LONDON.- The you in us is a new commission and the first solo exhibition in an institution by London and Oran-based artist Lydia Ourahmane. Comprising installation, sculpture and sound, Ourahmanes exhibition continues her ongoing engagement with the emotional, psychological and political charge of material and place. Informed by personal encounters, Ourahmanes work raises questions surrounding systems of exchange and dissemination.
Recurring throughout Ourahmanes work is the impulse to address acts of displacement, in which allegories of absence and removal evoke wider issues of place and migration. Influenced by time spent living and working from her family home in Oran, Algeria, Ourahmanes exhibition at
Chisenhale Gallery investigates transformation through sonic and sculptural registers.
Works within the exhibition resonate through acts of cause and effect between materials, the audience and Ourahmane herself. Central to the show is a new sound work, Paradis (2018), which is embedded within, and amplified from a temporary wooden floor installed throughout the gallery. This work combines audio from field recordings made by Ourahmane whilst in Oran with sound scores composed and performed by the artist and her collaborators.
In the Absence of our Mothers (2015-18) consists of a single gold tooth, which resides in the gallery space, and a duplicate gold tooth that is implanted within Ourahmanes mouth. This work is shown alongside documents referencing Ourahmanes grandfathers resistance to military service under the French occupation of Algeria by extracting his own teeth. The archive also refers to the documents current use by his descendants to claim French citizenship by right of blood. Heavy silver doors, treated black with sulphur, mark the entrance to the gallery. Over the duration of the exhibition, as visitors and gallery staff interact with the doors by entering and exiting the space, the blackened surface slowly reverts back to silver.
Explored through a non-linguistic approach to narrative such as the use of deep listening and visceral engagement Ourahmane implements both her own body and the body of the viewer to ask questions including, how is localised trauma felt on a collective level and how do forms of resilience and respite manifest? Explored in relation to Ourahmanes subjectivity and political agency, this major body of work pursues lived experience as matter and as form.
Acting as a companion to the sound installation Ourahmane has produced Paradis, 11.10.2017, 23:45 (2018), a moving image commission for Chisenhale Gallerys website. Ourahmane recorded the silent video on her phone in Paradis Plage, Oran, during a production trip in October 2017. To watch the video please visit the Chisenhale Gallerys website. Ourahmane has also produced a new edition comprising 13 hand printed photographs. Displayed in the foyer of the gallery, each photograph references the spaces Ourahmane was working within while developing this new commission.
Lydia Ourahmane (b. 1992, Saϊda, Algeria) lives and works between London and Oran. Exhibitions include 2018 New Museum Triennial: Songs for Sabotage, The New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York (forthcoming 2018); a good neighbour, 15th Istanbul Biennial (2017); Social Calligraphies, Zachęta National Gallery of Art, Warsaw (2016); and Bloomberg New Contemporaries, Institute of Contemporary Arts, London (2014).