| Port
City explores the relationship between global
sea trade, slavery and the migration of people today.
Traditionally ports have been seen as gateways to a
wider world, representing points of contact between different
countries and cultures, facilitating the movement of people
as well as goods and ideas. Today, however, working ports
are increasingly separated off from everyday life, becoming
sealed points of exchange on a worldwide network of trade,
and sensitive entry points for the migrant worker.
Several works in the exhibition draw attention to the
experience of migration, in particular between North Africa
and so-called ‘Fortress Europe’. Ursula
Biemann’s video installation Sahara
Chronicle follows the route of migrants across
the desert to their embarkation points, filmed over three
years in Niger, Mauritania and Morocco. Yto Barrada’s
work refers to the Straits of Gibraltar, the narrow divide
between Europe and Africa. Her photographic series Sleepers
presents images from her home town of Tangiers, where
would-be émigrés await their moment of passage.
Elsewhere, Melanie Jackson’s
The Undesirables re-creates the scene
of the stricken cargo ship MSC Napoli, beached off of
Devon’s Jurassic coastline earlier this year, using
intricate paper models. Meschac Gaba’s
Sweetness is a model city, comprising buildings
from across the world made from sugar. Two new landmark
buildings from Southampton, chosen by local people, have
been added to the work. In the Gallery Reading
Room, visitors can explore Mary Evans’
Blighty, Guinea, Dixie, 2007, featuring
kaleidoscopes revealing contemporary scenes from historic
trans-atlantic trade routes.
As part of Port City the Maghreb
Connection Screening Programme will be shown
in the Project Room. Curated by Ursula
Biemann, this comprises a series of artist’s
films and documentary works exploring migratory movements
within Europe and North Africa.
Port City is curated by Tom
Trevor, Director of Arnolfini and funded by Arts
Council England, Grants for the Arts and the
European Commission Culture 2007. The Maghreb
Connection Screening Programme is curated by
Ursula Biemann. The exhibition will tour
to the Liverpool Biennial 2008.
|

Meschac Gaba, Sweetness, 2006.
© Copyright the artist. Photo: John Melville.

Yto Barrada, Sleepers, 2006.
Courtesy the artist.
|
Filmed Discussion
A 15 minute filmed discussion between Tom Trevor,
Director, Arnolfini and Stephen Foster,
Director, John Hansard Gallery, can be accessed
here in video stream, download audio, and video and audio
podcast formats. A transcription will be published here
shortly.
Watch
with Windows Media Player
Instructions on viewing the video can be found here.
Video produced by e-media, University of Southampton.
Download
audio mp3 (3.5Mb)
...or
subscribe to the series of interviews
in audio and video with our podcast - drag the logo or
copy: http://www.hansardgallery.org.uk/exhibition/jhgpod1.xml
to your podcast software.
users please copy and paste: http://www.hansardgallery.org.uk/exhibition/jhgpod_sussed1.xml
to add a "Custom RSS Channel". |