Perceive sea, dunes, mountains in move

 

Perceive sea, dunes, mountains in move

Friday 13 October – Sunday 3 December 2023

Private View: Thursday 12 October, 6–9 PM

 

Monday & Tuesday: By appointment only

Wednesday to Friday: 11am-5pm

Saturday & Sunday: 12pm -5pm

 

Perceive sea, dunes, mountains in move, is a group exhibition featuring the works of seven artists who work across installation, sculpture, sound and film.

 

In Diasporic Landscapes of Longing (from “Art on My Mind: Visual Politics”), bell hooks explores the visual politics of art and aesthetics through the work of artist and photographer Carrie Mae Weems. bell hooks returns to the experience and subjectivity as a realm of radical site of remembrance, guiding the reader on how the subjective knowledge and lived experiences that form within the spaces that surround us, are often reflected, engaged and confronted in the practices of artists of colour.

 

Similar to the explorations that bell hooks touches on, the works of Ama Essel, Sasha Huber, Ima Iduozee, Liisa-Irmelen Liwata, Mikki Noroila, Man Yau and Haliz Yosef traverses across diasporic experiences, narratives, emotions, place-making, commonality, and belonging. Employing various conceptual starting points and an array of materials and techniques, the group exhibition makes tangible the manners in which visual artists analyse and embody their local, national, and global identities.

 

The exhibition follows a rhizomatic structure that further underlines the diversity of lived experiences from the exhibiting artists. The curatorial authorship is dispersed accordingly, using practices of care and collaboration, to emphasise contributors’ and participants’ intellectual and ethical agency.

 

 

About the artists

 

Ama Essel (b. 1992) is a craft scientist and a pedagogue who specialises in rya technique. Her research focuses on colour and its semiotic significance in Finnish rya rugs and how the technique has been applied in fashion throughout the years.

 

Sasha Huber (b. 1975) is a Helsinki-based internationally recognised visual artist-researcher of Swiss-Haitian heritage. Huber’s work is concerned with the politics of memory, care and belonging in relation to colonial residues left in the environment.

 

Ima Iduozee (b. 1988) is a Finnish-Nigerian filmmaker, choreographer and DJ based in Helsinki. His work explores themes of migration, identity and the intersections of culture within society and the communities around him, to weave intimate stories of magic, perseverance and hope.

 

Liisa-Irmelen Liwata (b. 1998) is a Finnish-Congolese visual artist based in Helsinki, Finland. In her works Liwata discusses the connections between body, land and language. As a person who has grown up at the intersection of several cultures, she is interested in exploring the points where one’s being is interlaced.

 

Mikki Noroila (b. 1990) is a Helsinki-based multi-disciplinary artist working between moving image, installation, sound, and text. Their current artistic practice explores the themes of archival memory, and marginalised histories from the point of view of family histories.

 

Man Yau (b. 1991) is a Helsinki-based sculptor. Her artistic practice explores identity and the experience of exoticization. She uses material artifacts and traditional techniques to discuss the role of everyday objects, values, and aesthetic agents in racialized, gendered, and commonly accepted narratives.

 

Haliz Yosef (b. 1990), frequently works with memories, cultural-identity and language which mediates through moving image, sound art installations where they all interplay site-specifically.

 

 

Curated by Nimco Kulmiye Hussein and Neicia Marsh 

 

You can read more about one of the exhibiting artists Liisa Irmelen Liwata’s work in an interview here.

 

This exhibition has been generously supported by: 

 

Languid Hands 

Frame Contemporary Art Finland 

The Finnish Institute in the UK and Ireland 

198 Contemporary Arts and Learning