Michaela Yearwood-Dan: No Time for Despair

Michaela Yearwood-Dan: No Time for Despair
14th May, 2025– 2nd August, 2025
Hauser & Wirth London
23 Savile Row
London W1S 2ET
Through paintings, sculpture, site-specific murals and installations, Michaela Yearwood-Dan endeavors to build spaces of community, abundance and joy. Yearwood-Dan’s debut exhibition with Hauser & Wirth will take place in London, featuring new paintings ranging from monumental to intimate in scale, including an expansive 11m-long panelled landscape painting, alongside richly adorned ceramic sculptures and benches. The lyrical quality of the paintings will be complemented by a new sound piece made in collaboration with the composer Alex Gruz, a reflection on the analogous experience of art and music alike.
The title of the show, ‘No Time for Despair,’ is a call to action, referencing an article written by Toni Morrison for The Nation, which states, ‘In times of dread, artists must never choose to remain silent.’

We’ll be free (someday)
2025
Oil, acrylic, paper and glass beads on plastic and canvas
240 x 200 cm / 94 1/2 x 78 3/4 in
Courtesy the artist, Hauser & Wirth and Marianne Boesky Gallery
© Michaela Yearwood-Dan Photo: Deniz Guzel
Yearwood-Dan’s unique visual language draws on a diverse range of influences, including Blackness, queerness, femininity and healing rituals. Moving freely between media and resisting any singular definition of identity, the artist explores the possibilities of creating spaces—physical, pastoral, metaphorical—that allow for unlimited and unbounded ways of being.
Lush and brightly hued, Yearwood-Dan’s work is at once personal and political. She often engages colors and materials for their symbolic associations, such as ceramic petals collaged into her recent paintings, as seen in ‘Fxxk the opinions and all the logistics’ (2025), that evoke the queer histories of carnations and pansies. The surfaces of her canvases are dense with generous and purposeful swathes of lavish pigments, as well as textures and embellishments using subversive and non-traditional materials such as gold leaf, Swarovski crystals, sequins and glitter.
Language intertwines with botanical motifs throughout the works, where abstract habitats not only teem with hints of plant life but also inscribed lines of text from song lyrics, poetry or her own diaristic writings. Her words, in works such as ‘We’ll be free (someday)’ (2025), beckon the viewer into a vivid, welcoming world of paradox, play and contemplation formed within an atmosphere of swirling forms and brilliant chromaticity. A monumental five-panelled landscape work acts almost as a mural, a vista into another world, and is in dialogue with large-scale paintings and a collection of bonus tracks or ‘B-Sides’, jewel-like, intimate versions of their larger counterparts.

Fxxk the opinions and all the logistics
2025
Oil, glass beads, paper and ribbon on canvas
240 x 200 cm / 94 1/2 x 78 3/4 in
Courtesy the artist, Hauser & Wirth and Marianne Boesky Gallery
© Michaela Yearwood-Dan Photo: Deniz Guzel
In recent years, Yearwood-Dan’s practice has expanded to include sculpture, extending her visual vocabulary. The exhibition features joyful ceramic sculptures on purpose-built plinths as well as two benches crafted in wood that are partially painted and adorned with ceramics that pour with plant-life. She encourages the viewer to move around each work, shaping the experience of surrounding space and atmosphere. With their luxuriant tropical shades and decorative flourishes, Yearwood-Dan’s sculptural works enrich an oeuvre alive with individuality.
Michaela Yearwood-Dan: No Time for Despair opens on the 14th of May, 2025 until the 2nd of August, 2025 at Hauser & Wirth London
©2025 Hauser & Wirth