Nigerian creative Goodluck Jane has transitioned from fashion design into mixed-media visual art, marking a significant evolution in her career as her works begin to gain attention in both local and international gallery spaces.
Jane’s move into fine art is not a departure from her fashion background but an extension of it. Years spent manipulating textiles for garments have informed her current studio practice, where she now layers fabric, paper and paint to explore themes of memory, identity and emotion.
Her training in fashion sharpened her sensitivity to materials, understanding how cloth folds, stretches and responds to touch. That material intelligence is evident in her mixed-media compositions, where Ankara fabric, painted surfaces and cut silhouettes interact in carefully balanced arrangements.
Unlike fashion, which is driven by seasonal cycles and commercial timelines, fine art has allowed Jane to slow down. In the studio, she works through a patient, exploratory process, often beginning with materials rather than fixed concepts. Fabric and paint guide the composition, creating layered works that suggest meaning rather than explicitly define it.
Pieces such as Bloodline in Bold Print and Bodies in Blue: An Ankara Study feature fragmented silhouettes emerging from patterned backdrops. The use of Ankara cloth moves beyond decoration, functioning as a visual language tied to heritage, nostalgia and cultural identity. Through cutting, layering and juxtaposition, Jane creates works that invite viewers to reflect on both form and process.
Her background also shapes her engagement with the public. Jane has facilitated workshops for children at the Yemisi Shyllon Museum of Art and collaborated with the La Mode Disability Foundation, integrating education and inclusion into her broader practice. These engagements reinforce her belief that art is an ongoing dialogue, between materials, generations and communities.
More recent works, including Clothed in Care, present overlapping female silhouettes layered with bold textile patterns. The compositions balance intimacy and structure, encouraging viewers to look closely and consider the relationship between surface and story.
Jane’s expanding portfolio has been showcased internationally at institutions such as The Africa Center and Rele Gallery, reflecting growing recognition of her evolving practice.
Her transition challenges the notion of a simple career pivot. Instead, it reflects a continuity of craft, where the discipline, colour sensibility and structural awareness developed in fashion now underpin a fine art practice grounded in process and reflection.
With her move into mixed media, Goodluck Jane demonstrates how creative evolution can build on existing foundations, transforming fabric once tailored for the body into layered works that speak to memory, identity and contemporary African expression.
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