Exhibition | Photography

Rotimi Fani-Kayode: Tranquility of Communion

Explore a world of heightened sensuality informed by Yoruba cosmology and queer activism in the work of Nigerian British photographer Rotimi Fani-Kayode.

Four grayscale exposures of a man looking to the right, the last one looking at the camera.
Date
Sep 22, 2024 - Jan 5, 2025
Cost
Free
Time
See event details
Location
Wexner Center for the Arts

Galleries

Beginning in the early 1980s, Fani-Kayode (1955–1989) developed a photographic practice that refused categorization, cutting across cultural codes, gender norms, and artistic traditions. Born into a prominent Nigerian family, Fani-Kayode emigrated to London in the 1960s, seeking political refuge during civil war. As an art student in the United States, he came to negotiate his outsider status along multiple axes, balancing his family heritage and immigration status alongside his own queer sexuality and exposure to underground subcultures. Channeling these multiple facets of his identity into photography, Fani-Kayode generated a remarkable body of images over the course of a career cut tragically short by his death in 1989.

Organized in partnership with Autograph (London), Rotimi Fani-Kayode: Tranquility of Communion is the first North American survey of Fani-Kayode’s work and archives. This major exhibition brings together key series of color and black-and-white photographs along with archival prints and never-before-exhibited works from Fani-Kayode’s student years. Often created in collaboration with his partner Alex Hirst (1951–1992), Fani-Kayode’s photographs treat romantic love with spiritual reverence, translating the emotional intensity of same-sex, multiracial desire into richly evocative symbolic language. Today, his art remains a potent source of inspiration, presciently anticipating contemporary photographic approaches to identity, sexuality, and race. 

This exhibition is part of the FotoFocus Biennial: backstories. Learn more about the program and related events.

“On three counts, I am an outsider: in matters of sexuality; in terms of geographical and cultural dislocation; and in the sense of not having become the sort of respectably married professional my parents might have hoped for.”

Rotimi Fani-Kayode, “Traces of Ecstasy,” 1988