments are closed.

Ads
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Our Picks

Sydney Monarch’s Wondrous Day | Dedicated Review

June 21, 2025

Bull & Bear Build a Bright Future with Bonds

June 21, 2025

Pedal Pusher: How One Woman’s Bicycle Adventure Helped Change the World

June 21, 2025

I HAVE A CONFESSION – Bilingual Monkeys

June 21, 2025
Ads
About Cat Fish Waiter
About Cat Fish Waiter

Cat Fish Waiter is a book that kids will love to read and listen. An interesting and engaging book that encourages children to think big.
Email Us: topkidsbooks@outlook.com
Contact: +1-484-378-5779

Latest Posts

Sydney Monarch’s Wondrous Day | Dedicated Review

June 21, 2025

Bull & Bear Build a Bright Future with Bonds

June 21, 2025
Categories
  • Africa
  • Bilingual
  • Cat Fish Waiter
  • Children's Books
  • Children's Games
  • Spanish
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest WhatsApp
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
© 2025 CatFishWaiter || Designed by BizieBiz

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.