We are proud to announce our first solo exhibition with Imogen
Stidworthy.
Imogen Stidworthy (born in 1963 in the UK) examines the different
dimensions of language: its communicative potential, its path
through the body, its acoustic, gesticulatory, spatial and mental
characteristics. She works with the voice as a material to reflect
and question how voice and language locate the subject, socially,
politically or culturally. Her installation 'I Hate' had great
attention at the Documenta 12 in Kassel in 2007.
In the exhibition Barrabackslarrabang at AKINCI, Stidworthy brings together
works referring to very different languages and places, from the
Backslang and Scouse of Liverpool to the Papiamentu of Curacao.
In the film Barrabackslarrabang (2009), Stidworthy
interweaves standard and subverted English (Backslang) with tropes
of class and race, trade and desire, in the hidden backwaters and
idealized forms of the voice. The film was commissioned for the
exhibition ‘XXX Get Off at Edge Hill’ at Edge Hill Station in
Liverpool. It draws on images and ideas connected with this site,
the birthplace of the railway, where from the oldest platform in the
world Stephenson’s Rocket was first run. This is the beginning of
consumer capitalism with the speed and spread of goods accelerating
to previously unknown levels. The railway also brought about
Standard Pronunciation as a solution for the millions of traders and
businessmen travelling around Britain, confronted for the first time
by accents they could not understand.
Backslang developed as a linguistic disguise to protect speakers,
especially from the ears of the law. It is associated with working
class culture and criminality, the black or grey trade upon which
many depend. Like all languages, Backslang is also a space of
identification, spoken proudly; it can be seen as a sign of economic
and social conditions, but also as a form of resistance - a
necessity, or a possibility for different social paradigms.
Topography of a Voice
(offset and copperplate print, 2008-9) uses several forms of
language to represent an accent. This results in a visualisation of
sound which describes the accent while it is not audible. The
diagrams of waterfall plots, charting decibels, wavelength and
duration are commented upon by local speakers, immigrants, actresses
and a voice coach. Stidworthy explores the relationship between
accent, voice, geography and identity.
The third work in this exhibition is a series of photographs of
residential buildings in Curacao in process of being built,
alongside transcriptions of Papiamentu jokes (originally recorded in
the public spaces of Willemstad). It also questions the relation
between language and identity. Papiamentu is an extraordinarily hybrid language, having
absorbed many linguistic elements of its trading and colonial past.
The various butts of these jokes invoke a landscape of social
thresholds and borders - like most jokes, they are built on the
logic of who gets it and who doesn’t; who is in and who is out.
Imogen Stidworthy has had many exhibitions worldwide, amongst others
XXX Get off at Edge Hill at Metal, Edge Hill Station
in Liverpool; See this Sound at Lentos Museum in Linz
(Austria); the installation Left at the Zacherlfabrik in
Vienna, in 2009; Die Lucky Bush, a curatorial project at the
Museum of Contemporary Art in Antwerp, Shrinking Cities at
Cube in Manchester, in 2008; the installation I Hate in
Documenta 12 in Kassel; Works in Translation, at the Digital
Arts Laboratory in Holon (Israel); Thessaloniki Biennial, in 2007;
Walk On at the Shanghai Biennial; Be what you Want but
Stay where you Are at Witte de With in Rotterdam, in 2006;
Murmur at TENT Centre for Contemporary Art in Rotterdam;
Dutch-non Dutch in the Van Abbe Museum in Eindhoven, in 2005,
Becks Futures, ICA London and CCA Glasgow; With Hidden Noise
at the Henry Moore Institute in Leeds; Governmentality: How do we
want to be Governed at Art Central Miami, in 2004. Stidworthy
was nominated for the Northern Art Prize in 2009, won the Liverpool
Art Prize in 2008, was nominated for Becks Futures in 2004 and won
the Prix de Rome in 1996.
She is currently an advising researcher at Jan van Eyck Academy in
Maastricht, and is based in Liverpool, UK.
From December 16th 2009 till March 7th 2010,
Stidworthy’s film I hate [screen work] is presented in
the exhibition Niet Normaal, Difference on Display at the
Beurs van
Berlage in Amsterdam.
Upcoming exhibitions:
February 2010 solo exhibition at Arnolfini, Bristol, UK and March
2010 Art Sheffield, UK.