Page 15 - retrospective_d'un_artiste
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Adu Jahmal

                                       Born Andre Lahori (American, b.1967)








                                                                              Artistic  Approach




                                       From conception through implementation each creation is based on rhythms, colors and sounds from
                                       Adu’s early Childhood in Chicago Bronzeville neighborhood.   He embodies the frequency of life and
                                       transposes them into visual compositions.  The complexities of math formulas and experiments brings
                                       out his inner scientist.  Zooming in on their own details as small as a pixel to create light or allowing the
                                       object to cure by abstracting water molecules to settle in its place.  From the hues to the blues, adapting
                                       color palettes from past ancestry to current.   Reflecting on conversation shared by elders and people
                                       who lived to the fullest, his aim is more like a responsibility and a reminder to those who perhaps forgot.
                                       However his dreams allow him to travel through space in full gear, listening to the rhythm of air to carve
                                       a concise form or the reflection of the sun to maintain the perception of depth in each object. Research is
                                       essential for it allows the facts to maintain the focus of each subject and the importance is never
                                       compromised.  The drum keeps the rhythm true to its form.  Breathing in and out each layer that make up
                                       the symphony and all of it’s arrangements becomes the ingredients to bring forth the soul of life into
                                       each art piece.  As he dances from one side of a canvas to the other each creation is to uplift another.  His
                                       search continues to find the best from the worst case scenario. Adu has told quite a few interviewers that
                                       “You can't walk past the great Chicago muralist Caton Mitchell's art and not want to speak about your
                                       world in bold, colorful strokes.  Likewise, you can't grow up passing great blues clubs like “Theresa's”
                                       on your way to school and not want to speak to other people through music. Chicago's Bronzeville
                                       neighborhood combusted artistic expressiveness in us all and wrapped it around the essence of all of our
                                       daily triumphs, struggles and very existence.  Today, I can go anywhere, anytime -- and understand
                                       people and their culture through the essential languages of art and music.  A beautiful thing.  I wish more
                                       of us were rooted in the natural rhythms of existential, expressive living!”
                                        Celebration of life is a must…...more champagne please.



















































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