Paa Joe Takes New York
by Superhouse
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Start Date
March 13, 2024
End Date
May 11, 2024
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Hours
Tuesday to Saturday 12:00 PM - 6:00 PM

Superhouse is pleased to announce the presentation of a collection of new sculptures by the internationally acclaimed Ghanaian artist, Paa Joe, in Celestial City. The exhibition takes place from March 13 to April 27, 2024, marking the inauguration of the gallery's new location at 120 Walker Street, New York, NY.

Throughout a career spanning six decades, Paa Joe has explored Ghanaian beliefs on life and death. His carved wooden coffins, known as abeduu adeka, or proverb boxes, take the form of an object intended to glorify the deceased. Over the past 15 years, Paa Joe has transformed the folk craft tradition into Pop art, creating idiosyncratic renditions of quotidian objects for the global art market.

For his debut solo show in New York, the artist chose to pay homage to the city itself, creating a portrait of the Big Apple through objects emblematic of the five boroughs. The exhibition includes two human-scale coffins, one in the shape of a Heinz ketchup bottle, a familiar sight at any corner diner, and a yellow taxi cab, once a symbol of the city, now fleeting in the wake of rideshare services.

On view in Celestial City, viewers will also encounter scaled-down works, providing a glimpse into the diversity of the urban landscape. Replicas of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Guggenheim Museum and a Hermès Birkin handbag represent the prominent art and fashion industries. In recognition of New York's history of welcoming migrants, the exhibition features disproportionate versions of a bagel with a schmear, a Statue of Liberty, and a hotdog. Finally, acknowledging the less savory aspects of the city, there is a trash can overflowing with refuse and a depiction of a subway rat.

Paa Joe is a member of the Ga community, residing in several villages around Ghana’s capital city, Accra. For the Ga people, funerary rights are an important process allowing the dead to transition to the afterlife while enabling the living to honor the deceased’s life and vocation. In the early 1950s, Paa Joe’s uncle, Kane Kwei pioneered the first figurative coffin – a cocoa pod intended for a chief as a ceremonial palanquin. When the chief passed away during its construction, it was repurposed as his coffin. This innovative art form quickly gained popularity, and Kane Kwei began creating bespoke commissions resembling living and inanimate objects, symbolizing the deceased individual's identity (an onion for a farmer, an eagle for a community leader, a sardine for a fisherman, etc.). Paa Joe apprenticed with his uncle from 1960 until 1972, at which point he established his own studio, Paa Joe Coffin Works.

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About
Superhouse
Superhouse is a New York-based platform and nomadic gallery founded in 2019 by Stephen Markos with a focus on art furniture and design. In addition... View More
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