Artes Mundi 8 is at the National Museum Cardiff, until 24 February 2019
Artes Mundi is a biennial
art prize awarded to an international contemporary artist who directly
engages with the human condition, social reality and lived experience and who
explores contemporary social issues across the globe. It is the biggest art
prize in the UK, awarding £40,000 to the winning artist - the winner will be
announced on 24th January 2019.
The shortlist for Artes Mundi 8
(2018) is –
Anna Boghiguian (Canada/Egypt)
Bouchra Khalili (Morocco/France)
Otobong Nkanga (Nigeria/Belgium)
Trevor Paglen (USA)
Apichatpong Weerasethakul (Thailand).
Bouchra Khalili (Morocco/France)
Otobong Nkanga (Nigeria/Belgium)
Trevor Paglen (USA)
Apichatpong Weerasethakul (Thailand).
Previous winners have been –
2004 Xu Bing (China)
2006 Eija-Liisa Ahtila (Finland)
2008 N. S. Harsha (India)
2010 Yael Bartana (Israel)
2012 Teresa Margolles (Mexico)
2014 Theaster Gates (USA)
2016 John Akomfrah (UK)
Reviews
Veronica Simpson (Studio International)
Jonathan Jones (The Guardian)
Cal Revely-Calder (The Telegraph)
Anna Boghiguian (Canada/Egypt) was born in 1946 in Cairo, Egypt.
Veronica Simpson (Studio International)
Jonathan Jones (The Guardian)
Cal Revely-Calder (The Telegraph)
Anna Boghiguian (Canada/Egypt) was born in 1946 in Cairo, Egypt.
Boghiguian’s raw and
expressionistic works combine painting, drawing, writing, collage, and
sculpture to contemplate the past and present through intersections of
economics, philosophy, literature, and myth. Since the 1970s, Boghiguian has
travelled continuously, and her work has charted her impressions and
observations of various societies, as well as her experiences of non-belonging
as a foreigner and outsider. In Boghiguian’s work, the palimpsest of memory
takes physical form as a rough accumulation that thickens the surface of her
paintings with encaustic, pigment, steel, collage and non-specific debris.
For
Artes Mundi she is showing a new
monumental installation concerning the steel industry, moving past the faceless
global industry and into the communities whose lives encompass it, including
nearby Port Talbot, Wales.
Bouchra Khalili (Morocco/France) was born in 1975 in Casablanca, Morocco and lives and works in Berlin and Oslo.
Bouchra Khalili (Morocco/France) was born in 1975 in Casablanca, Morocco and lives and works in Berlin and Oslo.
Working with film, video,
installation, photography and prints, Khalili’s practice articulates language,
subjectivity, orality, and geographical explorations. Each of her projects
investigates strategies and discourses of resistance as elaborated, developed,
and narrated by individuals, often members of political minorities. Many of her
works suggest civic platforms, from which members of minorities perform their
strategies of resistance to arbitrary power. Through her work, Khalili
articulates subjectivity and collective history, questioning the complex
relationships between the singular and civic belonging and calling for a new
collective voice to come into being.
In a UK premiere for Artes Mundi
8, Twenty-Two Hours (2018) follows two young African-American women
investigating how, in the 1970s, celebrated French writer Jean Genet was called
to action by the Black Panther Party and travelled secretly to the US to
support their struggle for racial equality.
Otobong Nkanga (Nigeria/Belgium) was born in 1974 in Kano, Nigeria and lives and works in Antwerp.
Otobong Nkanga (Nigeria/Belgium) was born in 1974 in Kano, Nigeria and lives and works in Antwerp.
Otobong Nkanga, Double Plot, 2018, tapestry, detail
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Otobong Nkanga, Double Plot, 2018, tapestry, detail.
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Nkanga’s drawings, installations,
photographs and sculptures variously examine ideas around land and the value
connected to natural resources.
Nkanga’s interest in minerals has
led the artist far and wide, studying the intense mining of the world’s natural
resources since the rise of late capitalism. One of the primary means by which
the artist’s interest manifests is through the body. In Nkanga’s works on paper
and her tapestries, the body becomes a border implicated within the field of
mining. Nkanga acts as a cultural anthropologist—tracing the violent means by
which contested minerals and objects are exhumed from their natural
environments, such as in Nigeria and Namibia—and considers how they are
transported to the West. Through her work, the artist re-imagines our
relationship to our everyday environment.
For Artes Mundi 8, Nkanga has
produced an interactive, site-specific installation, Manifest of
Strains (2018), that links the west’s everyday luxuries with the core
elements and minerals they’re made from. Nkanga’s installation is mirrored by a
7-metre-long tapestry, Double Plot (2018), that literally
weaves together our materialism with industrial exploitation and the
detrimental environmental impact of mass industry on African communities.
Trevor Paglen (USA) was born in 1974 in Camp Springs, Maryland, and lives and works in Berlin.
Trevor Paglen (USA) was born in 1974 in Camp Springs, Maryland, and lives and works in Berlin.
, STSS-1 and Two Unidentified Spacecraft over Carson City (Space Tracking
and Surveillance System; USA 205), 2010
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His work spans image-making,
sculpture, investigative journalism, writing, engineering, and numerous other
disciplines. Among his chief concerns are learning how to see the historical
moment we live in and developing the means to imagine alternative futures. His
work deliberately blurs lines between science, contemporary art, journalism,
and other disciplines to construct unfamiliar, yet meticulously researched ways
to see and interpret the world around us.
For Artes Mundi 8, Paglen is
presenting two ongoing series of seminal work. In the first, The Other Night
Sky (2007 – ongoing), Paglen has spent the last eleven years working with a
network of amateur astronomers to track the more than 200 classified military
satellites that orbit the earth. He is also exhibiting works from his series Limit
Telephotography (2005 – ongoing), documenting secret US government bases
and operations, often from extreme distances.
Apichatpong Weerasethakul (Thailand) was born in Bangkok, Thailand in 1970 and lives and works in Chiang Mai, Thailand.
Apichatpong Weerasethakul (Thailand) was born in Bangkok, Thailand in 1970 and lives and works in Chiang Mai, Thailand.
Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Invisibility, 2016
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Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Invisibility, 2016
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Working in the space between
cinema and contemporary art, Apichatpong Weerasethakul creates installations
and films that are often non-linear and convey a strong sense of dislocation
and otherworldliness. Through the manipulation of time and light, Weerasethakul
constructs tenuous bridges for the viewer to travel between the real and the
mythical, the individual and the collective, the corporeal and the chimeric.
Over the years, the majority of his projects have involved many of the same
actors, which has allowed him to capture different phases of their lives and
their experience of ageing. Frequently set in rural Thai villages and forests,
his films traverse an extremely personal territory, inviting the viewer to
enter the subjective world of memory, myth and deep yearning. By using
unconventional narrative structures, expanding and constructing the sensation
of time, and playing with ideas of veracity and linearity, Weerasethakul’s work
sits comfortably in a world of his own making.
In Artes Mundi Weerasethakul is
exhibiting his film Invisibility (2016). The film, shown across two
screens, appear dreamlike and meditative, but reveal the ghosts of Thailand’s
political past, and the dark underside of political corruption that continues
today.