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In his powerful photographs, films, paintings, and sculptures, Zak Ové mines his own Trinidadian and Irish heritage, which he describes as “black power on one side and… social feminism on the other side.” His work delves into post-colonialism in Britain and Trinidad, the African Diaspora, contemporary multiculturalism, globalization, and the blend of politics, tradition, race, and history that informs our identities. Influenced by the pioneering films of his father, Horace Ové, Zak Ové began his artistic career with a series of exuberant photographs of the participants in Trinidad’s vibrant, multivalent Carnival. He later made forays into sculpture, which he approaches as a form of narrative. Through his sculptural figures, concocted from a dynamic assortment of materials, and resembling African and Trinidadian statuary, Ové plays with notions of identity, positing the self as complex, open, and interconnected.

b. 1966

Lives and works in the Canary Islands

SOLO EXHIBITIONS

2023     Comments on Cosmology, C O U N T Y

             The Best Of: Zak Ové, De Buck Gallery

             Zak Ové: Recent and Iconic Works, De Buck Gallery

2022     Zak Ové: The Evidence of Things Not Seen, De Buck Gallery

2021     Zak Ové: Canboulay, De Buck Gallery

             Spotlight: Zak Ové, De Buck Gallery

2018     Zak Ové | 'Star Liner', Lawrie Shabibi

2017     Zak Ové: Black and Blue: The Invisible Man and the Masque of Blackness @Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Vigo Gallery

2013     ZAK OVÉ GLASSTRESS: WHITE LIGHT / WHITE HEAT, Vigo Gallery

GROUP EXHIBITIONS

2023     De Buck Gallery x Miami Arts Week, De Buck Gallery

             Filling In the Pieces In Black - London, MARUANI MERCIER GALLERY

             Filling In the Pieces In Black, MARUANI MERCIER GALLERY

2019     Life Through Extraordinary Mirrors, October Gallery

2017     Playing Mas, Vigo Gallery

             The Figure in Contemporary Art, rosenfeld