It’s your last chance to see Kehinde Wiley at The National Gallery

Last Chance: Kehinde Wiley at the The National Gallery | Soho House

The American artist is famous for reimagining western portraiture with Black protagonists. At his current exhibition, ‘The Prelude’, he shifts his focus to landscape painting

Thursday 7 April 2022    By Soho House

Last Chance: Kehinde Wiley at the The National Gallery | Soho House
Last Chance: Kehinde Wiley at the The National Gallery | Soho House

Kehinde Wiley is an American artist whose hyper-real paintings subvert the principles of European portraiture, blurring the boundary between traditional and contemporary representation. By positioning contemporary Black sitters in the poses of original historical, religious or mythological figures, his work serves to highlight the empty spaces and pages of art history where people who look like him should be represented. 

Standout pieces from his oeuvre include remakes of ‘Napoleon Crossing The Alps’ by Jacques-Louis David, ‘Jacob de Graeff’ by Gerard ter Borch, and ‘The Dead Christ In The Tomb’ by Hans Holbein the Younger. 

Last Chance: Kehinde Wiley at the The National Gallery | Soho House
Last Chance: Kehinde Wiley at the The National Gallery | Soho House

Over the past 20 years, Wiley’s work has found fans in some of hip-hop’s biggest names, and he has painted for the likes of Spike Lee, LL Cool J, Questlove, and Ice-T. His most famous commission, however, came in 2018 when he was approached to paint former US president, Barack Obama. 

Here, the artist sits down with Soho House’s Head of Collections, Kate Bryan, to discuss his current exhibition at The National Gallery. 

Last Chance: Kehinde Wiley at the The National Gallery | Soho House
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