Exposition: Dawit L. Petros

Visions de départs et de retours
23 août au 12 octobre 2019

Arrivé au Canada à l’âge de 12 ans avec ses parents, l’artiste est très interpellé par la migration et les frontières autant physiques qu’interculturelles. Son travail repose sur une interprétation presque abstraite des lieux qu’il visite dans le monde entier et pour lesquels il ne retient que l’essentiel. Ses œuvres visent à créer une analyse introspective et texturée des facteurs historiques qui ont produit ces conditions migratoires.

La galerie a accueilli le photographe Petros du 23 aout au 12 octobre 2019 pour son exposition Visions de départs et de retours. Le vernissage a eu lieu le samedi 24 aout de 17 h à 20 h. Dawit partage son temps entre New York, Chicago et Montréal. Il voyage aussi fréquemment en Afrique dont il est originaire.

Dawit expose ses photographies, ses installations et ses vidéos autant en Amérique qu’en Europe ou en Afrique.

Oeuvres présentées

Curriculum vitae

Born in Asmara, Eritrea

Education

Whitney Independent Study Program
School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MFA Concordia University, Montreal, QC, BFA (Photography) University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK, BA (History)

Solo Exhibitions

The Stranger’s Notebook, H&R Block Artspace, Kansas City, MI, 2016
The Stranger’s Notebook, Tiwani Contemporary, London, UK, 2016
Sense of Place, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA, 2013
Mahber Shaw’ate (Association of Seven), Print Studio, Hamilton, ON, 2012
Mahber Shaw’ate (Association of Seven), Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum, Santa Barbara, CA, 2011
Mahber Shaw’ate (Association of Seven), Alexander Gray Associates, New York, NY, 2011 Mimesis, Marilia Razuk Galeria De Arte, Sao Paulo, Brazil, 2011
Dawit L. Petros, Franklin Art Works, Minneapolis, MN, 2011
Addis/Chromes, Atelier Art Gallery, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, 2010
Remix, Prefix Gallery, Toronto, ON, 2006

