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Curating Contemporary Art (MA)

Jieyi Zhang

Grace Ndiritu - An Absolute River was an exhibition, running from Wednesday 11th May - Saturday 16th July 2022, a public programme, which took place on Friday 13th and Saturday 14th May, and an accompanying publication, at LUX, London. 

The exhibition and programme called upon artists to expand the public’s horizons of temporal divides of past, present and future. The global pandemic has caused many to question the dominance of linear time. Through moving image, live performance, workshops and text, the artists in this project investigated different subjectivities of time.

The film-based exhibition was dedicated to the British Kenyan artist and activist, Grace Ndiritu (b.1982), whose practice is deeply concerned with our contemporary world seeing it through the twin lenses of healing and spirituality, by finding alternative ways for humanity to live. Her archive of over forty 'hand-crafted' videos; Post-Hippie Pop-Abstraction collages and shamanic performances reflect her alternative ways of looking and seeing the world through spiritual practice.

Inviting audiences to immerse themselves in Ndiritu’s two films: “A Week in the News: 7 places we think we know, 7 news stories we think we understand” (2010) and “Black Beauty” (2021), the exhibition reflected the artist’s explorations of “deep time”. The two works stood in dialogue with each other in two separate screening rooms to enable the viewers to see a continuity and development between the artist’s ideas across eleven years. Ndiritu’s intermediary film “Raiders of the Lost Ark” (2015) was screened online for the first week of the exhibition. Her films blur the lines between different time frames and explore themes of media, authorship and historical narratives, whilst expanding on notions of temporality. 

Grace Ndiritu’s debut short film “Black Beauty” has been selected for prestigious film festivals including 72nd Berlinale in the Forum Expanded section (2022), 32nd FIDMarseille (2022), and British Art Show 9 (2022) . Most recently her work has been featured at Flat Time House (2022), British Art Show 9 (2021/2022), Nottingham Contemporary (2021) and Kunsthal Gent (2021).

*Grace Ndiritu - An Absolute River’s title derived from Borges’ theories on the fluidity of time. Borges features as a fictional protagonist in Ndiritu’s “Black Beauty”, and his notion of “An Absolute River” was inspired by Heraclitus’ “No Man ever Steps in the Same River Twice”.

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In the accompanying public programme, artists Rieko Whitfield, Serena Huang and Dr Jason Allen-Paisant guided audiences through an atemporal journey. Inspired by Jorge Luis Borges’, the Argentinian writer, ideas around the mysterious nature of time, the exhibition and programme explored alternative ideas of time to widely accepted linear narratives.

The three contributors in the live programme each deal with critical conceptions of time in their practice. Visitors to the workshop led by Rieko Whitfield reflected on past histories through non-linear writing activities and guided meditation. Serena Huang invited her participants to reimagine potential futures using found objects to create a temporary work of theatrical art. Performing a soundscape with spoken word, Dr Jason Allen-Paisant explored the ways in which sound evades temporal categorisation and affects us differently to visual representations. The audience was invited to contemplate an unfinished past and imagine futures beyond linear time. The accompanying publication “Grace Ndiritu: An Absolute River” offered different perspectives of temporality, and gave audiences opportunities to interact with these themes and the screenings in a tangible and enduring way. 

Jieyi Zhang-statement

Jieyi Zhang is a curator and writer working in the field of contemporary art. She considers her practice as a bridge between art and the public. Being intrigued by the notions of decolonising and decentralising in the contemporary global context, Jieyi's work focuses on recognising and excavating the repairing, healing, and liberating potentials in art and art projects.

In her graduate dissertation, Stolen Time in a Curatorial Duration, Jieyi explores the notion of duration in the curation of contemporary art exhibitions through the lens of 'stolen time'. The idea of stolen time reflects how the curatorial challenges the normative clock time by introducing an alternative time flow dependent on the dialectical interaction between the audience and art installations. Through rethinking and reflecting on time via moving image installations, Jieyi seeks the potential of the curatorial to liberate the audience from chronological time frames prescribed by the modern capitalised world and allow a subjective experience on a human level.

For her graduation project, Jieyi co-curated Grace Ndiritu - An Absolute River, a two-month exhibition and a live programming weekend in collaboration with the moving image archive, LUX. The project re-evaluates the nature of time beyond the universalised chronology of linear time. Through artists Grace Ndiritu, Rieko Whitfield, Serena Huang, and Dr Jason Allen-Paisant's various approaches, the project provides alternative models for understanding the subjectivities of time. 

Jieyi was the co-founder of a Chinese-language virtual media platform Curator-To-Go, she also co-curated an online research platform called Grapevine. Prior to her studies at the RCA, Jieyi graduated with BA Philosophy from Xiamen University.



Installation View: "Grace Ndiritu: An Absolute River", 2022. Photo: Dimitri D'ippolito
Installation View: "Grace Ndiritu: An Absolute River", 2022. Photo: Dimitri D'ippolito
Installation View: "Grace Ndiritu: An Absolute River", 2022. Photo: Dimitri D'ippolito
Installation View: "Grace Ndiritu: An Absolute River", 2022. Photo: Dimitri D'ippolito
Grace Ndiritu in conversation with Benjamin Cook. "Grace Ndiritu: An Absolute River", 2022. Pho
Grace Ndiritu in conversation with Benjamin Cook. "Grace Ndiritu: An Absolute River", 2022. Pho
Workshop "Mythologies of Memory" by Rieko Whitfield as part of "Grace Ndiritu: An Absolute River", 2022. Photo: Dimitri D'ippoli
Workshop "Mythologies of Memory" by Rieko Whitfield as part of "Grace Ndiritu: An Absolute River", 2022. Photo: Dimitri D'ippoli
Workshop "Mythologies of Memory" by Rieko Whitfield as part of "Grace Ndiritu: An Absolute River", 2022. Photo: Dimitri D'ippoli
Workshop "Mythologies of Memory" by Rieko Whitfield as part of "Grace Ndiritu: An Absolute River", 2022. Photo: Dimitri D'ippoli
 Workshop "Staging Theatricalities in Mundanities" by Serena Huang, 2022. Photo: Dimitri D'ippoli
Workshop "Staging Theatricalities in Mundanities" by Serena Huang, 2022. Photo: Dimitri D'ippoli
 Workshop "Staging Theatricalities in Mundanities" by Serena Huang, 2022. Photo: Dimitri D'ippoli
Workshop "Staging Theatricalities in Mundanities" by Serena Huang, 2022. Photo: Dimitri D'ippoli
Dr Jason Allen-Paisant's performance as part of "Grace Ndiritu: An Absolute River", 2022. Photo: Dimitri D'ippoli
Dr Jason Allen-Paisant's performance as part of "Grace Ndiritu: An Absolute River", 2022. Photo: Dimitri D'ippoli
Installation View: Publication of "Grace Ndiritu: An Absolute River", 2022. Photo: Jieyi Zhang
Installation View: Publication of "Grace Ndiritu: An Absolute River", 2022. Photo: Jieyi Zhang

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