isee.art

Price
€600
Medium
wood
Technique
carving
Dimensions
60 × 40 × 7 cm
Year
2026
About the Work
“Ehiosu draws from the Edo idea of Ehi, the personal spirit that guides a person’s destiny. The name means destiny guide, and that felt right for this figure. She isn’t a portrait of anyone specific, she’s more of a presence, a reminder that strength, balance, and direction can sit quietly inside a person. In a way, she also reflects my own path. I’m self-taught, I didn’t plan to become an artist or to work with wood or engraving. I just followed what felt natural at the time, and somehow it led me here. Looking back, it feels like something was guiding me, even when I wasn’t fully aware of it. Ehiosu is about guidance as something steady and quiet. A figure that holds space, that watches, and that reminds me of the inner direction I’m following, even when I don’t always realise it.”




Artist
Shyne Eghosa (b. 1975) is a Nigerian-born, self-taught artist whose work explores memory and identity through bold, textured compositions. Since beginning to paint in early 2023, he has developed a raw and expressive style rooted in Neo-Expressionism, Art Brut, and a Trans-Cultural approach where African heritage and European diasporic experience collide. Working primarily on wood panels with acrylics, oil sticks, pastels, and fabric, he draws inspiration from traditional African masks and crafts, as well as artists like Jean-Michel Basquiat, Paul Klee, and Manolo Valdés. Many viewers relate his work to Basquiat, though his palette and forms also reflect the modernist spirit of Barcelona, where he currently lives. His choice of wood as a primary surface is rooted in childhood memories grounding his practice in personal history and an approach that embraces the raw, unrefined nature of the materials themselves. He is the founder of Unmaking Art Studio, a nonprofit space in Barcelona where a diverse group of emerging artists come together to share ideas, create, and exhibit. For him, “unmaking” is not about destruction, it’s about stripping away what no longer fits and giving shape to something more honest. As he puts it: “My art is a conversation between cultures, history, and my personal journey. Each piece is a step forward in discovering who I am.” Though new to the art scene, Shyne's work was selected for the juried Biennale di Chianciano 2024 in Tuscany, Italy. He has also exhibited in various group shows in Barcelona, and currently has work with Tobian Art Gallery in Florence, Italy.
Exhibitions