Group Exhibitions

Intermittent Rivers, 13th Havana Biennial in Matanzas, 2019
Public Volumes, Small Arms Inspection Building, Mississauga, ON
How the light gets in, Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, 2019
Nine Moments for Now, Ethelbert Cooper Gallery, Harvard, Cambridge, MA, 2018
Recent Histories, Huis Marseille Museum Voor Forografie, Amsterdam, Netherlands, 2018
HERE:Locating Contemporary Canadian Artists, Aga Khan Museum, Toronto, ON, 2018
Afrotopia: The African Photography Biennial, Africa Museum, Berg en Dal, Netherlands, 2018
Addis Foto Fest, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, 2018
Here We Are, Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, ON, 2018
Nowhere Is A Place, Rencontres de Bamako, Bamako Biennale, (Black Athena Collective), Bamako, Mali, 2017
Deconstructed Spaces, Surveyed Memories, Bamako Biennale, Bamako, Mali, 2017
Prospect.4 The Lotus In Spite of the Swamp, New Orleans Museum of Art, New Orleans, LO, 2017
Lack of Location, Is My Location, Koenig & Clinton Gallery, Brooklyn, NY, 2017
In Search Of, Transmitter, New York, NY, 2017
Recent Histories, The Walther Collection, Neu-Ulm, Ulm, Germany, 2017
In each hand I keep each of my eyes, Hampshire College Art Gallery, Amherst, MA, 2017
Capture Image Festival, Contemporary Art Gallery in Vancouver, Vancouver, BC, 2017
Recent Histories, The Walther Collection Project Space, New York, NY, 2016
Africans in America, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, SA, 2016
Position As Desired, Art Gallery of Windsor, Windsor, ON, 2016
Encounters Beyond Borders, Kennedy Museum of Art at Ohio University, Athens, OH, 2016
Race, Love, and Labor, Center for Photography, Woodstock, NY, 2016
The View From Here, Tiwani Contemporary, London, UK, 2015
In Another Place, And Here, Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, Victoria, BC, 2015
Hopes and Impediments, Prince Claus Fund Gallery, Amsterdam, NL, 2014
Under Another Name, The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, NY, 2014
Race, Love, and Labor, Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art, New Paltz, NY, 2014
Earth Matters: The Land as Material and Metaphor in the Arts of Africa, Fowler Museum at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, 2014
Earth Matters: The Land As Material and Metaphor in the Arts of Africa, National Museum of African Art, Washington, DC, 2013
American Beauty, Susan Inglett Gallery, NYC, NY, 2013
Whitney ISP Exhibition, Temp Gallery, New York, NY, 2013 The Bearden Project, Studio Museum In Harlem, NY, 2012
Artists-In-Residence Exhibition, McColl Center for Visual Art, Charlotte, NC, 2012
Sawdust and Solitude, Artist-In-Residence Exhibition, Salina Art Center, Salina, KS, 2012 Position As Desired, Royal Ontario Museum, Pier 21, The Canadian Museum of Immigration, Halifax, NS, 2012
Mimesis, Lianzhou International Photo Festival, Lianzhou, China, 2011
Always Moving Forward, Platform Gallery, Winnipeg, MB, 2011
Don’t Panic, Durban Art Gallery, Durban, SA, 2011
Becoming, Nasher Museum of Art, Durham, NC, 2011
The Idea of North, Biscuiterie, Dakar, Senegal, 2011
The Production of Space, Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, NY, 2011
Position As Desired, Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, ON, 2011
The Laundromat Project, Collette Blanchard Gallery, New York, NY, 2010
Made in Woodstock V, The Center for Photography at Woodstock, NY, 2010
Always Moving Forward, Gallery 44, Toronto, ON, 2010
Encodings, Artist-In-Residence, Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, NY, 2009
Liminal Space, The Lay Up, Brooklyn, NY, 2009
Young Curators: New Ideas 2, PPOW Gallery, New York, NY, 2009
The New Language Makers, Videotage, Hong Kong, China, 2009
Site Seeing: Explorations of Landscape, The Center for Photography at Woodstock, NY, 2009 Flow, Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, NY, 2008
Becoming, Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit, Detroit, MI, 2008
Subpoena, Talman + Monroe, Brooklyn, NY, 2008
Floating Architectures and Constant Centers: Some Projections, Martin, 2008 Art Gallery, Baker Center for the Arts, Muhlenberg College, Allentown, PA, 2008
The Idea of North, MFA Thesis Exhibition, Tufts University Gallery, Medford, MA, 2007 Wedge Retrospective Exhibition, Wedge Gallery, Toronto, ON, 2007
CAA Regional MFA Exhibition, Mass College of Art, Boston, MA, 2006
Alone, Gallery 44, Toronto, ON, 2006
Wish, Bagg Gallery, Boston, MA, 2005
Visions of Active Citizenship, Tufts University, Medford, MA, 2005
Strike Black, Observatoire 4, Montreal, QC, 2004
The Lexington Project, Site Specific Installation, Lexington, MA, 2004
Omiala, Harbour Front Gallery, Toronto, ON, 2004
Transliteration, Gallery 101, Ottawa, ON, 2003
1st Art! Exhibition, 1st Canadian Place Gallery, Toronto, ON, 2003
Translucide, Maison de la Culture, Montreal, QC, 2003
Translucid, Galerie Art Mûr, Montreal, QC, 2003
Green, Leonard and Bina Ellen Gallery, Montreal, QC, 2003
Separate Grounds, Gallery VAV, Montreal, QC, 2003
Too Big To Stay Small, Leonard & Bina Ellen Gallery, Montreal, QC, 2002
A Relative Proximity, Lotus Eaters Gallery, Montreal, QC, 2002

