SearchOpportunitiesEventsAbout UsHubs
C&
Magazines
Projects
Education
Community
Event

Akinola Davies Jr : Boot/leg

Basel, Switzerland1.1 Zeitgeist17 March 2018 - 31 March 2018
Akinola Davies Jr : Boot/leg

Akinola Davies Jr : Boot/leg

High end brands are globally recognised symbols of meaning within social identity, and thus are a direct mode of instant visual communication, between the individual and the world.

As a result, they have become defining symbols of affiliation and status. This is particularly true of working class communities where brands enjoy widespread representation within the most liminal of spaces, and unintended of communities.

Davies’s work explores the conversation of meaning and context, and investigates whether luxury items is perceived as authentic or bootleg when it’s removed of intended context. He comments that historically, once luxury brands have been displayed within these communities, they gain social poignancy. The community creates them as relevant markers of identity and projected aspiration. Not only the adoption of iconic, expensive brands but also of other accessories through marginalised, often poor communities is an unacknowledged conduit through which these styles gain credence and legitimacy in popular culture. Boot/leg asks what is real and fake within the stratified layers between the economically disenfranchised and the economically empowered, when each wears the same product as an outward expression of their identity?

In two newly produced video works, Akinola Davies Jr examines through portraiture the role which items have as social signifiers and tools of cultural production as their wearers ascribe fashion goods with meanings and symbols, thus leading to the constant construction and reproduction of visual narratives and identities. The images have been constructed and presented in the same luxury aesthetic used within the brands’ adverts, addressing the interrelation between the real and the fake.

Davies's quest to challenge imagery that is made familiar by the fashion and music industries reflects throughout his practice with a strong focus in portraiture through, video, photography and radio. He lives and works in London.

By Deborah Joyce Holman & Moya DeYoung

.
cargocollective.com

View more from

Beyond Representation

Beyond Representation

Pérez Art Museum Miami
Dec 7, 2023–Dec 31, 2026
Diverse work uniforms displayed on stands in a bright room with large windows.

Dignidade e luta: Laudelina de Campos Mello

Instituto Moreira Salles
May 16–Nov 22, 2026
An art installation of white fabric ropes hangs within a bright atrium with a glass ceiling, some looping in the foreground, others vertical against a large window overlooking a city.

Cecilia Vicuña - The vanished glacier

Castello di Rivoli
Apr 30–Sep 20, 2026
A man leans against large speakers next to a customized mobile record shack called "Swing A Ling," painted with music genres like Reggae and Soul.

Dancing the Revolution

Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago
Apr 11–Sep 20, 2026
Illustration of two naked people in a teal bathroom; one sits on the edge of a bubble bath holding a katana, while the other relaxes in the bubbles with a drink.

The Object of Power is Power

Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art
May 6–Sep 20, 2026