Works
Bio
A leading figure in Congolese popular painting, Chéri Benga’s depictions of everyday life in Kinshasa are painted with simplicity, humour and mockery. Bright blocks of colour and dark-lined contours are characteristic of his style.
Born in 1957 in Boma, Bas-Congo (DRC). He lives in Kinshasa.
Hyppolite Benga Nzau, who is known as Chéri Benga, has been painting for 50 years, which makes him one of the elder statesmen of the current crop of Congolese painters. He is also one of the pioneers of popular art. Although the term is sometimes overused, in this case it is perfectly valid. In accordance with the meaning given by those who coined the term with Chéri Samba in mind, it designates a form of art that comes from the people – in the sense that artists draw inspiration from what they see around them – and can be understood by the people. Chéri Benga depicts scenes from everyday life with simplicity: people fighting, swaggering, dancing, people suffering when the power cuts out, people lacking everything.
The title that he has given himself embellished the façade of his former legendary studio on avenue Victoire – L’international! And, in fact, his art has enabled him to travel: to France in 2006 to the Fondation Blachère, to Louvain in 2010 and Antwerp in 2011, together with JP Mika to represent popular artists at group exhibitions; again, to Belgium in 2016, to Mauritius in 2017, and to Leipzig in Germany in 2019. In 2024, he celebrates his 50th anniversary of career with the “Génération Chéri” exhibition in Paris, where he shares the bill with Chéri Chérin and Chéri Samba, also in activity for five decades.
In situ
More
news
Angalia is an exhibitor at the 2024 Lille Art Up!
29 January 2024
‘CONGO/Passé composé’, opening exhibition in Paris
29 January 2023
2019 – a fruitful year for Congolese popular painting
10 October 2019
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