Intimate dialogues by Adedamola Adebesin

Art, for me, is a language of the subconscious—an intimate dialogue between inner emotions, personal experiences, and the realities I observe around me. My creative process often begins with impressions that linger in my mind: moments, memories, conversations, and silent observations that may seem ordinary but carry deeper emotional weight. Through painting, I translate these fragments into visual narratives that invite viewers to pause and reflect beyond the surface.

My artistic style is deeply rooted in personal experience. Every piece I create carries traces of my journey, emotions, and evolving perspective on life. Rather than striving for perfection, I embrace vulnerability, spontaneity, and authenticity in my work. I allow colors, textures, and forms to emerge naturally, often letting intuition guide the process. This approach helps me create works that feel raw, honest, and deeply human.

Social observation also plays a significant role in my practice. I am constantly inspired by the dynamics of human behavior, societal structures, and the unseen struggles people navigate daily. My art often reflects themes of resilience, identity, inequality, hope, and transformation. I aim to capture not only what is visible in society but also the emotional undertones that are often ignored or overlooked.

Ultimately, my work is an invitation to connect—with oneself, with others, and with the deeper truths hidden beneath everyday life. I want my paintings to evoke emotion, provoke thought, and create space for meaningful conversations. Through my art, I strive to preserve fleeting moments, challenge perspectives, and remind people that beauty and meaning can emerge from even the most complex human experiences.

written by ©Adedamola Adebesin

Adedamola Adebesin lives in Edmonton, Alberta. Studied Drawing & Painting at Auchi Polytechnic, Auchi, Edo State, Nigeria. Born September 2, 1976

Six Poems Uche Nduka

SHED

But the psyche.

                   But the anarchy.

But the abyss

                 turned entirely back

                                        on itself.

But the altar. The crone.

                  But the panther. Testimony

from a tranced pirate.

                    But the music that showed up.

But the fast train.

                    The visitation.

But the asylum & sanctuary.

                   But the breakdown.

The breakthrough.

                     But the brown-eyed barometer.

FLASH FROM A MAZE

An overfed guitar,

tired balls.

The fag-ends

                     of rambles.

So what.

I write like this

              to wake sleepy monks

in the wilderness

                 of the street.

The end of summer

will be when

                  memory matters.

Wanderers head home.

So much given already.

So much given.

So much to give.

Do you remember

eating pussy

at sundown?

I do.

SEEING IT CLEARLY

Stumbling in your

alphabets the lovers

went up up up

loosed upon the island

                              triply blessed

our arguments

& disagreements

                    are part of

                                  the full picture

I was lost

irrevocably

inside your knickers

& now

         you’re gone

pounding the pavement

                           poems stuffed

                                             to the gills

BRAND NEW SHIELD

Losing interest

is beside the point, we

didn’t dare figure out

the prequel, a woman’s busy

hands in the rainy season

of a nation’s beginnings,

this unholy war in holy lands,

latitudes left each other a

note, sailboat of our spirit,

those heedless selfies, the

blisters of blue irises, somehow

we braved the blast of

loneliness & sang out of tune,

no resolution, no conclusion, we

hung a new star over gathering rains.

RESCALE

Three thistles.

Four inkwells.

Terracotta tracker.

Clay coil pots.

Weaver star.

Fooling with gouache.

Black line.

Osprey in water.

You’re back again

on the sunroof of

the car as it speeds

down the freeway

with the wind in your hair

or at least try to

in the public mirror

reality & words

an actuality common

to both of us

wedged between what

is said & what is.

IF THE STAMEN

The mountain

remembered us

rainbow in the attic

the riddle

is our measure

all theology begins

with lovers that leap

& curse

don’t expect me

to present a balanced picture

this poem is a ballet

without shoes

I cling to your legs

with their stores of sweetness

like the beneficent cunt

opening its wings

I reject the entreaties

of dead language

you dance the book

from right to left

the ocean is our sky

Written by  © Uche Nduka

Uche Nduka
Photo by Fiona Gardner

Uche Nduka was born in Nigeria to a Christian family. Raised bilingual in Igbo and English, he earned his BA from the University of Nigeria and his MFA from Long Island University, Brooklyn. He left Nigeria in 1994 and settled in Germany after winning a fellowship from the Goethe Institute. He lived in Germany and Holland for the next decade and immigrated to the United States in 2007. Nduka is the author of numerous collections of poetry and prose, including Living in Public (2018), Nine East (2013), Ijele (2012), and eel on reef (2007), all of which were published after he arrived in the United States. Earlier collections include Heart’s Field (2005); If Only the Night (2002); Chiaroscuro (1997), which won the Association of Nigerian Authors Poetry Prize; The Bremen Poems (1995); Second Act (1994); and Flower Child (1988). Belltime Letters (2000) is a collection of prose. His work has been translated into German, Finnish, Italian, Dutch, and Romanian.

Books by Uche Nduka

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Featured Picture: Moon in Capricorn. Oil, Collage 2022 Mitchell Pluto

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