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In 2020, I was invited to participate in Collecting Otherwise, a project developed by Het Nieuwe Instituut within the framework of Rethinking the Collection, an initiative situated under the umbrella of Disclosing Architecture. blueprints, constructing the membrane of a temporary dwelling... draws on my emerging research enquiries whilst exploring the National Collection of Architecture and Urban Planning. An architectural schematic — commonly known as a ‘blueprint’, referring to the cyanotype technique that was formerly used to reproduce such drawings — can be understood as a score for entering and walking through an imagined site, a psycho-sociological terrain. Drawing on the fact that blueprints are — as much ironically as lyrically — prone to fading and are therefore an impermanent medium, blueprints, constructing the membrane of a temporary dwelling... proposes a reimagining of what constitutes an archival site — materialising an ad-hoc architecture that sees story-telling interwoven with hermeneutics, diasporic sensibilities, opacities, and desiccated residuals of rituals. In this space, the archive literally becomes malleable, fragile, foldable and potentially mobile.
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metrics of a temporary dwelling unfolds as a meditative survey of the archival depot of Het Nieuwe Instituut (NL), incorporating the collections of the Netherlands Architecture Institute. Amidst the depot’s corners and corridors, four spectres seek out idiosyncrasies — traces of haptic interventions and doubts in the archival process, rupturing the space’s otherwise formal, laconic aura. This search for human presence extends to the depot’s permanent inhabitants: figures depicted in archival materials, housebound in dossiers. Reflections arise regarding the archive’s function as a chronic host, its conceptual relation to architecture, and its role in negotiating and narrating the Netherland’s colonial history.
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Inside the fixed limits of a house, two figures negotiate both themselves and one another’s presence without ever directly coming into contact with one another. They dwell amongst strict lines — a structure that is holding them together but that at the same time instigates both claustrophobia and distance. The verisimilitude of their antics is encroached by an aura of estrangement — tangential thoughts and permeating sounds that annotate and ricochet within this shared, narrow enclosure. Credits Actresses: Karolina Rupp and Ingvild Delia Syntropia Camera: Gijs van der Meer Sound: Nick Thomas
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This work belongs to the gesamtkunstwerk ‘Oneirological and Bodily Metrics’ (2020-2021) – an assemblage of interwoven narrative elements, comprising of texts, found objects, drawings, and sculptural components. It is a body of work that developed over the first year as a resident at the Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten, which happened to parallel to the eruption of the Covid-19 pandemic. A set of flowers ‘stand’ erect on the wall, jutting out, floating horizontally. Some recoil back onto themselves, defying gravity. The width of the installation corresponds to my height. The number of flowers corresponds to my age at the time of its creation. Most of the flowers date from the first partial lockdown in The Netherlands in March 2020, during which time I did not travel to my studio in Amsterdam for several weeks. Upon eventually returning, I found that little had changed – in fact, it was only the flowers that indicated that time had elapsed.
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Oneirological and Bodily Metrics is an assemblage of interwoven narrative elements, comprising of texts, found objects, drawings, and sculptural components. It is a body of work that developed over the first year as a resident at the Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten, which happened to parallel to the eruption of the Covid-19 pandemic. During this secluded and oftentimes mentally dissociative period, I became increasingly preoccupied with — and, oftentimes, confronted by — that common paradigm of the mind-body duality. It is a duality that appears to belong to wider framework of dichotomous, reductive thought — eg. well versus sick, pure versus diluted, domestic versus foreign. The internalisation of these dichotomies manifests an accumulative yet eerily quiet distress — especially so when the individual in question cannot readily situate themselves in one category or the other. One looks for shelter in these cavities between opposites, dwelling in dissociative grey areas. Each aspect of the assemblage recollects bodily registrations, oftentimes referencing my own bodily dimensions, as well as my attempts to documents parts of my body and the narratives it carries that are not outwardly visible. As such, these registrations do not amount to a quantitative depiction or cataloguing of the body, but rather relay an idiosyncratic, archival abstracting of a body. Residuals of unseen sojourns and excavations — these documents, in their various forms, testify to a body's urgency to locate its points of gravity and subjecthood: the relation between remaining upright and keeping one’s feet on the ground, as much physically as existentially. These works situate fragmented mental experiences — eg. dissociation, escapist daydreaming, mourning — as being integral within, not absent from, the chronology and cartography of one’s corporeality. Trauma is thus understood as not only a ruptured site, but as a liminal space in which new understandings are called to materialise.
