Showing posts with label Camden Arts Centre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Camden Arts Centre. Show all posts

09/03/25

Black Paris Exhibition @ Centre Pompidou, Paris - Artistic circulations and anti-colonial resistance 1950 – 2000 (In English)

Black Paris
Artistic circulations and anti-colonial resistance
1950 – 2000
Centre Pompidou, Paris
March 19 – June 30, 2025

Vers la version en français de l'exposition Paris Noir

Ed Clark - Oeuvre
Ed Clark
Untitled, (Vétheuil), 1967
Acylic on canvas, 177,8 × 208,3 cm
© The Estate of Ed Clark. 
Courtesy of the Estate and Hauser & Wirth
Photo © Sarah Muehlbauer

First Congress of Black Writers and Artists
Premier Congrès des écrivains et artistes noirs 
(First Congress of Black Writers and Artists)
Paris, September 1956
© Présence Africaine Éditions, 1956
Photographie © Lutetia

From the creation of the Présence Africaine review to that of Revue noire, Black Paris retraces the presence and influence of Black artists in France from the 1950s to 2000. The exhibition celebrates 150 artists of African descent, from Africa to the Americas, whose works have often never been displayed in France before.

Black Paris offers a vibrant immersion in a cosmopolitan Paris, a place of resistance and creation that gave rise to a wide variety of practices, from a new awareness of identity to the search for trans-cultural artistic languages. From international to Afro-Atlantic abstractions via surrealism and free figuration, this historical voyage reveals the importance of artists of African descent in the redefinition of Modernisms and Post-modernisms.

Four installations produced especially for the exhibition by Valérie John, Nathalie Leroy-Fiévée, Jay Ramier and Shuck One punctuate the visit and provide contemporary insights into this memory. At the centre, a circular matrix takes up the motif of the Black Atlantic, the ocean as a disk, a metonymy of the Caribbean and the “Whole-World”, to use the term coined by Martinican poet Edouard Glissant, as a metaphor for the Parisian space. Attentive to circulations, networks and friendships, the exhibition proposes a living and often entirely new map of Paris.

Black Paris: A transnational artistic map

From the 1950s, Afro-American and Caribbean artists explored new forms of abstraction in Paris (Ed Clark, Beauford Delaney, Guido Llinás), while artists from the continent outlined the first Pan-African modernisms (Paul Ahyi, Skunder Boghossian, Christian Lattier, Demas Nwoko). New artistic movements emerged in Paris, such as that of the Fwomajé group (Martinique) and Vohou-Vohou (Côte d’Ivoire) The exhibition also presents the first post-colonial movements of the 1990s, marked by the affirmation of the notion of ethnic mixing in France. 

Black Paris: A tribute to artists of African descent in Paris

After the Second World War, Paris became an intellectual centre where figures such as James Baldwin, Suzanne and Aimé Césaire, and Léopold Sédar Senghor converged to lay down the foundations of a post- and de-colonial future. The exhibition captures the political and cultural effervescence of the period, in the midst of struggles for independence and the fight for civil rights in the United States, by offering a unique immersion in the artistic expressions of Négritude, Pan-Africanism and the transatlantic movements.

Black Paris: An exhibition between utopia and emancipation

The exhibition retraces half a century of struggles for emancipation, from African independence to the fall of the apartheid, and the fight against racism in France. “Black Paris” highlights the aesthetic power and political strength of those artists who, through their creations, challenged the prevailing narratives and reinvented a universalism “of differences” in a post-colonial world. This political background provided the context, and sometimes direct frame of reference, for certain artistic practices. In parallel or in contrast, the exhibition also includes plastic experimentations that are often solitary but find aesthetic ties within the display.

Recognised as a key space of classical artistic training and, at the same time, a centre of experimentation, Paris held exceptional appeal for creators, whether visitors or residents. The city was a nexus of encounters and point of transit – particularly towards Africa – that lent itself to the affirmation of transnational trajectories.

Black Paris: An ambitious cultural programme

The exhibition is accompanied by a rich cultural programme in Paris and abroad. Conferences, publications, the acquisition of works by the Musée National d’Art Moderne and archives at the Kandinsky Library, thanks to the “Black Paris” fund, contribute to enhancing the visibility of Black artists. These initiatives also allow the creation of a lasting archive of militant and artistic anticolonial culture in a national institution.

