Osaze Akil Stigler is based in Atlanta, GA and his work takes a contemporary view on Black divinity, pulling from traditional African cultures, spirituality and the intersection of Blackness and fashion. Along with being a visual artist, he is also a graduate of the University of Georgia and is now a practicing Landscape Architect and Urban Planner.
Behind the Scenes with Osaze Akil
Visual artist Osaze Akil Stigler’s virtual exhibition, Revolutionizing the Systems We’re Transcending, focuses on his experience as an African American, combining the often opposing worlds of being of African descent and living under systems of racial supremacy. The works address the question of how the social conditioning of racial supremacy intersects with the healing of Black Americans as they evolve and understand themselves as a community, independent of and in spite of injustice.
Visual artist Osaze Akil Stigler’s virtual exhibition, Revolutionizing the Systems We’re Transcending, focuses on his experience as an African American, combining the often opposing worlds of being of African descent and living under systems of racial supremacy. The works address the question of how the social conditioning of racial supremacy intersects with the healing of Black Americans as they evolve and understand themselves as a community, independent of and in spite of injustice. A selection of works will be on view at UTA Artist Space through April 10.
The show also explores the way that religion has framed the ways Black people view themselves. Christianity is one of the most significant components of the Black American identity and is arguably the base for how they have built so many other cultural elements, such as dialects and music. Several works in the show address the trauma from seeing spiritual figures depicted as the Black community’s opposites. Representation can be vital when envisioning oneself in a space other than where they are.
“It is exponentially more crucial when the area in which you lack representation is a core component in the foundation of your identity,” said Akil. “I believe depicting Black people in modernized images of divinity in our God-given beauty will allow others see themselves in my art.”
Osaze Akil Stigler
David and Goliath, 2021
Oil and gold leaf on canvas
36 x 60 inches
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Osaze Akil Stigler
Reconciled Paths, 2021
Oil and gold leaf on canvas
36 x 60 inches
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Osaze Akil Stigler
Madonna and Child, 2021
Oil and gold leaf on canvas
36 x 48 inches
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Revolutionized Luxury
Revolutionized Luxury, 2021
Oil and gold leaf on canvas
36 x 48 inches
INQUIRERevolutionized Luxury
Revolutionized Luxury, 2021
Oil and gold leaf on canvas
36 x 48 inches
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Osaze Akil Stigler
Samson and Delilah, 2021
Oil and gold leaf on canvas
30 x 40 inches
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Osaze Akil Stigler
Safe Haven, 2021
Oil and gold leaf on canvas
24 x 48 inches
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Osaze Akil Stigler
Afternoon Tea in Isolation, 2021
Oil and gold leaf on canvas
36 x 60 inches
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Afternoon Tea in Isolation, 2021
Oil and gold leaf on canvas
36 x 60 inches
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Osaze Akil Stigler
I Decided to Take a Day, 2021
Oil and gold leaf on canvas
36 x 60 inches
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Osaze Akil Stigler
Eve’s Adam, 2021
Oil and gold leaf on canvas
30 x 40 inches
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Osaze Akil Stigler
No Wasted Candor, 2021
Oil on canvas
24 x 30 inches
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