NOTTINGHAM.- Eva Koťátkovás installations, now on view at
Nottingham Contemporary, invite us to enter a different kind of world one where social rules and hierarchies are critically reimagined. Combining sculptures, collages, costumes, texts and sound, her vast and playful scenographies centre the agency of the imagination. A giant bush is given voice; children befriend monsters; animals, plants, objects and people enjoy equal rights. For Koťátková, the imagination is not about reverie. It is a critical tool to envision how the world could otherwise be, freed from the forms of oppression, inequality and violence that keep us captive within normative structures. Often activated through performance and storytelling, her installations present a cosmological worldview ruled by a different set of empathetic relations.
Koťátkovás exhibition at Nottingham Contemporary consists of an entirely new body of commissioned work. Storytelling sits at the heart of the exhibition, which centres on the tale of a young giraffe called Lenka.
Captured in 1954, Lenka was the first ever giraffe at the Prague Zoo, but survived only two years in captivity. Her body was then donated to the National History Museum, only to be exploited as another visitor attraction. However, her life as a museum object was complicated by blunders in the preservation process, which caused the release of toxic gases and the temporary closure of one of Pragues main public squares. The exhibition will develop this story and all its metaphorical possibilities: as a cipher for the colonization of our bodies and of the non-human world, as well as for the violence of the modern human condition.
Developed in collaboration with Nottingham Contemporarys Learning and Exhibitions teams, the exhibition directly engages local communities and audience groups. An audio play, produced in collaboration with local children from Seely Primary School, presents a collection of narratives and responses related to Lenkas dual lives as a living animal and as a museum object. This sound work is hosted within a large-scale installation that includes a net-like rope sculpture suspended from the gallerys impressive 9 metre-high ceiling, as well as a floor-based textile where visitors are invited to sit, listen and contribute their own stories.
Throughout the summer season, the exhibition will be further activated by workshops, activities and prompts devised by the artist and our Learning and Live Programmes teams.
Eva Koťátkovás installations are a must-see for anyone interested in exploring a different kind of world, where empathy, imagination, and critical thinking reign supreme. The exhibition has been open at Nottingham Contemporary since Saturday 27 May, and will continue to be until Sunday 3 September, 2023.