Awards and Residencies

Visiting Artist, Lesley University, Cambridge, MA, 2017
Visiting Artist, School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL, 2015-2016 Artist-In-Residence, Mana Contemporary, Chicago, IL, 2015
Canada Council for the Arts, Long Term Project Grant, 2014-2015
Invisible Borders TransAfrican Photography Collective, Artist-In-Residence, Lagos, Nigeria, 2014 Whitney Museum, Independent Study Program Fellowship, 2012 Salina Art Center, Artist-in-Residence, Salina, KA, 2012
The Print Studio, Artist-in-Residence, Hamilton, Canada, 2012
McColl Center for Visual Art, Knight Foundation, Artist-In-Residence, 2012
Canada Council for the Arts, Production Grant, 2011
Canada Council for the Arts, Travel Grant, 2011
Addis Ababa Foto Festival, Artist-In-Residence, Ethiopia, 2010
Canada Council for the Arts, Production Grant, 2008
The Studio Museum in Harlem, Artist-In-Residence, 2008
Art Matters Foundation, New York, NY, 2007
Center for Photography at Woodstock, Artist-In-Residence, 2007
Montague International Travel Grant, 2007
International Travel Grant, School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 2006
Bartlett National Travel Grant, School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 2006 Graduate Teaching Fellowship, School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 2005-2007 Fulbright Fellowship, Canada–United States, 2004–2006
Imperial Tobacco Canada Grant, Montreal, Canada, 2004
Saskatchewan Arts Board Grant, Saskatchewan, Canada, 2004
J. Armand Bombardier Internationalist Fellowship, Montreal, Canada, 2004
Fonds québécois de la recherch sur la société et la culture, Research Scholarship, 2004

