Online Exhibition

Filtering by: Online Exhibition

Jun
10
to 23 Aug

Theda Sandiford: Hidden In Plain Sight

A dynamic presentation made up of virtual and public art exhibitions by Caribbean-American artist Theda Sandiford, Hidden in Plain Sight confronts the psychological impact of racial gaslighting as it has been revealed in her everyday interactions.

“Using racial conflict as a starting point, I juxtapose various fibers with a variety of found materials using free form weaving, coiling, knotting, wrapping and jewelry making techniques.  Meticulously collected materials, transformed by their collective memory become “social fabric” weaving together contemporary issues and personal narratives.

100-foot extensions of rope, twine, and yarn impeccably wrapped, woven, tied and embellished with recycled beads, ribbon, lace, tape and bottle cap bobbles lures you into my hue-imbued, enmeshed installations symbolizing natural hair. These bold albeit whimsically twisted and locked forms gingerly invite the audience into off the-wall conversations about micro aggressions against black women and their hair.

Community art making is also key to my process. Multi-disciplinary experiences pairing people, food, wine, music and art, create a safe space to explore themes such as equity & inclusion, sustainability and personal wellbeing.” – Theda Sandiford

For further information at The Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts (MoCADA) website.

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Apr
30
to 12 Jul

Culture at Work Africa

  • Bozar - Centre for Fine Arts (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

An online exhibition, Culture at Work Africa, Multimedia Digital Showcase & Graphic Wall Map includes 33 projects that were conducted in 15 African countries (Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Democratic Republic of Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, Kenya, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda and Zimbabwe).

Discover the projects here.

A physical exhibition will also be presented in Abidjan at La Rotonde des Arts (20.05-13.06.2021)

For further information at Bozar - Centre for Fine Arts website.

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Mar
29
to 6 May

Ozioma Onuzulike: The Way We Are

The exhibition is the third chapter of a three-part exhibition series, The New Nsukka School, which re-examines the conceptual and material practices that characterize the art department at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka.

Ozioma Onuzulike often explores the aesthetic, symbolic and metaphorical nature of clay (his basic material) and the clay-working processes – pounding, crushing, hammering, wedging, grinding, cutting, pinching, punching, perforating, burning, firing – in his making of the multiple units that characterise his mixed-media projects.

His recent work has been inspired by the aesthetic and conceptual force held by such natural resources as yam tubers, palm kernel shells and honeycombs which he mass-produces in terracotta and weaves together in often laborious processes.

For further information at the kó art gallery website.

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Mar
10
to 30 Apr

Non-Traditional

  • Mahogany Culture Collective (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

The Non – Traditional exhibition is part of the (CaFA) Caribbean Fine Art Festival 2021. Zoe Osborne of Mahogany Culture is the guest curator of this exhibition which features art work from 6 emerging Barbadian artists that are located in Barbados and the Diaspora.

The theme of the exhibition is an exploration of non traditional expressions of Caribbean identity, with a focus on exploratory fine art and digital art.

Artists: Akilah Watts, Alex Gibson, Brandon K Best, Housing Area, John Alleyne, Sydney Mcconney

For further information at the Mahogany Culture Collective website.

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Mar
3
to 27 Jun

Sonya Clark: Tatter, Bristle, and Mend

  • National Museum of Women in the Arts (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

This exhibition—the first survey of Clark’s 25-year career—includes the artist’s well-known sculptures made from black pocket combs, human hair, and thread as well as works created from flags, currency, beads, cotton plants, pencils, books, a typewriter, and a hair salon chair. The artist transmutes each of these everyday objects through her application of a vast range of fiber-art techniques: Clark weaves, stitches, folds, braids, dyes, pulls, twists, presses, snips, or ties within each object.

Access the online exhibition.

For further information at the National Museum of Women in the Arts website.

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Feb
3
to 1 Aug

Zone Franche

  • Institut des Cultures d’Islam (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

"Zone Franche" is a collective adventure, the fruit of a meeting between three artistic structures located in Cameroon, Morocco and France, driven by the same desire to interact with the urban ecosystems that gave them birth.

