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Wednesday, December 18, 2024 |
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Spike Island announces exhibitions and commissions 2025-26 |
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Nour Jaouda, Dust that never settles, 2024. Fabric dye and pigment on canvas, steel, 130 x 235 cm. Courtesy of the artist and Union Pacific.
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BRISTOL .- Spike Island presents Empty Alcove / Rotting Figure, a new moving image commission and exhibition by Dan Guthrie. Guthries practice explores representations and mis-representations of Black Britishness, with a particular interest in examining how these manifest in rural areas. His latest commission continues his ongoing exploration of the Blackboy Clock, an object of contested heritage on public display in his hometown of Stroud, Gloucestershire.
Guthries exhibition presents two newly commissioned videos that put forward the radical un-conservation of the clocka new theoretical concept proposed by Guthrie to describe the acquisition of an object with the express intent to destroy it. Central to this new body of work are questions about what society chooses to memorialise and how we do so.
Danielle Dean
February 8May 11, 2025
Spike Island presents a new moving image commission and exhibition by Danielle Dean. The exhibition centres around Hemel, a new film that serves as both a personal essay and a portrait of Hemel Hempstead, the town where Dean grew up. The film explores the towns history, blending archival footage and contemporary images with references to the sci-fi horror B-movie Quatermass II (1957).
Shot on 16mm film with a cast of non-professional actors and family members, Hemel blurs the line between fiction and documentary, offering a critical reimagining of Quatermass IIs colonial undertones. The film recasts its visual language to explore the race, class and labour dynamics of a small English town in a post-Brexit context.
Accompanying Hemel is a series of drawings and watercolours that capture the dystopian atmosphere that permeates the film.
Donald Locke
May 31September 7, 2025
Spike Island presents the first major survey exhibition of Guyanese artist Donald Locke (19302010). The exhibition at Spike Island explores the development of his work across Guyana, the UK and the United States over five decades, from the late 1960s to the early 2000s. It features early ceramics that evoke human and natural forms, alongside mixed-media sculptures and monochromatic black paintings from the 1970s. Also included are several large-scale paintings from the 1990s that incorporate found images, ceramic elements and crocodile skins. These materials reflect Lockes evolving approach to the use of different media, his formal ingenuity and the growing influence of African American vernacular art and iconography, following his relocation to the United States.
Nour Jaouda
September 27, 2025January 11, 2026
Spike Island is proud to present the first institutional solo exhibition by Libyan artist Nour Jaouda. Jaoudas fluid, multi-layered textile works traverse the languages of painting, sculpture and installation to produce landscapes of memory. The forms, colours and motifs within her intricately textured surfaces gesture towards different encounters across time and space, drawing on the artists childhood in Libya and experiences of living between Cairo and London. New commissions for Spike Islands large-scale galleries continue Jaoudas exploration of cultural identity as an ongoing process of becoming.
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