Beya Gille Gacha (born 1990) is a sculptor. Her work is in the collections of the World Bank and the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art.[1]

Biography

Gacha was born in Paris to a Cameroonian mother and French father. She studied at the École du Louvre before leaving in 2013 to found NÉFE, an artist collective.

Gacha combines plastic arts, including draftsmanship, with writing. Today, beading the surfaces of figurative sculptures serves as the artist's trademark. For her, drawing upon the longstanding practice of the Cameroon grasslands of encasing carved figures and domestic objects with glass beads traded, sometimes traced from as far as the Czech Republic, speaks to both her Bamileke heritage and the longstanding trade of beads that unites Africa with Europe and Asia. For the artist, beading figures and body parts illuminates underrepresented global connections while offering a humanistic focus that draws the eye to and focuses attention on individual human value and personal experience.[2][3][4]

Her work has been featured in exhibitions in Dakar, Marrakech, Paris, Rome, and Stockholm, and can be found in the collection of the World Bank and the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 National Museum of African Art. "Beya Gille Gacha". africa.si.edu. Retrieved March 19, 2022.
  2. Ehonian, Virginie (3 June 2017). "Autopsie d'un art nouveau: 3 questions à l'artiste Beya Gille Gacha". Retrieved March 19, 2022.
  3. L'Agence à PAris. "Beya Gille Gacha" (PDF). L'agence à Paris. Retrieved March 24, 2019.
  4. Castiglio, Kelly (December 8, 2018). "Beya Gille Gacha and the Art of Perlage". Archived from the original on May 15, 2019. Retrieved May 24, 2019.
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