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This work belongs to the gesamtkunstwerk ‘Oneirological and Bodily Metrics’ (2020-2021) – an assemblage of interwoven narrative elements, comprising of texts, found objects, drawings, and sculptural components. It is a body of work that developed over the first year as a resident at the Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten, which happened to parallel to the eruption of the Covid-19 pandemic. The protea genus takes it name from Proteus, a god who could change into any form — unfixed, ever fluid. A particular species in the genus — the protea cynaroides — evolved to withstand hostile conditions, specifically wildfires. The flower’s stem is robust and rigid, extending far below ground. When the exposed part of the plant is scorched, dormant buds in its subterranean stem are activated. The sacrum is the joint that is situated just above the tailbone. This clay study is derived from a process of trying to sense and envision my own sacrum. The sacrum is, essentially, the ‘seat’ of the pelvis. Its name derives from the Latin fo rsacred, likely a reference to how it protects the reverse side of the womb and ovaries. Due its density and size, it is usually the last bone to decompose — lingering as the final material trace of a life. When walking to my studio one day, caught up in a tide of anxiety, I saw a large stone at the side of the pavement. I don’t know what possessed me — most likely an urge for distraction and the need to feel grounded — but I decided to carry it with me. Struggling to cradle it in my arms, my spine was tugged into an aggressive curve by this bulk. I realised that it is not a stone at all but some kind of composite of sand and tiny pebbles — elements that, if they were not so tightly compressed together, would surely disintegrate and slip through my fingers.
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One edge of the platform is support by a rock, sourced from from a mountain range that I descended in the summer of 2020, shortly before the onset of a period of illness. In the autumn of 2020, I made a series of clay panels, which in total measured my full height and width. On these panels, I made drawings with charcoal — landscapes. I then proceeded to fire these panels through a traditional method — not in an electric kiln, but in a furnace placed on an open fire. However, as to be anticipated, they heated too rapidly and fractured. Other sections broke in my haste to remove them from the fire. What remained were shards and fragments — a pile of irregularities, somehow both complete and broken.
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The photographic series Annotations on Afrikaanderwijk recollects a period of site-specific research undertaken in the framework of Wider Perspectives, an exhibition programme presented at Het Gemaal op Zuid (Rotterdam), commissioned by Afrikaanderwijk Coöperatie in collaboration with Furtado Melville. This research culminated in an essay that can be read in the book 'Rotterdam, een postkoloniale stad in beweging' (Published by Boom, 2020) Presented in Het Gemaal op Zuid, the photo series is accompanied by short texts that contextualise and question the depicted imagery. This constellation maps out a chronology of three events that are embedded in the neighbourhood’s urban landscape, pointing towards its past, present and prospective future. These events are: 1) the creation of the neighbourhood and the naming of its streets, 2) the 1972 riots that saw a violent eruption of xenophobia underpinned by economic deprivation, and 3) the forthcoming renovation of Tweebos, an area within the wider neighbourhood which will entail the displacement of current residents per the demolition of social housing.
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A nameless figure wanders through an urban landscape, searching for someone or something that resonates as familiar. Her scattered thoughts permeate the material fibre of the neighbourhood — a dense sedimentation of conflicting historical and contemporary narratives: street names honouring a colonial legacy, a monument to migrant workers, the aural ricochet of a nearby construction site alongside protest slogans scrawled on the sidewalk. Personal and social memory become intertwined — both perforated by gaps, elisions, censorship and unrest. Testament was produced in the context of the exhibition series Wider Perspectives at Het Gemaal op Zuid (Rotterdam), commissioned by Afrikaanderwijk Coöperatie in collaboration with Furtado Melville. It was made possible with the generous support of Kunstcentrum Stroom, CBK Rotterdam and the Municipality of Rotterdam. Credits Sound: Erfan Abdi Actress: Arefeh Riahi Subtitling (Dutch): Pelumi Adejumo, Sébastien Smeur
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Between a Gaze and a Gesture consists of two synchronised slide-projectors, featuring imagery sourced from the archive of Liberty, a human rights organisation initiated in the 1930s, formally known as the National Council of Civil Liberties. As cropped archival images and texts circulate, a monologue emerges. This monologue seeks to instigate a dialogue with the viewer, whose gaze must navigate the swiftly paced back-and-forth of words and reciprocating glances, gesticulations of protest and being.
