Exhibition brings together work by 10 British African diaspora artists
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Monday, December 23, 2024


Exhibition brings together work by 10 British African diaspora artists
Harold Offeh, Down at the Twilight Zone, 2018. 12 hour event, Toronto, Canada. Commissioned by Toronto Nuit Blanche, 2018. Photo by Priam Thomas.



CAMBRIDGE.- Kettle’s Yard opened Untitled: art on the conditions of our time. This exhibition brings together work by 10 British African diaspora artists with a focus on how their innovative practices ask important questions about some of the most important cultural and political issues of our turbulent times. The exhibition features new commissions by Barby Asante, Appau Junior Boakye-Yiadom and NT, as well as new and recent work by Larry Achiampong & David Blandy, Phoebe Boswell, Kimathi Donkor, Evan Ifekoya, Cedar Lewisohn, Harold Offeh and Ima-Abasi Okon. Painting, drawing and printmaking sits alongside performance, video and sound installation.

The exhibition title refers to the longstanding art historical convention of leaving artworks ‘untitled’ in order to encourage attention onto the works themselves, and eliminate reliance upon contextual information. Untitled asks viewers to examine the conditions of our time through the prism of Black British artists working today, without reducing the encounter solely to an exploration of Black British identity. By avoiding such over-contextualisation, the exhibition seeks to foreground these artists’ practices and show how they create platforms for audiences to explore the connections between art, culture and society.

Themes emerge that speak to shared contemporary concerns: sexuality and queerness; migration and conflict; technology and media; the disintegration of traditional image making and transmission; commemoration and memory. Patterns can also be seen in the artists’ choice of media. The exhibition traces an interest in performativity, social participation, immaterial conceptualism, multimedia work and ephemeral practices, alongside more traditional techniques such as drawing, painting and printmaking.

Curator Paul Goodwin has said: “This exhibition takes a bold curatorial approach to the often paradoxical question of curating ‘black survey shows’. Instead of focusing on blackness ahead of the works themselves, Untitled flips this order and focuses on the works first and foremost. Questions of blackness, race and identity are then shown to be entangled in the multitude of concerns – aesthetic, material and political – that viewers can encounter without the curatorial voice obscuring the works.”




The exhibition includes three new works that have been commissioned by Kettle’s Yard. Barby Asante (b. 1975) presents an ambitious new performance in the Kettle’s Yard House inspired by Audre Lorde’s essay Poetry is not a luxury, and incorporating music and spoken word. This new video and sound work flows through the exhibition spaces. Called To make love is to create and recreate ourselves over and over again - a soliloquy to heartbreak (2021), it features a group of women who have been asked by Asante to recite Lorde’s text collectively, yet separately, and perform everyday rituals in their homes.

Appau Junior Boakye-Yiadom (b. 1984) has made a new work that explores performativity, cultural exchange and abstraction. An installation fills Gallery 2 with the sound of Kettle’s Yard’s two grand pianos, engaged in a battle of sorts. Boakye Yiadom has commissioned musicians to respond to filmic source material collected across a long period, and the work connects the important role of music at Kettle’s Yard to the longstanding weekly ritual of changing the fresh flowers in the House.

NT presents a new three-channel film focusing on their muse Greta Mendez and shot on location in the brutalist surroundings of the Barbican Estate. Mendez is an artist, choreographer, dancer, carnivalist, and film-maker. Other recent works filmed by NT on location in London include Fox (2018), a compelling study of a solitary Black youth and their relationship to society and the urban environment, commissioned for Deptford X festival.

The exhibition also includes Larry Achiampong (b. 1984) and David Blandy’s (b. 1976) film A Terrible Fiction (2019) and Finding Fanon (2015–17), a trilogy of video works presented amongst what appears to be the detritus and remnants of society. Finding Fanon explores the artists’ relationship, as friends and collaborators, to their own colonial histories, played out through their discovery of the lost plays of writer and revolutionary Frantz Fanon (1925-61) whose work explored the psychological impact of colonialism and postcolonialism.

A number of paintings by Kimathi Donkor (b. 1965) are being shown, reimagining mythic and legendary encounters across Africa and its Diasporas, and exploring the ways in which painting can convey the relevance of history and memory to contemporary life. Nanny of the Maroons’ Fifth Act of Mercy (2012) references and subverts a painting by Joshua Reynolds (1723–92) which depicts an aristocrat whose family was involved in enslaving people in plantations in Jamaica. Here her role is swapped with her influential adversary, Queen Nanny of the Maroons.

In addition the exhibition includes new large-scale drawings by Phoebe Boswell (b. 1982) depicting fisherman on the African island of Zanzibar whose livelihoods have been impacted by the climate crisis and globalisation; Harold Offeh’s (b. 1977) Covers Playlist (2016) in which the artist uses his body to re-enact well known album covers, as well as his new film Down at the Twilight Zone (2020) documenting Offeh’s 12-hour performance for Nuit Blanche, Toronto, that looked at the rich histories of LGBTQ2S peoples’ experiences of Toronto’s nightlife; Evan Ifekoya’s (b. 1988) immersive six hour sound installation Ritual Without Belief (2018), Cedar Lewisohn’s (b. 1977) new series of handmade prints The Marduk Prophecy; and Ima-Abasi Okon’s (b. 1981) installation Put Something in the Air: The E-s-s-e-n-t-i-a-l Mahalia Jackson Blowing Up DJ Pollie Pop’s Chopped and Screwed Rendition of Wagner’s Ride of the Valkyries — Military-Entertainment Complex Dub [Jericho Speak Life!]*(Free of Legacy)* (2017).










Today's News

July 11, 2021

Man is accused of attempting to sell fake Basquiats and Harings

Exhibition at Hauser & Wirth shines a light on its Los Angeles artists

Lisson Gallery announces representation of Olga de Amaral

White House sets ethics plan for sales of Hunter Biden's art

Christie's appoints Rebecca Yuancao Yang as Chairman, China

Baltimore Museum of Art announces 175 acquisitions, new commission, and additional gifts

Unique private collection of rare pianos to go up for auction

Imaginary deaths, real grief: Thai artist honours fallen anime heroes

Praz-Delavallade opens an exhibition of new drawings by Soufiane Ababri

Pilar Corrias opens two exhibitions of new work by Tala Madani

75 artists selected for New Contemporaries 2021

Yorkshire Sculpture Park presents Rachel Kneebone's most ambitious sculpture to date

Maureen Paley opens a solo exhibition by Wolfgang Tillmans

Katherine Bradford's first solo exhibition with kaufmann repetto opens in Milan

Africa enters Cannes with homage to Chad 'heroines'

Architect finds a sense of belonging for his family's homeland, and for himself

Exhibition brings together work by 10 British African diaspora artists

The eight-year marathon to bring Anne Frank to the big screen

Anna Netrebko headlines Athens as Greece reopens for live opera

Blenheim Art Foundation opens exhibition by Tino Seghal

The collection of Diane and Sam Stewart will star in single-owner sale at Bonhams

Using the wisdom of dance to find our way back to our bodies

The Arizona collection of U.S. large cents to be offered at Heritage Auctions

Cautionary Tales: Great Artists Who Were Bad Role Models

Cannabis in Michigan

7 Best Love Psychic Reading Online: How to get authentic relationship advice

Tips To Build A Successful Website For Your Car Dealership Company

SEO services for Roofing Businesses:




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
(52 8110667640)

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys
Houston Dentist
Abogado de accidentes
สล็อต
สล็อตเว็บตรง
Motorcycle Accident Lawyer

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful