Dominic Chambers is considered one of 120 artists featured within the main group survey When We See Us: A Century of Black Figurative Portray (till 27 October).

Two work of his, All This Life in Us and Blue Park Lovers (each 2020), are included alongside works by main artists corresponding to Michael Armitage and Lynette Yiadom-Boakye. The previous work by Chambers is an “try at representing, via the language of portray, W.E.B. Du Bois’s thought of the veil, described in his e-book The Souls of Black People as a symbolic barrier that exists between black individuals and American society, which disables or prohibits a good evaluation of the Black character or Black life”, he says.

Chambers employs a Magical Realism-inspired fashion to confront how the “veil” is pervasive in Black life and generates an area “of precarity, absurdity, and alternative”. All This Life in Us is “an instance of how portray can symbolize the shortcoming to completely expertise the enjoyment and freedom of Black life via a wash of abstraction, together with the mysterious and enchanting nature of the world of portray”.

The artist could have his first solo exhibition at Lehmann Maupin in London throughout Frieze. Chambers, in addition to making artwork, additionally buys it, and is amassing a sizeable assortment. We sat right down to ask him what he collects and why.

Dominic Chambers’s All This Life in Us (2020)

© Dominic Chambers. Courtesy: Anna Zorina Gallery, New York Metropolis

The Artwork Newspaper: What was the primary work you ever purchased?

DC: The primary work I ever purchased was a portray by Chloe West titled Purple Palms.

What was the newest work you purchased?

Espresso and Persian Cypress (2024) by Sara Rahmanian

Who’re some new artists you could have found that the majority excite you?

Effectively, I haven’t essentially “found” these artists, however these are some rising artists whose work grabbed my consideration, and I believe are value testing: Olivia Jia, Jade Thacker, Adam Amram and Alexandria Sofa are making work that I’m enthusiastic about.

Espresso and Persian Cypress (2024) by Sara Rahmanian

Courtesy of Dominic Chambers

Do you could have a favourite murals in your assortment?

Not essentially. I don’t have a robust sense of magnetism in the direction of anyone piece. I consider gathering as a dialogue between myself and different artists, So I are typically most excited in regards to the curation of works and their dialogue in my house. From that viewpoint, I get pleasure from particular conversations between a few works in my assortment, such because the dialogue between my Undreamed glass balloon sculpture by Shikeith, and Darkish and Good-looking portray by Alteronce Gumby.

What do you remorse not shopping for once you had the possibility?

Nothing. Remorse, when gathering artwork, primarily stems from lacking out on the chance for a financial achieve or being priced out of an artist’s market. I imply, there are works I’m dissatisfied in not with the ability to purchase, however that’s extra so due to my envy of not with the ability to reside and talk with the works day by day.

In any other case, any work I miss out on, I hope to come across once more someplace within the artwork world, hopefully at a museum the place everybody can benefit from the work.

When you might have any work from any museum on the earth?

There are such a lot of! To call a pair I must go together with Vermeer’s Girl with a Pear Necklace (1662-64) on the Gemäldegalerie, Georges Seurat’s A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte (1886) at The Artwork Institute of Chicago, Joan Mitchell’s Wooden, Wind, No Tuba (1980) at MoMA, and naturally, Kerry James Marshall’s Black Portray (2006) on the Glenstone Museum

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