Curators: Alicia Knock, curator, head of contemporary creation and prospective department, Musée national d’art moderne − Centre Pompidou.
Associate curators: Eva Barois De Caevel, curator, Aurélien Bernard, Laure Chauvelot, and Marie Siguier, conservation officers, contemporary creation and prospective department, Musée national d’art moderne − Centre Pompidou.

For a list of Exhibited Artists, see the French version of this Post "Paris Noir" with more artworks

Related Post (in English): Sarah Maldoror Films at Centre Pompidou's Cinemas (Associated programme to the "Black Paris" exhibition)

CENTRE POMPIDOU, PARIS

30/06/19

Wong Ping @ Camden Arts Centre, London

Wong Ping
Camden Arts Centre, London
5 July – 15 September 2019

Wong Ping
WONG PING
Who’s the Daddy’, 2017, single channel video animation, 9 min.
Image courtesy of Edouard Malingue Gallery and the artist.

Camden Arts Centre presents the first solo exhibition in a UK institution by Hong Kong-born artist Wong Ping. Wong is the inaugural recipient of Camden Art Centre’s new Emerging Artist Prize (2018) and will present an ambitious exhibition installed across the gallery’s iconic spaces. The exhibition will showcase a group of the artist’s most recent animated films, installed within his bespoke installation environments.

Described as ‘sino-futurism’, Wong Ping’s digital and sculptural works combine a contemporary aesthetic with more archetypal content – often employing absurd narratives that reveal very human, and often universal, pathologies and fantasies lurking within the collective unconscious. Drawing anecdotally from his own personal social encounters, he elaborates his stories into darkly humorous tales that touch on political and cultural anxieties, psycho-sexual taboos, and the complexities and perversities of contemporary human relationships. Digitally rendering them in a seductive, technicolour language that recalls the modernism of Fernand Leger, the pop languages of Tom Wesselman or Allen Jones, as well as the design aesthetic of The Memphis Group and early 1980s video games, the simple but seductive animations disguise a deeper social critique of technological modernity.

Two new films - Fables 1 (2018) and Fables 2 (2019) – are populated exclusively by animal characters. Part of a new, ongoing series, they take their form from the anthology tradition of Aesop’s Fables and Grimm’s Fairy Tales: contemporary morality tales re-written for our dystopian and alienated modern age. Wong Ping’s creatures, which include a convicted capitalist cow, a three-headed homicidal rabbit, and a telepathic tree, hold up a twisted mirror to our own humanity, whilst mutated figures with asymmetrical facial features, eyes that have slid down beneath a cheek, or breasts that have grown on an adolescent girl’s back, become the focal points of subversive domestic fantasies.

Narrated in a deadpan Cantonese, the sexually explicit content of Wong Ping’s work has been a consistent feature, but for the artist it is not the subject itself, but rather a universal language through which he communicates more pervasive concerns about identity, fear, mortality and loneliness. It points again to a contemporary condition where physical contact has been replaced by digital communication, romance is brokered through dating applications, and young people interact with friends in the virtual space of computer games and social media sites.

Entirely self-taught, Wong Ping began making animations in his free time, while working as a digital editor for a TV studio in Hong Kong. Initially releasing them through Vimeo and YouTube, his satirical humour and unique visual language soon attracted a large on-line following and he was invited to present the work within an exhibition context. The artist has continued to craft every aspect of the films himself and they retain a very personal quality of the hand-made. He was listed amongst Art Review Asia’s 2018 future greats and was included in the New Museum Triennial Songs of Sabotage and the Guggenheim’s One Hand Clapping last year. For his exhibition at CAC, the artist will create new installations that contextualise the digital materiality of his films with sculptural objects that speak to the mass production of the consumer market.

CAC’s Emerging Artist Prize was established in 2018 as part of the Centre’s commitment to nurturing and celebrating the most innovative artists of the moment, who have yet to receive the recognition their work deserves. The prize awards an artist exhibiting in the Focus section of Frieze London with an exhibition at CAC.

In 2019, Wong Ping (b. 1984, Hong Kong) had solo exhibitions at Kunsthalle Basel - Golden Shower – and CAPRI, Dusseldorf, Germany, and won the Ammodo Tiger Short Competition at the 48th International Film Festival, Rotterdam. In 2018 he was included in New Museum Triennial Songs of Sabotage and One Hand Clapping, at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, both New York. Wong Ping was artist in residence at the Chinese Centre for Contemporary Art, Manchester, 2015.

CAMDEN ARTS CENTRE
Arkwright Road, London NW3 6DG
www.camdenartscentre.org