top of page
AP_220113_157.jpg

Turiya Magadlela

Employing art-making techniques traditionally associated with femininity and craft, the South African artist Turiya Magadlela sews and embroiders nylon pantyhose, correctional service uniforms, prison sheets, and other conceptually loaded fabrics to address issues that shape a gendered and racialized society. Magadlela studied at the University of Johannesburg and Rijksakademie, Amsterdam. Since winning the FNB Art Prize in 2015, she has shown at the 2016 Armory Show and exhibited around the world. Her work was included in the acclaimed group show “Blue Black,” curated by artist Glenn Ligon at the Pulitzer Arts Foundation in St. Louis. Magadlela cuts, stitches, and folds her materials across wooden frames to create multilayered abstract compositions. Drawing from her experiences as a Black woman and a mother as well as from Black South African history, Magadlela’s works serve as vibrant celebrations of Black womanhood while simultaneously suggesting the implicit eroticization of and violence against the Black body.

AP_220629_053.jpeg
AP_220629_052.jpeg
AP_220113_070.jpeg
AP_220113_036.jpeg
AP_220113_034.jpeg
AP_220113_025.jpeg
AP_220113_035.jpeg
AP_220113_053.tiff
bottom of page