PRIMO MARELLA GALLERY

The Lost Legacy

21 September - 09 November 2023

THE LOST LEGACY 

 

21st september 2023 - 9th November 2023

Opening: 21st September 2023

6.30 pm

Hako Hankson's works possess an essential recognisability, the use of masks, tribal figures, the careful choice of colours and the abundance of details and decorations make his works a concentration of Africa. They are distinct and carefully delineated elements that narrate, through expressions and compositions, the cultural history of this continent. 

 

The use of masks stems from a profound philosophy of life, practised and recognised by Hako Hankson, handed down to him by his father: animism.

 

"My father, for his part, drew me into animist beliefs: for example, by using masks and statuettes in a dialogue with the afterlife, and that's how I came to understand the power of masks, what they could carry as a spirit, a soul, something subtle that we can't control."

 

His works have an intrinsic narrativity, in fact, although the viewer sees well-defined elements, plots and fantasies develop on the canvas enriching the aesthetic beauty of the masks. One often comes across human figures, convivial scenes depicted as if they were small visions within the works themselves. This indicates a link that Hako Hankson has always wanted to express: animism uses elements, such as masks, to converse with the afterlife and thus take on a spiritual, as well as an earthly character, acting as a bridge between soul and body. 

 

In the artist's canvases there are flashes of humanity, gatherings, human figures in their individual form, or other elements, even animals, which always strictly maintain an almost rupestrian line of representation.

In fact, Hako Hankson's works also turn their attention to the past, underlying which is an important creative study of ancient African graphic descriptions. Not far removed from what are, for us, rupestrian paintings. In this way, the artist expresses a strong attachment to his land, communicating it to the Africans, showing their gaps and problems, almost in a codified language that, only thanks to a strong globalisation, becomes familiar to us as well, reminding us of American or European artists who, by appropriating a very similar imagery, revolutionised western aesthetics.

 

Hako Hankson's painting addresses his homeland, but at the same time he wants to export what he sees as contemporary Africa to the world, narrating it through elements of what Africa used to be, maintaining its tribal nature.

 

In his works, the artist describes what has always surrounded him, through a universal language that is as clear as it is intricate.

It goes back to its origins, narrating different situations and characters, as humanity once did, but evolves its language, enriches it and complicates it to make it future-oriented. In this way, it attracts the interest of the viewer, who loses himself in the immensity of the details.

 

"The lost legacy" is about just that, a collective imagination of an Africa that was the cradle of civilisation, that has handed down its distinctive elements all over the world, but that in the 20th-21st century is in trouble, as it is increasingly losing its cultural attachment to its roots.

 

Hako Hankson's message also speaks of prosperity and evolution, indicating how, if rediscovered, this new language can lead the African continent to a prosperous and flourishing future.

Days of engagement

Hako Hankson

Days of engagement
2023
Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas
157 × 200 cm

Days of engagement
2023 - Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas - 157 × 200 cm

After the end

Hako Hankson

After the end
2023
Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas
160 × 199 cm

After the end
2023 - Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas - 160 × 199 cm

Decoration of the palace

Hako Hankson

Decoration of the palace
2023
Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas
164 × 199 cm

Decoration of the palace
2023 - Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas - 164 × 199 cm

Day of celebration

Hako Hankson

Day of celebration
2023
Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas
164 × 199 cm

Day of celebration
2023 - Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas - 164 × 199 cm

The offering

Hako Hankson

The offering
2023
Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas
199 × 180 cm

The offering
2023 - Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas - 199 × 180 cm

The palace shaman

Hako Hankson

The palace shaman
2023
Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas
149 × 149 cm

The palace shaman
2023 - Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas - 149 × 149 cm

Mask face

Hako Hankson

Mask face
2023
Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas
149 × 149 cm

Mask face
2023 - Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas - 149 × 149 cm

Tribal ornamentation

Hako Hankson

Tribal ornamentation
2023
Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas
159 × 160 cm

Tribal ornamentation
2023 - Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas - 159 × 160 cm

The blind medium

Hako Hankson

The blind medium
2023
Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas
139 × 139 cm

The blind medium
2023 - Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas - 139 × 139 cm

The princess guardian

Hako Hankson

The princess guardian
2023
Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas
139 × 138 cm

The princess guardian
2023 - Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas - 139 × 138 cm

Symbol of initiation

Hako Hankson

Symbol of initiation
2023
Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas
149 × 149 cm

Symbol of initiation
2023 - Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas - 149 × 149 cm

The palace scout

Hako Hankson

The palace scout
2023
Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas
119 × 99 cm

The palace scout
2023 - Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas - 119 × 99 cm

Fears of freedom

Hako Hankson

Fears of freedom
2023
Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas
200 x 200 cm

Fears of freedom
2023 - Acrylic and Indian Ink on canvas - 200 x 200 cm