Event overview
020 8228 5969
The first solo show by artist Mohamed Bourouissa with a UK public institution and includes a selection of works across photography, sound, installation and moving image.
Artist Mohamed Bourouissa (b. 1978, Blida, Algeria) is known for confronting complex socio-economic issues and for seeking out tensions between different social contexts. In-depth research, including long periods of engagement with specific locales and groups, inform works that question collective histories, uses of public space, and representational identities. This solo survey show features new and existing works by Bourouissa across photography, sound, installation and moving image made since 2003, in what will be his first solo show with a UK public institution.
His celebrated work 'Horse Day' (2014-15) is included in the exhibition, and saw the artist live for eight months among a low-income community in North Philadelphia to create an event and film with the horse riders of its urban stables – making, as he terms it, a contemporary American cowboy movie. The charged legacies of colonialism, and contemporary realities of racial and socioeconomic inequality, are present throughout Bourouissa’s work; including the recent 'Brutal Family Roots' (2020), which fuses hip-hop with installation to track patterns of exchange between Britain, Australia, France and Algeria, through the spread of the Acacia tree species.
Throughout his work, Bourouissa builds poetics by examining contemporary society; often documenting disenfranchised groups and individuals who have been “left behind at the crossroads of integration and exclusion”, but who use the tools at their disposal to navigate their situation. For example, a new work 'HARA!!!!!!hAAARAAAAA!!!!!hHARAAA!!!' (2020) abstracts the invented word ‘hara’ used by young lookouts to alert drug dealers of approaching police in Marseilles. The distorted word becomes a sound installation in the vein of concrete poetry.
The presentation of Bourouissa’s work in the context of the gallery brings into relief different circulations of images and their economies. These circuits, their violence and corruptibility, are exploited and disrupted in works such as 'ALL IN' (2012) and 'Shoplifters' (2014). In these, as with all his works, Bourouissa moves between different modes of photographic and filmic techniques with irreverence and instinct. From grainy smartphone images in works like 'Temps Mort' (2008-9) – in which the artist exchanged images, videos and messages with an incarcerated friend – to street photography in 'Nous Sommes Halles' (2003-5), and canonical art historical framings of Parisian street life via Delacroix in the series 'Périphéries' (2006-8); each mode and medium is exploited for its ability to conceptually articulate incisive statements on contemporary image culture and a racialised social fabric of inequality.
Dates & times
Date | Time | Add to calendar |
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21 May 2021 |
12:00pm - 6:00pm We are offering two weekly time slots – Thursdays 12.00-2.00pm and Sundays 4.00-6.00pm – for visitors who consider themselves at greater risk of contracting Covid19. These include members of ethnic minority communities, and those with specific health cond |
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1 Aug 2021 |
12:00pm - 6:00pm Exhibition from 21 May–01 Aug 2021 |
Accessibility
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