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Temi Coker’s First Home Collection Brings Art Into Everyday Use

Temi Coker’s First Home Collection Brings Art Into Everyday Use Temi Coker launches The Temi Coker Home Collection. By Okla Jones ·Updated January 21, 2026 Getting your Trinity Audio player ready…

Artist Temi Coker is expanding his practice beyond the wall with his first home collection. The 18-piece debut, launching January 21, 2026, brings his visual language into everyday objects designed for daily use.

For Coker, moving into home design was a practical extension of his work. His art has long drawn from personal history, whether applied to illustration or commercial projects. With this collection, the format changed. Plates, vases, and sculptural objects replaced prints and murals, designed to exist in use rather than on display.

Growing up in Lagos, Coker was surrounded by color, texture, and pattern that carried meaning beyond decoration. Now living in Dallas, he views the home as a place where those histories can shift and overlap. Elements inspired by Nigerian textiles appear throughout, but the forms remain simple, made to fit into modern spaces without requiring context.

“This collection honors the vibrant textiles, colors, and culture of my Nigerian childhood while embracing my wife’s African American heritage, creating pieces that speak to both identities,” Coker said. “The living room is the heart of our home, where the majority of our family memories happen, so I designed these pieces to live in that sacred space and be accessible to every family. Partnering with Walmart feels full circle; my first pair of shoes were from Walmart, and so many people in my community shop there—so being able to launch my first home collection with them is extremely special.”

“My children are the product of two cultures—African and African American,” he added. “I wanted to create heirlooms that celebrate the beauty in that duality.”

Temi Coker’s First Home Collection Brings Art Into Everyday UseThe Temi Coker Home Collection

The vases reference braided patterns and natural hair, motifs Coker has explored before. He describes them as functional containers first. What they hold, or whether they hold anything at all, is left to the owner. Also, several pieces were developed through 3D printing and manufactured in the United States, allowing the artist to stay closely involved.

Priced from $14 to $320, the pieces were made for everyday homes, not limited releases. Coker wanted the objects to be used regularly and kept over time, not treated as collectibles. The collection is available exclusively at Walmart, and a short film released with the launch traces his >Google, Nike, Netflix, Adobe, and The New York Times, but this project feels a bit more personal. In the below conversation, he speaks candidly about timing, family, and why now felt like the moment to move beyond the wall and into people’s lives.

What made now feel like the right moment to step into home décor with The Temi Coker Home Collection?

This moment felt right because my life has shifted. Becoming a husband and a father changed how I think about space, legacy, and what we surround ourselves with every day. Home became more than a place to land. It became a place where memories are formed, where identity is shaped, and where love lives. I have spent years telling stories through posters design , creating campaigns for brands, designing clothes etc. Stepping into home felt like a natural evolution. It was time to create work that lives with people. Work that holds space for their everyday lives.

You’ve described these pieces as heirlooms—what does that word mean to you when you think about your own family?

An heirloom is something that carries memory. It is not about perfection or rarity. It is about meaning. It is something that has been lived with, touched, cared for, and passed down. When I think about my family, heirlooms are the things that hold story. The objects that remind you of who came before you and the life that was lived around them. I wanted these pieces to feel like that. Objects that grow more valuable over time because of the memories attached to them.

How did growing up in Lagos shape the colors, patterns, and textures we see throughout the collection?

Growing up in Lagos shaped everything. Nigeria is bold, expressive, and layered. My love for color and texture comes directly from Yoruba culture. For celebrations, families would sew their own Aso Oke, mix patterns, and show up fully expressed. Weddings, birthdays, funerals, and gatherings wererel=”tag”>black art

The post Temi Coker’s First Home Collection Brings Art Into Everyday Use appeared first on Essence.

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