Works by : Mariam Abouzid Souali, Mohamed Arejdal, Malala Andrialavidrazana, Sabrina Belouaar, Mansour Ciss, Saïdou Dicko, Hicham Gardaf, Chourouk Hriech, Smaïl Kanouté, Le Cercle Kapsiki, Salifou Lindou, Randa Maroufi, Jean David Nkot and Fatiha Zemmouri.

For further information at Institut des Cultures d’Islam website

Exhibition organized as part of Saison Africa2020.

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Feb
2
10:00 am10:00

Collaborating: For Whose Benefit? & Returning: From Causes to Consequences

As part of the Webinar Series "Global Provenance. Revisiting Appropriated Heritage in the Light of Inclusive Partnerships?"

For further information at Palais de Rumine website.

Program

10.00-11.30 (UTC+1)

Collaborating: For Whose Benefit?

Modératrice/Chair : Noémie Etienne, SNSF Professor at the University of Bern
 
Les participant.e.s du panel proposent de questionner la légitimité et la pertinence des relations établies ou convoitées entre les institutions gardiennes d’un patrimoine anthropologique ou ethnographique, et les héritiers culturels de celui-ci.

The participants of the panel propose to question the legitimacy and relevance of the relations established or expected between museums with anthropological or ethnographic collections, and the cultural owners of this heritage. 

  • Le traitement médiatique des collections des musées d’ethnographie : visibilisation de la recherche et enjeux géopolitiques. Audrey Doyen, Attachée temporaire d’enseignement et de recherche à l’Université Sorbonne Nouvelle

  • Revisiting the history of the ethnographic collection in Cape Town, South Africa. The changing relationship between museum curators and representatives of indigenous populations. Damiana Otoiu, Assistant Professor at the Political Science Department, University of Bucharest

  • Haunting Simulacra: the Presence and Evolving Meanings of Colonial Era Body, Bone and Facial Casts of Indigenous Peoples in Western Museum Collections. Paul Turnbull, Emeritus Professor of History at the University of Tasmania

14.00-15.30/2.00-3.30PM (UTC+1)

Returning: From Causes to Consequences

Modérateur/Chair : Marc-André Renold (Professeur et directeur du Centre du droit de l'art, Université de Genève)

Des enjeux des politiques gouvernementales aux initiatives internationales de recherche en provenance, les participant.e.s discutent des circonstances de la restitution patrimoniale et de ses répercussions.

From governmental issues to international provenance research initiatives, the panel participants discuss the circumstances of heritage restitution and its repercussions.

  • Retour et traitement des biens patrimoniaux en Belgique : Dénonciations, frilosité, bonnes pratiques et évitement. Yasmina Zian, chargée de la rédaction du rapport sur la question de la restitution des patrimoines culturels en Belgique commandé à l’Académie royale de Belgique

  • Current Developments in the Netherlands: Advice on a National Policy Framework for Colonial Collections. Jos van Beurden, Senior Researcher, Free University, Amsterdam

  • Contemporary Narratives on Ownership and Convenient Usages of the Provenance Yemen’s Past. A Perspective on Values and Archives of South Arabian Heritage. Alexander Nagel, Assistant Professor at the State University of New York’s Fashion Institute of Technology

  • "Demuseumification" and the return of Cultural Objects. Donna Yates, Associate Professor of Criminal Law and Criminology at Maastricht University, and Pierre Losson, Post-Doc, Graduate Center of the City University of New York

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Feb
1
to 30 Apr

The Shape of Blackness

A virtual exhibition that highlights expressions of contemporary Blackness as envisioned by South African and U.S. artists.

Participating artists:

  • From South Africa - Theko Boshomane, Tshepiso Moropa, Lebohang Motaung, Lebo Thoka, and Helena Uambembe ;

  • From the United States - Aaron Beitia, Courageous, Nicole Dixon, Michon Sanders, Brette Sims, and Abba Yahudah.

For further information at Oakstop website.

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Jan
17
to 19 Apr

Delita Martin: Calling Down the Spirits

  • National Museum of Women in the Arts (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

An exhibition on works by multimedia artist Delita Martin that combine tradition with innovation. Through her rigorous and meticulously layered process, Martin creates a new iconography for African Americans, and claims space for her subjects, particularly black women—a powerful presence that simultaneously highlights the historical absence of black bodies in Western art.

Access the online exhibition.

For further information at the National Museum of Women in the Arts website.

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