Janiva Ellis | |
Birth Date: | 1987 |
Birth Place: | Oakland, California |
Training: | California College of the Arts |
Nationality: | American |
Field: | Painting |
Janiva Ellis (born 1987) is an American painter based in Brooklyn, NY and Los Angeles, CA. Ellis creates figurative paintings that explore the African-American female experience, while incorporating her journey of self-identity within the Black community.[1]
Born in Oakland, California, Ellis moved to Hawaii at the age of 7, moving between the islands of Kauai and Oahu.[2] While having a black father, Ellis was raised solely by her white mother in the state of Hawaii, which had a small black population. Ellis investigates in her work the complex racial dynamic of her upbringing and the biracial origins of her identity. Ellis studied painting at the California College of the Arts in San Francisco, graduating in 2012.
Upon graduating in 2012, Ellis took a pause from the art world and returned to Hawaii. Ellis did not find any inspiration from the New York art scene, nor companions of the same ethnic background. This was a big loss for Ellis's self identity and reasons why she left Hawaii to begin with. As she said for an article Hawaii was, “a place where I didn’t know any black person until I was 18.”[3] After taking a few years to find herself, Ellis returned to New York in 2017 with a new outlook on her upbringing and a sense of self identity being both black and white.
In one of Ellis's recent works, The Angles, held at the Hammer Vault Gallery, in Los Angeles, California, she relates her experience of feeling confusion and chaos of the self and the beauty of when one finds the self and accepts what is to be in the work. Critic Aram Moshayedi writes, "Decay and loss permeateThe Angels, yet the intimate experience of looking closely and allowing oneself to succumb to the painting’s wrapping embrace reveals moments of flourish and signs of life amidst the debris."[4]
Ellis describes her paintings as, “not only an attempt to communicate to nonblack women my experience, but also to call to other black women, ‘Do you feel this, too?’” Critic Rachel Corbett has commended Ellis for the psychoanalytic tension in her paintings, stating "The calm country landscapes in the background of Ellis’s paintings clash with her psychologically tormented subjects, who are often tyrannized by cartoon characters."[5] Occasionally, Ellis's paintings incorporate religious symbology; such as lambs or angels, referencing the canon of religious painting. In each of her works Ellis continues to share her story incorporating different parts of her self identity. In 2017, Ellis presented "Lick Shot" at 47 Canal,[6] her first solo show in New York City. In 2018, Ellis participated in the New Museum Triennial - “Songs for Sabotage.” Then in 2019 Ellis was included in the Whitney Biennial curated by Rujeko Hockley and Jane Panetta.[7]