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Drawing on a body of research compiled during a residency undertaken at Hull History Centre in collaboration with the Wilberforce Institution for the study of Slavery and Emancipation, Being, in a State of Erasure contemplates the socio-political legacies embodied within diasporic identities. In seeking to understand how one may locate a sense of origin when belonging to diaspora formed by multiple diasporas, as in the case of the Jamaican diaspora, I found myself confronted with the urgency to address and examine the politicisation of personhood and movement. By bringing the autobiographical into dialogue with the archival, the publication sheds visibility on the prevalent commentaries that circulated Commonwealth migration to the UK during the mid-20th Century, a political history to which my own family history is intertwined. During the residency I worked predominately with of the archive Liberty, formally known as the National Council of Civil Liberties, a human rights organisation initiated in the 1930s. Over the course of four weeks I surveyed hundreds of documents, from letters to government reports to newspapers, each reflecting another facet of the many complex narratives and perspectives defining this era. This proved to be as much an investigation into the history of British colonialism as it was research into what it means in the current day to belong to a diaspora formulated by those colonial practices, whereby one’s identity is seemingly both fragmented and yet demanding of definition.
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In Search of an Axis meditates on the politicisation of the body and movement, departing from the notion that the body is both a vessel in which personal experienced are compiled yet simultaneously a territory upon which political power-plays are exerted. Produced in collaboration with dancer and choreographer Malik Nashad Sharpe and dancer Fazle Shairmahomed, the essay features movement performances staged at various locations along Hull’s docklands. The gestural qualities of these performances takes influence from the visual material gathered during a period of research in Hull, where I was engaged predominately with the archive of Liberty.
Websites
Member of Artists’ Initiative/Collective/Incubator
Notes on Hapticity Collective
Curriculum vitae
Education
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2012 - 2014Artistic Research Den Haag, Koninklijke Academie van Beeldende Kunsten diploma
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2009 - 2012Graphic Design Salford, University of Salford diploma
exhibitions
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2022Positions: Time-Based Stroom The Hague, Netherlands Group
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2022Open Studios Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten Amsterdam, Netherlands Group
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2022Material Memory, TENT Rotterdam, Netherlands Group
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2021Open Studios Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten Amsterdam, Netherlands Group
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2021Reasonable Doubt V2_ Rotterdam, Netherlands Group
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2020In Belief is Power Expoplu Arnhem, Netherlands Group exhibition curated by Yoeri Appelo Group
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2020For Staying is Nowhere Haus N Athen Athens, Greece Group exhibition curated by Ioanna Gerakidi Group
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2020Filmhuiskamer Galerie Jaloezie Rotterdam, Netherlands Video art exhibition produced by Galerie Jaloezie collective. Group
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2020Towards a Foreword ART BAR / Print Room Rotterdam, Netherlands Exhibition by Notes on Hapticity Collective Group
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2019Inward Out ArchiRAAR Brussels, Belgium Curated by Pauline Hatzigeorgiou Group
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2019Black Out Kunsthal | International Film Festival Rotterdam Rotterdam, Netherlands Curated by Julian Ross Group
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2019Black Out Ambika P3 London, United Kingdom Curated by Julian Ross Group
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2019Black Out Greylight Projects Brussels, Belgium Curated by Julian Ross Group
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2019On the Line of the Equator Expoplu Nijmegen , Netherlands Group
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2019Testament Gemaal op Zuid Rotterdam, Netherlands Forthcoming Solo
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2018Black Material | Experiments in Cinema Festival Guild Cinema Albuquerque, United States Group
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2018Out of Focus | Queer Arts Festival Gallery Verbeeck-Van Dyck Antwerp , Belgium Group
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2018Inverting the Archive PuntWG Amsterdam, Netherlands Duo exhibition with Miguel Peres dos Santos Duo
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2018Prospects and Concepts Van Nellefabriek Rotterdam, Netherlands Group
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2017Beyond Words Central Library Hull Hull, United Kingdom Exhibition with Helen Cammock and Lubaina Himid Group
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2017Queer Art(ists) Now Archive Gallery Archive Gallery, United Kingdom Exhibition as part of the 'And What?' Festival Group
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2015Ter Observatie Gemak The Hague, Netherlands Exhibition with Marianna La Rosa Maruyama, Ronald Schelfhout and ligteringen/derooij Group
