TORONTO.- Mercer Union presents Tassili, the first institutional solo show in Canada by Algerian-born artist Lydia Ourahmane, from Jan. 28April 1, 2023. The exhibition is titled after the moving image work commissioned and produced by the gallery in partnership with SculptureCenter, New York; rhizome, Algiers; Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris; Kamel Lazaar Foundation, Tunis; and Nottingham Contemporary. This is the fourth work in Mercer Unions Artist First commissioning platform, following Lawrence Abu Hamdans 45th Parallel earlier this year.
Tassili was filmed in the desert landscape of southeastern Algeria, which Ourahmane and a group of collaborators travelled to on foot. Tassili n'Ajjer is home to one of the most important groupings of prehistoric cave art in the world, with more than 15,000 drawings and engravings illustrating changes to the Sahara from 6,000 B.C. to the first centuries of the present era.
Ourahmane first visited the area in 2019 and was struck by the sites ability to transcend time a trans-dimensionality that also unfolds aesthetically in the film. The artist notes the desert as a place where she could face her fears and push her bodys limits wanting to explore this further, she later returned with a group of friends. They walked into the open desert, fully at the mercy of the elements with only their guides to navigate them through the landscape. The 46-minute 4K film captures not only the landscape, but also the array of cave paintings the artist encountered: ancient demons, extraterrestrials, lost rivers and forests. First-person passages are intercut with point-of-view shots, night vision recordings, and sequences transferred from 16mm film. The work is scored in four parts by four composers, none of whom were present in Tassili nAjjer, adding another layer of intervention to the work. Because traveling through the desert is a careful balance of resource management and walking routes choreographed by locals, the artist was able to film only where she could walk, with no opportunity to backtrack or act beyond each present moment and location.
Tassili serves as a sort of reminder and an echo of an experience that was deeply impactful for Lydia Ourahmane and her travel companions, says Julia Paoli, Director & Curator of Mercer Union. The film offers another way of seeing how we move through landscape, how we encounter our environment, and how we understand mediated experiences. For Mercer Union, the film asks important questions about embodied ways of knowing, and the underlying memories, records, and infrastructures that unite to create them.
Lydia Ourahmane is based in Algiers and Barcelona. Recent and forthcoming solo exhibitions include MACBA, Barcelona (2023); SMAK, Gent (2022); Sculpture Center, New York (2022); Portikus, Frankfurt (2022); KW Institute of Contemporary Art, Berlin (2022); De Appel, Amsterdam (2021); Triangle-Astérides, Marseille (2021); Kunsthalle Basel (2021); CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts, San Francisco (2020); and Chisenhale Gallery, London (2018). Her work was included in the 34th Bienal de São Paulo (2021) and the New Museum Triennial, New York (2018).