Bibliography

Albu, Cristina, “Dawit Petros at Artspace,” TemporaryArtReview.com, January 9, 2017
Affleck, Jane. “Position As Desired Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21, Halifax.” C Magazine 118, Summer 2013
Armstrong, Neil. “We Are Here,” The Weekly Gleaner, January 11-17, 2018
Azimi, Roxana, “La photographie sous toutes ses formes.” Le Quotidien de L’Art, 20 Mai 2016 Beckwith, Naomi. “Encodings.” Encodings: The Studio Museum in Harlem, Artists in Residence, Exhibition Catalogue, 2009
Branker, Saada. “The Wedge’s Flava.” WordMag, 2007
Byrd, Antawan I., “Listening Along the Wayfarings of Em’kal Eyongakpa and Dawit L. Petros,” Exhibition Catalogue, Recent Histories: Contemporary African Photography and Video Art from the Walther Collection, 2017
Cappetta, Andrew. “Amani Olu Has New Ideas.” Art in America. August 2009
“Contact”, Now Magazine, May 2006
“Contact Goes Global”, Doze, May 2006
Cotter, Holland. “Encodings: Khalif Kelly, Adam Pendleton, Dawit L. Petros.” The New York Times, October 22, 2009
Cotter, Holland, “American Beauty.” The New York Times, January 23, 2014
Cotter, Holland. “Out of Africa, Whatever Africa May Be.” The New York Times, April 4, 2008 Cousineau-Levine. Penny, “Alone: Fitting In.” (Exhibition Catalogue). 2006
Crooks, Julie. “Position As Desired.” (Exhibition Catalogue). 2010
Dee, Christa, “Dawit L. Petros: Place-making and cultural negotiation,” Bubblegumclub.co.za, 2017
Díaz, Eva. “Prospect.4: In New Orleans, a global triennial fails to learn from its past mistakes,” 4columns.org, January 5, 2018
Dillon, Stephen. “Dawit L. Petros: The Stranger’s Notebook.” Garage Magazine, June, 2016 “Dawit L. Petros: Untitled (Prologue II),” Harpers Magazine Blog, October 28, 2017
“Dawit L. Petros Captures the World with a Camera and a Cardboard Box.” Artsy.net, June 24, 2015
“Dawit L. Petros: The Stranger’s Notebook (Prologue),” Contemporary &, June 2016
Duerr, Teri. “Young Curators on the Art of New Ideas,” New York Art Beat. August 2009 Edmonds, Pamela. “I’ll Make Me A World.” Prefix Photo, 2006
“1st Art.” Canadian Art Fall 2003
“Flava: Wedge Curatorial Projects, 1997–2007.” Wedge Curatorial Projects Catalogue, 2007 Enwezor, Okwui, “Okwui Enwezor on The Recent Histories of African Photography, “Apterture.org, May 4, 2017
Enwezor, Okwui and Okeke-Agulu, Chika. Contemporary African Art Since 1980, October 2009 Fortin, Sylvie. “Prospect.4: The Lotus in Spite of the Swamp, New Orleans.” C Magazine, 137, Spring 2018
Frater, Sally. “Position As Desired” Exhibition Review, Canadian Art, Spring 2011 Gessell, Paul. “Paraphrasing famous European works of art.” The Ottawa Citizen, 2004 Ghirmay, Huriy. “The Eritrean Diaspora.” Elem Magazine, Issue 14, October-December, 2009 Goodhand, Margo. “Out of Africa, Into Your Homes”, Winnipeg Free Press, 11/12/2011. Hagman, Sarah. “Dawit L. Petros: Sense of Place.” Improper Bostonian, September, 2013
Handelman, Jon. “Re-drawing the Colour Lines.” The McGill Daily, 2004 Harney, Elizabeth. “Shades and Passages: Petros’ colorscapes.” Franklin Art Works, Exhibition Publication, 2012
Haynes, Lauren. “The Bearden Project.” The Bearden Project: The Studio Museum in Harlem, Exhibition Catalogue, 2012 Iduma, Emmanuel, “Here Comes The Stranger,” Exhibition Brochure Text, The Stranger’s Notebook, H & R Block Artspace, January 2017
Iduma, Emmanuel, “Fiction/Non Fiction: ‘Recent Histories’ Presents Documentary-Based Photography from Africa,”, Artnews, May 9, 2017 Indrisek, Scott, “Prospect.4 Brings Big Names to New Orleans–but Doesn’t Take Enough Risks,” Artsy, Nov 20, 2017
Johnson, Paddy. “Pleasant Surprises in the Swamp at Prospect, the New Orleans Triennial,” Hyperallergic, November 22, 2017 Jordan, Betty Ann. “Group Therapy.” Toronto Life, May 2006
“World Remade in Their Image”, The Montreal Gazette. 2003
Khvan, Olga. “Sense of Place Exhibit at the MFA Marks Homecoming for Dawit L. Petros.” Boston Magazine. November 11, 2013
