Slavery, Sunset and the African Journey


This painting reflects an impressionistic meditation on slavery as a journey, physical, emotional, and spiritual set beneath a burning African sunset. 

The figures are rendered as silhouettes, stripped of identity and detail, not to diminish them, but to allow them to stand for countless unnamed lives forced into motion.

The sunset dominates the composition, glowing with beauty and cruelty at once. It marks transition rather than rest: the end of freedom, the beginning of suffering, and the slow erasure of certainty. Chains are suggested rather than described, echoing both physical bondage and the invisible weight carried across generations.

The road stretches forward without promise or conclusion. In this work, the artist does not seek to narrate history, but to evoke memory and to invite the viewer to walk quietly behind those who were made to journey into the unknown, carrying dignity even as everything else was taken.

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