Sculpture IV | Stanley Onah & Subodh Gour I Resin Sculpture

£1,250.00

Resin Sculpture Finished with Acrylic Paint

Size: 16cm x 31cm (Edition of 1)

Collaborative Sculptures by Stanley Onah and Subodh Gour
From the series From Ancient Braids to Contemporary Fades

In this remarkable collaboration, Stanley Onah and sculptor Subodh Gour bring the language of Onah’s paintings into three dimensions, transforming the symbolic power of hair and adornment into tactile form. Each sculpture is a one-of-a-kind, hand-painted work, a living translation of the artist’s portraits, where strands become structure and stories are shaped in space.

Here, hair takes on sculptural weight: coiled, braided, twisted, or smoothed into form, it becomes both architecture and archive. Gour’s craftsmanship and Onah’s painterly vision merge to honour the same themes that run through the paintings, heritage, identity, and transformation — while inviting viewers to move around the works, to see how light and shadow trace new meanings across familiar motifs.

These sculptures stand as physical embodiments of From Ancient Braids to Contemporary Fades, works that bridge painting and presence, past and present, image and object. They remind us that hair is more than surface: it is structure, story, and sculpture all at once.

Resin Sculpture Finished with Acrylic Paint

Size: 16cm x 31cm (Edition of 1)

Collaborative Sculptures by Stanley Onah and Subodh Gour
From the series From Ancient Braids to Contemporary Fades

In this remarkable collaboration, Stanley Onah and sculptor Subodh Gour bring the language of Onah’s paintings into three dimensions, transforming the symbolic power of hair and adornment into tactile form. Each sculpture is a one-of-a-kind, hand-painted work, a living translation of the artist’s portraits, where strands become structure and stories are shaped in space.

Here, hair takes on sculptural weight: coiled, braided, twisted, or smoothed into form, it becomes both architecture and archive. Gour’s craftsmanship and Onah’s painterly vision merge to honour the same themes that run through the paintings, heritage, identity, and transformation — while inviting viewers to move around the works, to see how light and shadow trace new meanings across familiar motifs.

These sculptures stand as physical embodiments of From Ancient Braids to Contemporary Fades, works that bridge painting and presence, past and present, image and object. They remind us that hair is more than surface: it is structure, story, and sculpture all at once.