Ablade Glover

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Prof. Ablade Glover

Ablade Glover
FRSA
,
Ghanaian
Alma materKwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology;
Central School of Art and Design (BA);
Kent State University (MA);
Ohio State University (PhD)
Known forVisual art, painting
AwardsFlagstar Award

Ablade Glover

Life Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, London.[3] He was Associate Professor, Head of the Department of Art Education and Dean of the College of Art at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology until 1994.[4]

Early life and education

Born in the La community of Accra in what was then the Gold Coast (present-day Ghana), Emmanuel Ablade Glover had his early education at Presbyterian mission schools.[5] He had his teacher training education at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi (1957–58), before winning a scholarship to study textile design at London's Central School of Art and Design (1959–62).[1]

Glover returned to Ghana to teach for a while, before another scholarship, given by

University of Newcastle upon Tyne (1964–65), where he began to use the tool that shaped his technique when his teacher suggested a palette knife to apply paint, rather than brushes.[1] Glover went on to further his education in the US, first at Kent State University, where he earned his master's degree, and then at Ohio State University[6] where he was awarded a PhD in 1974.[1][3]

Career

Ablade GLOVER, Painting in Yellow, Oil on canvas

Academic

Returning to Ghana after receiving his doctorate, Glover taught for the next two decades at the

College of Art in the University of Kumasi, becoming Department Head and College Dean.[1] He rose to the rank of an associate professor within that period.[4]

Artists Alliance Gallery

He founded the Accra-based Artists Alliance Gallery,[7][8] which has roots in an earlier gallery he founded in the 1960s and in its new incarnation was opened by Kofi Annan in 2008.[9] As well as being an outlet for Glover's own work, this gallery features the work of other significant artists such as Owusu-Ankomah and George O. Hughes, together with collectible local artifacts.[10]

Style

Glover's style has been described as "swirling between abstraction and realism",[1] and his subject matter typically favours large urban landscapes, lorryparks, shantytowns, thronging markets and studies of the women of Ghana.[11] Asked about his influences, he has said: "...if you notice, you see a lot of women in my work and people do ask me, why do you paint so many women? The first time I was asked the question, I didn't think about it. I just opened my mouth and said because they are more beautiful than men. That wasn't a serious answer. It was later, thinking about it, that it struck me they have courage. Women of Africa have some courage and they show it. When they walk the street, they are elegant. They are courageous, they are brave. When they are going about, they show it. Men don't do that, do they?"[3]

Honours and recognition

In 1998, Glover received the Flagstar Award by ACRAG (the Arts Critics and Reviewers Association of Ghana), and was also honoured with the distinguished alumni award from the African-American Institute in New York City. He has received several national and international awards, including the

Life Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, London.[3] He is also a Fellow of the Ghana Academy of Arts and Sciences.[12]

Selected exhibitions

  • Ablade Glover: 80th Anniversary, October Gallery, London (3 July–2 August 2014)
  • Transmission Part 2, Tasneem Gallery, Barcelona, Spain (15 November 2012 – 30 March 2013)
  • I See You, Tasneem Gallery (6 July–17 November 2010)
  • Ablade Glover: 75 Year Anniversary, October Gallery, London (2 July–1 August 2009)
  • Visions & Dreams, Tasneem Gallery (13 March–31 May 2008)

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Juliet Highet, "Ablade Glover – Ghanaian mirage" Archived 30 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine, New African Magazine, 6 August 2014.
  2. ^ "Ablade Glover: 80th Anniversary", October Gallery, 2014.
  3. ^ a b c d "Why I paint women, markets; Ablade Glover Digs Deep", GhanaWeb, 16 July 2012.
  4. ^ a b "Ablade Glover", October Gallery.
  5. Emmanuel Akyeampong and Steven J. Niven (eds), "Glover, Emmanuel Ablade (1934–)"
    , Dictionary of African Biography, Oxford University Press, 2012.
  6. ^ David Owusu-Ansah, "Glover, Ablade (1934–)", Historical Dictionary of Ghana, Rowman & Littlefield, 2014, p. 158.
  7. ^ Artists Alliance Gallery on Facebook.
  8. ^ Ruth-Ellen Davis, "Interview: Ablade Glover — The veteran Ghanaian artist discusses his kaleidoscopic take on African life", Time Out Accra, 21 November 2016.
  9. ^ Safia Dickersbach, "Ablade Glover — The Black Stars of Ghana", Modern Ghana, 29 August 2013.
  10. ^ "Artists Alliance Gallery, Labadi", Time Out Accra, 15 July 2013.
  11. ^ "Ablade Glover", Tasneem Gallery.
  12. ^ Graphic.com.gh (14 July 2017). "Prof Ablade Glover delivers keynote address at Atuu Festival of Arts launch". Graphic Online. Retrieved 19 January 2021.

External links