Lacayo, Jessie. “Transliteration.” Exhibition Catalogue, 2004
Lehman, Henry. “Strike Black.” The Montreal Gazette, 2004
Lew, Christopher Y. “A Kind of Blue.” Encodings: The Studio Museum in Harlem, Artists in Residence, Exhibition Catalogue, 2009
Livingston, Wendy. “Art from the Cutting Wedge.: Today Duke, August 11, 2011
Marquet, Thomas. “Dawit L. Petros: Mahber Shaw’ate: Association of 7.” Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum, Exhibition Publication, 2011
McGirk, James. “Harlem’s Rising Stars.” The Intelligent Life, September, 2009
McQuaid, Cate. “Displacement in a Theoretical World.” Boston Globe, November 12, 2013 Mengiste, Maaza, “Interview With Dawit L. Petros,” Exhibition Catalogue, Recent Histories: Contemporary African Photography and Video Art from the Walther Collection, 2017 Mercier, Jean, “The Stranger’s Notebook (Prologue),” LensCulture, June 2016
Milbourne, Karen E. “Earth Matters: Land As Material and Metaphor in the Arts of Africa.” Smithsonian National Museum of African Art, Exhibition Catalogue, 2013
Mitter, Siddartha “Africa Illuminated: Shining A Spotlight On Contemporary African Photography,” Village Voice, November 9, 2016
Muluneh, Aida. Addis Ababa Foto Fest, Exhibition Catalogue, 2011
O’Toole, Sean. “Flow.” Frieze, Issue 116, June-August 2008
Okeke-Agulu, Chika. “New Order.” Arise, No. 6, October 2009
Perree, Rob, “Dawit L. Petros: The Stranger’s Notebook,” africanah.org, April 22 2016 Radin, Joshi. “The Choice of Mobility.” Printers Devil Review, Spring, 2015
“Recent Histories: New Photography From Africa.” Contemporary And, September, 2016 Rattan, Chris. “The ROM’s Here We Are Here pushes back against narrow views of Blacknes,” Nowtoronto.com, February 1, 2018
Rubine, Nadine, “Bright Young Things.” Art South Africa V. 7.3, February 2009
Ruth Butler, Shelley, “Museum without Walls: After Into the Heart of Africa,” Curatorial Dreams: Critics Imagine Exhibitions, McGill-Queens University Press, Montreal, 2016 Ryan, Bartholomew, “Floating Architectures.” Exhibition Text, 2008
Sablinska, Agnieszka. “Keeping Up With the Flow of the Art World, Just a Few Short Block Away.”, Columbia Spectator, April 30, 2008 Sanchez, Barbara. “Las fronteras (in)visibles.” El Pais, August 20, 2014
Sargent, Antwaun, A South African Exhibition Explores African American Identity, The Creators Project, Dec 2 2016
Schroeder, Hannah. New exhibit in the Kennedy Museum features art from The Horn of Africa, The Post, Thursday, January 21, 2016
Schultz, Charles. “Separate But Equal.” Art Slant, Summer 2009
“Seeing Is Not Believing.” New York Times International, June 8, 2015
Seymour, Tom, “The Stranger’s Notebook – Dawit L. Petros’ Journey Across Africa,” British Journal of Photography, April 13, 2016
Shanberg, Ariel. “Site Seeing: Explorations of Landscape.” Exhibition Text, January 2009 Smart, Paul. “Where We Live.” Woodstock Times, January 1, 2009
Smith, Roberta. “Introductions.” The New York Times, August 31, 2007
“Spotlight,” ArtMatters, Fall 2005
Sotorrio, Regina. “Las fronteras se rompen con arte.” Diario Sur, August 19, 2014.
Tousignant, Isa. “From the Mouths of Babes.” Hour Magazine, April 2003
“2005 PRC.” In The Loupe, January 2005
“Untitled (Prologue II).” Harpers Blog, 19 September, 2016
Vaughn, R.M. “ROM’s Position as Desired: At last, a black Canada by black Canadians.” The Globe and Mail, Friday, October 15, 2010
Westwood, Rebecca. “The Lotus in Spite of the Swamp,” Canadian Art, November 23, 2017 White, Simone. “Dawit L. Petros.” Flow: Exhibition Catalogue, The Studio Museum in Harlem, 2008
Wilson, Michael. “Flow Motion.” ARTFORUM, 2008. Wolin, Joseph R. “Dawit L. Petros and Bryan Jackson.” Time Out, July 11-18, 2007
Wolin, Joseph R. “What Does Art Look Like in America’s Most “Prophetic” City?” Garagevice. com, November 21, 2017
Wong, Pamela. “Reinterpreting History in Black and White.” The Ottawa Sun, 2004
Young, Allison, “Dawit L. Petros” Artforum, Critics Pick, 25 June, 2016

