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Khari Turner

b. 1991, United States

Khari Turner was born in April 1991 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. His paints translate truth into abstract portraits of reverence. His work, saturated with a desire to connect, Turner’s chosen medium incorporates ocean, lake, and river water from all over the world as a solvent. Identity and memory join us to Black history intrinsic and a part of American history. To cleanse, heal, and tether, his brushstrokes, and drippings bring us closer to those ancestors who reach back from the not-so-distant past. While viewers may think of Jackson Pollock in these instances, consider that the word ‘drippings’ (lardo) is used in southern American vernacular to describe unusable animal renderings. Just as specific characteristics associated with Black people - large lips, broad noses, du-rags, and long, brightly colored nails - have been deemed unprofessional or unattractive by some aspects of society. Turner’s visual lexicon has used the device of obscured countenance to have these portraits speak with dexterous confidence, reflecting inherent value to a viewer of any background in all its parts. Through including ocean and lake water, Turner reminds us that we are one through time, space, and, more importantly, cellular memory. Turner focuses on the celebration of life.