Installation view
Annabelle Agbo Godeau
Too good to be true (1), 2022
Annabelle Agbo Godeau
Eyewash, 2022
Annabelle Agbo Godeau
mon oeil, 2022
Annabelle Agbo Godeau
Peeping, 2022
Annabelle Agbo Godeau
Gender reveal, 2022
Annabelle Agbo Godeau
Inferno (1), 2022
Annabelle Agbo Godeau
Inferno (2), 2022
Annabelle Agbo Godeau
The handmaid (1), 2022
Annabelle Agbo Godeau
The handmaid (2), 2022
Annabelle Agbo Godeau
Unusual photos of women, 2022
Old erotic magazines from the 60s and 70s, movies, extracted film stills and found footage serve as the basis and source of inspiration for her paintings. Being drawn to very staged and artificial appearing images and scenes, it is no surprise that the color blue remains dominant in many of her paintings. Her choice of colors mainly represents the night and artificial light, creating a cinematographic atmosphere that can easily be associated with a certain kind of loneliness and mysterious mood.
Godeau’s work circulate around ideas of femininity and identity, challenging the terms as the clearly defined binary concepts that society views them as. The paintings for Too good to be true deal with the perception of the other and the act of self-dramatization, resulting from consumed content and learned ideals. Whether it is a painting of a woman literally trying to wash out her eyes from the advertising and images she has consumed, or a painting of a piece of paper with a catchy slogan aimed at selling photographs of women—Godeau holds up a mirror to society with a humorous wink, questioning its notion of femininity and womanhood and critiquing the truncated portrayal of women in the mass media, which often reduces them to something consumable.
By citing these images, playing with clichés and placing them in new contexts and relations, Godeau also reflects on her own gendered gaze and interest in the representation of women and invites the viewer to do the same.
– Amira Hartmann
Installation view
Annabelle Agbo Godeau
Too good to be true (1), 2022
Annabelle Agbo Godeau
Eyewash, 2022
Annabelle Agbo Godeau
mon oeil, 2022
Annabelle Agbo Godeau
Peeping, 2022
Annabelle Agbo Godeau
Gender reveal, 2022
Annabelle Agbo Godeau
Inferno (1), 2022
Annabelle Agbo Godeau
Inferno (2), 2022
Annabelle Agbo Godeau
The handmaid (1), 2022
Annabelle Agbo Godeau
The handmaid (2), 2022
Annabelle Agbo Godeau
Unusual photos of women, 2022
Old erotic magazines from the 60s and 70s, movies, extracted film stills and found footage serve as the basis and source of inspiration for her paintings. Being drawn to very staged and artificial appearing images and scenes, it is no surprise that the color blue remains dominant in many of her paintings. Her choice of colors mainly represents the night and artificial light, creating a cinematographic atmosphere that can easily be associated with a certain kind of loneliness and mysterious mood.
Godeau’s work circulate around ideas of femininity and identity, challenging the terms as the clearly defined binary concepts that society views them as. The paintings for Too good to be true deal with the perception of the other and the act of self-dramatization, resulting from consumed content and learned ideals. Whether it is a painting of a woman literally trying to wash out her eyes from the advertising and images she has consumed, or a painting of a piece of paper with a catchy slogan aimed at selling photographs of women—Godeau holds up a mirror to society with a humorous wink, questioning its notion of femininity and womanhood and critiquing the truncated portrayal of women in the mass media, which often reduces them to something consumable.
By citing these images, playing with clichés and placing them in new contexts and relations, Godeau also reflects on her own gendered gaze and interest in the representation of women and invites the viewer to do the same.
– Amira Hartmann
Get in contact or
book an appointment
Schirmerstrasse 61
Backyard
40211 Duesseldorf
Germany
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Get in contact or
book an appointment
Schirmerstrasse 61
Backyard
40211 Duesseldorf
Germany
Follow us on Instagram, or subscribe to our newsletter to receive invitations to upcoming exhibition openings and more information about featured artists.