Acrylic on Canva/Arcrylic paintings.
60 x 72 Inches (152.4 × 182.9 cm)
Three figures emerge through shapes and colour undefined, yet undeniably connected. In The Third Voice, presence is felt more than seen, as each form balances the other in silent harmony. This abstract piece speaks of unity, distance, and the invisible threads that bind us, even when faces are hidden and...
Three figures emerge through shapes and colour undefined, yet undeniably connected. In The Third Voice, presence is felt more than seen, as each form balances the other in silent harmony. This abstract piece speaks of unity, distance, and the invisible threads that bind us, even when faces are hidden and lines are blurred.
Born in 3rd April 1943 in Osogbo, Osun State, Nigeria, Chief Jimoh Buraimoh is one of the most influential artists to emerge from the 1960�s 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...
Born in 3rd April 1943 in Osogbo, Osun State, Nigeria, Chief Jimoh Buraimoh is one of the most influential artists to emerge from the 1960�s 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 distinguished 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.