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Gerald Williams USA, b. 1941
Face in the Crowd #4, 2026Acrylic on canvas40 x 30 x 1 1/2 in.
(101.6 x 76.2 x 3.81 cm)9493Further images
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AfriCOBRA founder Gerald Williams has long worked at the intersection of abstraction and figuration, a condition he has described as “mimesis at midpoint.” Emerging from his early years with the...AfriCOBRA founder Gerald Williams has long worked at the intersection of abstraction and figuration, a condition he has described as “mimesis at midpoint.” Emerging from his early years with the collective, his practice initially balanced recognizable form with rhythmic abstraction before gradually expanding into increasingly immersive fields of accumulation. Across decades spent living in Africa beginning in the late 1970s, followed by extended periods in Asia and Europe before returning to the United States in the 2000s, Williams developed the meticulous “dot” language that continues to define his work today. Shaped in part by the intensity and clarity of East African light, as well as by global visual traditions ranging from beadwork to pointillism to print-based CMYK processes, these works reflect a sustained inquiry into how image is constructed through repetition, structure, and perception. Williams has described the dot as both unit and system—an elemental mark through which image, collective identity, field, and meaning are formed. In this sense, the paintings propose a kind of universality: a visual field in which all forms are composed of smaller interrelated parts, hovering between order and dispersion, structure and flux. Far from the optical exercises of the French masters, these labor-intensive works unfold as meditative fields of attention, where perception itself becomes the subject.
Face in a Crowd #4, 2026 extends this system directly into portraiture. An individual figure emerges from a dense cosmic accumulation of painted marks. His identity is built through repetition. The mask-like face that surfaces within this composition carries an affinity with African and Indigenous masking traditions, sharing visual logics in which the face operates as a site of transformation, mediation, and collective presence. Here, recognition is assembled slowly through rhythm, proximity, and fragmentation. In this way, the work brings Williams’ broader pointillist language into explicit dialogue with figuration. The face's gaze is distributed across the surface and reconstituted through fields of color and gesture, creating a practice of portraiture rooted in accumulation, where individuality and collectivity are held in continuous tension, and where the act of seeing becomes inseparable from the act of building meaning through countless small, deliberate marks.Provenance
Artist's Studio Woodlawn, Chicago
Kavi Gupta Chicago
Exhibitions
Gerald Williams: Screaming at the Sky, Kavi Gupta, Chicago, IL, USA 2026
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