About The Work
This open edition 2023 leather basketball features Kehinde Wiley’s 2013 painting John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester from the artist's series The World Stage: Jamaica. First exhibited at Stephen Friedman Gallery in London, Wiley, using his notorious street casting method, places contemporary Jamaican natives in heroic poses that reference directly from 17th and 18th-century British portraiture and feature background patterns inspired by British textiles. The body of works offers a corrective to the omission of the black figure from art history and specifically comments on the nature of the relationship between the United Kingdom and its former colonial holding. Wiley’s exhibition The World Stage: Jamaica is part of a broader project titled "The World Stage," which presents portraits of black and brown men and women the artist met in China, Brazil, Nigeria, Haiti, Israel, and India.
Courtesy of The Kehinde Wiley Shop
About Kehinde Wiley
From The Magazine
- Interviews & Features: Introducing Giants: Art from the Dean Collection of Swizz Beatz and Alicia Keys
- Interviews & Features: Mickalene Thomas releases two new Phaidon Artspace Editions
- Interviews & Features: Do You Have What It Takes To Pose For A Masterpiece? Models Describe Sitting for Lucian Freud, Alex Katz, Kehinde Wiley, and Others
- Interviews & Features: Year in Review: Here Are the Most Talked About Artists of 2017
- News & Events: Neil Patrick Harris Named His Son After Gideon Rubin—Who Else Does the Actor Collect?
Regulation size, premium leather basketball
Diameter: 24.0 cm
Includes monogrammed cotton dust bag and oiled pine plinth, laser-cut with the artist's signature.
About The Work
This open edition 2023 leather basketball features Kehinde Wiley’s 2013 painting John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester from the artist's series The World Stage: Jamaica. First exhibited at Stephen Friedman Gallery in London, Wiley, using his notorious street casting method, places contemporary Jamaican natives in heroic poses that reference directly from 17th and 18th-century British portraiture and feature background patterns inspired by British textiles. The body of works offers a corrective to the omission of the black figure from art history and specifically comments on the nature of the relationship between the United Kingdom and its former colonial holding. Wiley’s exhibition The World Stage: Jamaica is part of a broader project titled "The World Stage," which presents portraits of black and brown men and women the artist met in China, Brazil, Nigeria, Haiti, Israel, and India.
Courtesy of The Kehinde Wiley Shop
About Kehinde Wiley
From The Magazine
- Interviews & Features: Introducing Giants: Art from the Dean Collection of Swizz Beatz and Alicia Keys
- Interviews & Features: Mickalene Thomas releases two new Phaidon Artspace Editions
- Interviews & Features: Do You Have What It Takes To Pose For A Masterpiece? Models Describe Sitting for Lucian Freud, Alex Katz, Kehinde Wiley, and Others
- Interviews & Features: Year in Review: Here Are the Most Talked About Artists of 2017
- News & Events: Neil Patrick Harris Named His Son After Gideon Rubin—Who Else Does the Actor Collect?
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- Ships in 10 to 14 business days from Texas.
- This work is final sale and not eligible for return.
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