Public Lectures

Black Athena Collective, “Regimes of Passage,” Violence in the Arts, DFG Research and Training Group Knowledge in Arts, In cooperation with Studium Generale, UdK Berlin
Panelist, Here We Are, Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, ON, 2018
Visiting Lecture, Discrepant Modernisms, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, 2017 Visiting Lecture, Decolonising the Archive, Lesley University, Cambridge, MA, 2017
Visiting Lecture, The Stranger’s Notebook, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, MO, 2016 Panelist, Beyond the Frame: Contemporary Photography from Africa and the Diaspora, Columbia University, 2016
Visiting Lecture, The Stranger’s Notebook, Ontario College of Art and Design, Toronto, ON, 2016 Panelist, Position As Desired, Art Gallery of Windsor, Windsor, ON, 2016
Visiting Lecture, The Stranger’s Notebook, The University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, 2016
Dawit L. Petros In Conversation with Dr. Elizabeth Harney, The Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, ON, 2016
Visiting Lecture, Ohio University, Athens, OH, 2016
Art Connect: Dawit L. Petros in Conversation with Osei Bonsu, Tiwani Contemporary, 2015
Four Photographers Speaker Series, School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA, 2014 Invisible Borders, Goethe Institute, Accra, Ghana, 2014
Invisible Borders, Goethe Institute, Lagos, Nigeria, 2014
Public Lecture, Ulrich Museum of Art, Wichita State University, Wichita, KS, 2012
Public Lecture, Salina Art Center, Salina, KS, 2012 Visiting Lecture, Fort Hays State University, Hays, KS, 2012
Public Lecture, McColl Center for Visual Art, Charlotte, NC, 2012
Visiting Lecture, University of Manitoba, School of Art, Winnipeg, MA, 2011
Panelist, Documenting Diaspora(s), Literary Studies Colloquium, Fordham University, New York, NY, 2011 Panelist, Position As Desired, Symposium, Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, ON, 2011
Visiting Lecture, Brooks Institute of Photography, Santa Barbara, CA, 2011
Visiting Lecture, Fordham University, New York, NY, 2011
Panelist, African Literature, Visual Arts, and Film in Local & Transnational Spaces, Ohio University, Athens, OH, 2011
Visiting Lecture, Ohio University, Athens, OH, 2011
Visiting Lecture, Department of Photography, The Cooper Union, 2010
Panelist, Imagery and Africa Conference, Addis Ababa University, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, 2010
Panelist, The African Art Renaissance, Symposium, World Black Arts Festival, Dakar, Senegal, 2010
Visiting Lecture, Fordham University, New York, NY, 2010
Panelist, Always Moving Forward, Gallery 44, Toronto, ON, 2010
Public Lecture, Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum, Santa Barbara, CA, 2010
Panelist, The Artist’s Voice: Encodings, The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, NY, 2009
Visiting Lecture, UCI/OCMA Speaker Series, University of California, Irvine, CA, 2009
Visiting Lecture, Tyler School of Art, Philadelphia, PA, 2008
Panelist, The Artist’s Voice: Flow, The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, NY, 2008
Visiting Lecture, The Art Institute of Boston, Boston, MA, 2007
Visiting Lecture, Tufts University, Boston, MA, 2007
Panelist, Alone, Gallery 44, Toronto, ON, 2006
Public Lecture, Prefix Gallery, Toronto, ON, 2006
Visiting Lecture, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, 2006

Collections

BMO Financial Group, 1st Art Collection, Toronto, ON
The Center For Photography at Woodstock, Woodstock, NY Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, VA
Gallery 44, Silver Editions, Toronto, ON
Huis Marseille, Museum for Photography, Amsterdam, Netherlands Infor Global Solutions, Alpharetta, GA
Saskatchewan Arts Council, Regina, SK
Stanley Mills Collection, Concordia University, Montreal, QC
The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, NY
The Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, ON
The University of Toronto Art Museum, Toronto, ON
The Walther Collection, Neu-Ulm, Germany
Wedge Curatorial Project, Toronto, ON

Démarche artistique

Visions de départs et de retours

Démarche artistique

Mon art étudie les frontières et les limites de la géographie, des connaissances culturelles, du pouvoir et de la subjectivité. Je situe ces efforts au sein d’une relecture de la relation entre le colonialisme et la modernité. Ces préoccupations sont dérivées de mon expérience vécue : je suis l’enfant d’émigrants érythréens et j’ai passé ma jeunesse en Érythrée, en Éthiopie et au Kenya, avant de m’établir au Canada. Les cultures, les voix et les principes fondamentaux se chevauchant de cette constellation postcoloniale ont produit une conscience dispersée, de position et de perspective internationales et transnationales. Mes œuvres visent à créer une analyse introspective et texturée des facteurs historiques qui ont produit ces conditions migratoires. J’installe mes œuvres selon une logique performative, picturale ou adaptée au site. La transition entre les œuvres reflète les nombreux voyages requis pour les créer; tandis que les dispositifs récurrents visuels ou formels indiquent discrètement les toiles de fond complexes de l’histoire d’un projet.

L’œuvre Imaginings of Departures and Returns (Visions de départs et de retours) comprend des éléments de trois projets récents. The Stranger’s Notebook (Le carnet de l’étranger) établit un lien entre deux voyages : une résidence de cinq mois en Afrique occidentale et neuf mois passés entre l’Italie et le Maroc. Le projet met l’accent sur la longue histoire de migrations internes de l’Afrique et les mouvements multidirectionnels entre l’Italie et l’Afrique orientale/l’Afrique du Nord. Les œuvres photographiques incluent une documentation de paysages marins, des paysages construits, des actions adaptées au site et des motifs graphiques abstraits. Les éléments fragmentés et opaques interrogent les manières dont l’expérience sociale est articulée et négociée dans des formes esthétiques.