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2014But, actually, what I meant was... 1646 The Hague, Netherlands Solo featuring new and previous video works Solo
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2014Un Sentiment de Comme Si Gemak The Hague, Netherlands Exhibition of graduating students of Master Artistic Research (KABK) Group
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2013Wunderkind 2022NQ Manchester , United Kingdom Group exhibition of graphic works by artists based in Manchester Solo
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2013510 SHOWS, NO REVOLUTION W139 Amsterdam, Netherlands Collaborative project with Ronald Huynen, Sara Garcia and Caetano Carvalho Group
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2013It's About Time Quartair The Hague, Netherlands Group exhibition curated by Kosta Tonev and supported by Time/Bank, an e-flux initiative. Group
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2012Impromptu Collections Kunstvlaai Amsterdam , Netherlands Collaborative project with Kees van Leeuwen, Sara Garcia, Aline Weyel and Ehsan Behmanesh Group
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2010Moves: International Festival of Movement on Screen Bluecoat Gallery Liverpool, United Kingdom Presentation of collaborative video work with Stephen Dewsnap Group
Projects
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2022
The Archive Who Breathes ArtEZ University of the Arts Rotterdam, Netherlands PrintRoom with ArtEZ Studium Generale
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2018
Love from Kingston Museum Boijmans van Beuningen Rotterdam , Netherlands Duo presentation with Nicole Jordan, organised by Print Room, Rotterdam
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2015
ORACLE Gemak The Hague, Netherlands Performative manifestation with the Political Arts Initiative
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2012
Decoded:Recoded MediaCity Salford, United Kingdom Digital and performance art event
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2011
Sketch-o-Matic Cornerhouse Manchester , United Kingdom Live drawing/performance event
International exchanges/Residencies
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2016Wilberforce Institute for the study of Slavery and Emancipation & Hull History Centre Kingston-upon-Hull, United Kingdom
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2011AKV St Joost, Breda | Erasmus Study Programme Breda, Netherlands
Sales/Works in collections
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2018Joan Flasch Artists' Book Collection Chicago, USA Library collection (Artist book)
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2017University of Hull Hull, UK Library collection (Artist book)
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2017Oxford Brooks University Oxford, UK Library collection (Artist book)
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2017University for the Creative Arts Farnham, UK Library collection (Artist book)
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2017Koninklijke Academie van Beeldende Kunsten The Hague, NL Library collection (Artist book)
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2017British Royal Library London, UK Library collection (Artist book)
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2017TATE (Library and Archive) London Library collection (Artist book)
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2011Bespoke illustration (Private collection) Manchester, UK Commissioned by Raw Design as part of the exhibition 'Raw 5'
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2011Various print editions of illustrations (Private collections) Manchester, UK Via various exhibition sales
Publications
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2021Rotterdam, a post-colonial city in motion Boom Edited by Francio Guadeloupe, Paul van de Laar, Liane van der Linden
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2017Being, in a State of Erasure Book Works, London Artist Book
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2015A Set of Recollections What are you looking at? | A zine project initiated by Vasiliki Sifostratoudaki Essay
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2014Un Sentiment de Comme Si MAR/KABK, Den Haag Netherlands Essay
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2013MARchive MAR/KABK, Den Haag Netherlands Essay
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2012BANG BANG Le Gun/Arrtco, Beijing Artist feature
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2011The Drum Magazine The Drum, UK Artist feature
Awards and grants
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2022Artist Basis Stipend Mondriaan Fonds Amsterdam Amsterdam, Netherlands
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2019Develop your creative practice Grant United Kingdom Granted by the UK Arts Council
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2018Production Subsidy AFK Amsterdam, Netherlands For the exhibition Inverting the Archive
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2017Young Talent Stipend Mondriaan Fonds Amsterdam Netherlands
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2017Production Subsidy James Reckitt Library Trust Hull, United Kingdom For the project Being, in a State of Erasure
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2016Project Subsidy Stroom The Hague, Netherlands For the project Being, in a State of Erasure
Secondary art-related activities
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2022 - --Archive Chef at PrintRoom, Rotterdam On-going
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2018 - 2018Editor at Foundation Meduza (Amsterdam, NL)