Press Release

Pippy Houldsworth Gallery is pleased to present We Were Like Those Who Dreamed, Nigerian artist Nengi Omuku’s second solo exhibition with the gallery.

In new paintings Omuku explores the politics of green spaces in urban centres. With humanity’s relationship to the natural world under threat, she questions the power structures that govern climate catastrophe, proposing the garden as a radical symbol of equality and inclusiveness. In Omuku’s compositions figures are transplanted from contemporary and archival images of Lagos’ densely populated centre into Impressionistic landscapes, characterised by lush foliage and panoramic vistas, painted with rapid, pointillist brushstrokes in a distinctive Fauvist palette. Gardens offer their visitors the opportunity to learn how to move through the world more harmoniously and sustainably, while reconnecting with nature, something that Omuku has referenced with frequency in her work. Her Edenic landscapes act as sites of resistance, extolling the solace to be found in the natural world, and its connections to themes of rest and refuge.

The lack of green spaces is particularly critical in Lagos, which has often been described as a ‘concrete jungle’, in no small part due to rapid urbanisation that privileges construction and expansion over public gardens. Omuku is acutely aware of socio-economic tensions birthed from flawed political systems, something that her work explores in depth. In Dream Logic, faceless people queue for fuel, sitting atop empty jerry cans, while One Particular Man depicts crowds of people gathered, as another walks to refuel his broken-down car. The subjects of both paintings are transposed from urban settings into arcadias distinguished by dense thickets of acid green shrubbery, or a panoramic cloudscape, parting thunderously to reveal streaks of sunrise. In Omuku’s hands the garden is a crucible of change, symbolic of the transformative power of faith, ritual and reverie.

Omuku paints on sanyan, a tightly woven, hand spun cloth rooted in the pre-colonial history of the Yoruba people. By bringing together western painting traditions with West African heritage textiles, she reflects on the preservation of indigenous culture within a social and political context open-endedly impacted by the legacy of colonialism. Works such as A quiet nation capture this dichotomy: a girl jumps rope in front of an apartment block partially obscured by a thicket of tangled branches, the building’s Brutalist architecture mirroring the vertiginous strips of sanyan on which Omuku composes the work. Since 2022, Omuku has taken an active role in the production of sanyan for her paintings, working directly with local artisans in Ilorin in Western Nigeria to revive the tradition. While previous works were made on vintage fabric bolts, Omuku’s new works are made on contemporary sanyan, fostering cultural revival and rebuilding memory through the reinvigoration of ancestral practices.

Nengi Omuku (b. 1987, Nigeria) lives and works between London, UK and Lagos, Nigeria. She received her BA (2010) and MA (2012) from the Slade School of Art, University College London. In 2019 Omuku established The Art of Healing, a charitable organisation that transforms clinical spaces across Africa with art. In June 2026, Omuku will have her first US institutional solo exhibition at de Young Museum, San Francisco, CA. Her first institutional solo exhibition in the UK, The Dance of People and the Natural World, opened at Hastings Contemporary in 2023, before travelling to Arnolfini, Bristol the following year. Other recent exhibitions include Roots in The Sky, curated by Tunji Adeniyi-Jones, HOME, Manchester (2025-6); The Clearing, curated by Ekow Eshun, Space UN, Tokyo; An Uncommon Thread, Hauser & Wirth, Bruton (2025); The Poetics of Dimensions, Institute of Contemporary Art San Francisco, CA (2024-5); The 15th Dakar Biennale (2024-5); Lentos Kunstmuseum, Linz (2024-5); The Whitworth, Manchester (2023-4); Dulwich Picture Gallery, London (2023-24); Saint Louis Art Museum, MO (2023-24); Gagosian, London (2023); and Pippy Houldsworth Gallery, London (2022). Collections include Baltimore Museum of Art, MD; The Government Art Collection, UK; The Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach, FL; The Whitworth, Manchester; Women’s Art Collection, Murray Edwards College, Cambridge; The Newark Museum of Art, NJ; and Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami, FL.

Courtesy Pippy Houldsworth Gallery.

Read More

Installation Views

About the Artist

In her painting, Nengi Omuku (b. 1987, Nigeria) studies nature, heritage and the interior psychological experience. Painting on sanyan, a tightly woven Aso-oke fabric crafted by the Yoruba people, she presents scenes of figures in flux, interacting with one another and the landscape around them in an atmosphere of meditative collectivity. Omuku’s figures are otherworldly in their ambiguity, their faces hazy and undefined with mottled layers of oil paint. In states of rest or quiet collective movement, the artist’s figures appear to float and waver, inviting considerations of interiority, spirituality, subjecthood and group identity.

View Artist Profile

Also Exhibiting at Pippy Houldsworth Gallery

About the Gallery
Pippy Houldsworth Gallery is a leading contemporary art gallery committed to championing diverse voices and creating long-term institutional visibility for its artists. Since relocating to its current premises in 2011, the gallery has focused on increasing the representation of female and non-binary artists, and fostering intergenerational dialogue across its programme.

The gallery has presented the first UK solo exhibitions of significant artist such as Jacqueline de Jong, Faith Ringgold, Dindga McCannon, and Carrie Mae Weems, while also providing early and sustained support to a new generation of artists, including Jadé Fadojutimi, Wangari Mathenge, Nengi Omuku, Sophia Loeb, and Shaqúelle Whyte. This commitment extends to The Box, the gallery’s micro-project space, which has hosted ambitious commissions by influential voices such as Susan Hiller, Martha Rosler, Yinka Shonibare CBE, Ai Weiwei, Alina Szapocznikow, and Woody De Othello.

A defining pillar of the gallery’s ethos is to build enduring institutional recognition for its artists. To that end, Pippy Houldsworth Gallery places significant emphasis on relationships with museums and public collections, facilitating major acquisitions internationally. Recent placements include Tate, London; Centre Pompidou, Paris; The Metropolitan Museum of Art and The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C.; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; LACMA and Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; The Studio Museum in Harlem; Columbus Museum of Art; Nasher Museum of Art, Durham; The Whitworth, Manchester; The Hepworth Wakefield; Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh; Baltimore Museum of Art; and New Orleans Museum of Art, among others.
View Gallery Profile
Address
6 Heddon Street
London
United Kingdom
Opening Hours
Tuesday – Friday, 10am – 6pm

Saturday, 11am – 6pm

Closed Sunday and Monday
(1)
London 6 Heddon Street
Pippy Houldsworth Gallery
6 Heddon Street, London, United Kingdom
+44 20 7734 7760

Opening hours
Tuesday – Friday, 10am – 6pm

Saturday, 11am – 6pm

Closed Sunday and Monday
The art world in focus