Mahber Shawʼate (Association de sept) est une série de photographies, de sculptures de boîtes de carton et de fresques murales. Alors que les arrangements des boîtes font référence au minimalisme et à l’art conceptuel, les boîtes, bien qu’elles soient vides, revêtent des connotations de voyages et de migration. Cette complication de l’héritage de ces mouvements de l’art par les mouvements des gens est approfondie par le cadre conceptuel du projet. Plutôt que de travailler avec les traditions mathématiques et permutables de l’art conceptuel, le projet prend la langue comme modèle, plus précisément l’alphabet du tigrina, qui est utilisé dans mon pays natal, l’Érythrée.

The Sea In Its Thirst Is Trembling (La mer tremble dans sa soif) est une vidéo à canal unique qui met l’accent sur la migration des objets culturels afin d’examiner les histoires complexes de la Corne de l’Afrique. L’œuvre met en scène le parcours migratoire d’une chanson populaire du Tigré, d’Érythrée à Cuba. Le mouvement de la chanson à travers les espaces physiques et linguistiques devient une occasion d’explorer les fonctions complexes des frontières géographiques et idéologiques. Cette œuvre prend forme autour des répétitions et des spectacles du groupe musical de Matanzas, Ashé Olúrun, et d’un entretien avec l’artiste cubain de renom, Agustin Adama Drake.

Les structures formelles de cette exposition, souvent poétiques et révélatrices, se développent dans des sites de géographies accidentées et d’histoires contestées. Le résultat est une lutte continue sur la façon de joindre les questions formelles d’expérimentation esthétique à celles de nature sociopolitique.


Imaginings of Departures and Returns

ART STATEMENT

My art investigates boundaries and limits of geography, cultural knowledge, power and subjectivity. I locate these efforts within a re-reading of the relationship between colonialism and modernity. These concerns derive from my lived experiences: I am the child of Eritrean emigrants, and spent formative years in Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Kenya before settling in Canada. The overlapping cultures, voices, and tenets of this postcolonial constellation produced a dispersed consciousness, global and transnational in stance and outlook. My works aim for an introspective and textured analysis of the historical factors that produced these migratory conditions. I install work according to performative, painterly, or site responsive logics. Moving between the works echoes the extensive travel taken to produce them; while recurrent visual or formal devices quietly indicate the complex backdrops of history against which a project is set.

Imaginings of Departures and Returns comprises elements from three recent projects. The Stranger’s Notebook, links two extensive journeys: a five-month residency in West Africa, and nine-months spent between Italy and Morocco. The project’s focus is on Africa’s long history of internal migrations, and multi-directional movements between Italy and North/East Africa. The photographic works range from documentations of seascapes, constructed landscapes, site-responsive actions, and abstracted graphic motifs. The fractured and opaque elements interrogate the ways in which social experience is articulated and negotiated in aesthetic forms.

Mahber Shawʼate (Association of Seven) is a suite of photographs, cardboard box sculptures and wall murals. While the arrangements of the boxes reference minimal and early conceptual art, the boxes themselves, despite their emptiness, carry connotations of travel and migration. This complication of the legacy of these art movements by the movements of people is furthered by the project’s conceptual framework. Rather than working within the mathematical, permutational traditions of conceptual art, the projects takes language as a model, specifically the Tigrinya alphabet, as used in my birthplace of Eritrea.

The Sea In Its Thirst Is Trembling is a single-channel video that focuses on the migration of cultural objects to examine the complex histories of the Horn of Africa. The work stages the migratory journey of a popular Tigre song from Eritrea to Cuba. The song’s movement across physical and linguistic spaces becomes an occasion to explore the complex functions of geographical and ideological boundaries. This work takes shape around Matanzas musical group Ashé Olúrun’s rehearsals and performance and a conversation with noted Cuban artist Agustin Adama Drake.

The formal structures in this exhibition— often poetic and allusive— play out in sites of uneven geographies and contested histories. The result is an ongoing struggle of how to join formal questions of aesthetic experimentation with sociopolitical ones.

Vidéos

Rien à afficher pour l'instant.