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Midcity, Los Angeles

Esmaa Mohamoud

What Does Webster’s Say About Soul?

Roberts Projects

27 September – 16 November 2025

Roberts Projects is pleased to present What Does Webster’s Say About Soul?, an exhibition by Esmaa Mohamoud and the artist’s first solo presentation with the gallery. Featuring a suite of new sculptures that build upon Mohamoud’s rich visual lexicon, this exhibition considers the loss of innocence experienced by Black youth and how these experiences become imprinted on the body, mind, spirit and soul. Known for her conceptual practice that incorporates familiar objects and symbols from Black visual culture—including football equipment, peacock chairs, lowriders and butterflies—Mohamoud reimagines her source materials by transforming their scale and layering cultural references to recontextualize their interpreted meaning. The exhibition’s title comes from Gil Scott-Heron’s spoken word poem Comment #1 (1970), which earnestly describes the violence of racial and social inequality in America during that time. The deep significance of soul, and the harm that can be inflicted on it, is what Mohamoud’s sculptures examine from the perspective of Black children who must navigate a world that robs them of their innocence. Esmaa Mohamoud (b. 1992 London, ON, Canada; lives and works in Brooklyn, NY) is a conceptual artist working at the intersection of sculpture and installation. Her sculptures explore the politics of race and identity through references to and recontextualizing of objects from popular culture. Solo exhibitions include What Does Webster’s Say About Soul?, Roberts Projects, Los Angeles (2025); Complex Dreams, the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum, East Lansing, MI (2024); Let Them Consume Me In The Light, Kavi Gupta Gallery, Chicago, IL (2023); It Cannot Always Be Night, Arsenal New York, NY (2022) and Esmaa Mohamoud: To Play in the Face of Certain Defeat (2019-2022), Museum London, Ontario, Canada, travelled to Art Gallery of Hamilton, Ottawa Art Gallery, Winnipeg Art Gallery and Art Gallery of Alberta, Canada. Group exhibitions include Sports Culture, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, CA (2024), travelling to Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, AR and Perez Art Museum, Miami, FL; Resistance Training, Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum (2023) and In These Truths, Albright-Knox, Buffalo, NY (2022). Mohamoud’s work is featured in numerous public collections, including the Art Gallery of Hamilton, Ontario; the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto, Canada; the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum; the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Quebec, Canada; Museum London, Ontario; the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa; Weatherspoon Art Museum, Greensboro, NC and the Winnipeg Art Gallery, Manitoba, Canada, among others.

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442 S La Brea Ave

La, NY

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