LONDON.- Marking the culmination of a year-long collaboration as
Whitechapel Gallerys Writer in Residence, this new project from artist, writer and filmmaker Sophia Al-Maria (b. 1983, US) draws on feminism and radical queer politics to consider themes of history and narrative. BCE presents two distinct creation myths side by side one ancient, one new.
In an ongoing collaboration Al-Maria has invited London-based artist, writer and performer Victoria Sin (b. 1991, Canada) to conceive of a new creation myth in a film work specially-commissioned for Whitechapel Gallery and on show for the first time. Sin performs the myth to camera, interrogating the patriarchal dimensions of sex, race, gender and fertility.
Displayed alongside, Wayuu Creation Myth (2018) explores the power of feminine rage to question colonial narratives. Footage shot on a hill of salt introduces a member of the Wayuu tribe in northern Colombia with whom Al-Maria collaborated, spontaneously retelling the story of Wolunca the first Wayuu woman, who has a vagina dentata.
Over the course of her residency, Al-Maria has taken inspiration from the late speculative fiction writer Ursula K. Le Guin (1929 2018, US), whose short essay The Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction questions masculine heroic trajectories to suggest an alternative non-linear model of storytelling based on the process of collecting and gathering (as opposed to hunting). Asking urgent questions about survival in a hostile world, storytelling becomes a means to imagine different, more hopeful futures.
Sophia Al-Marias work has been exhibited internationally. Her award-winning memoir, The Girl Who Fell to Earth (2012) charts the experience of navigating two different worlds in a childhood spent shuttling between the Pacific Northwest and the Gulf.
The project is curated by Jane Scarth, Curator: Public Programmes at the Whitechapel Gallery
The texts written by Al-Maria over the course of a year are available online. They reflect an ongoing series of performances and readings held at Whitechapel Gallery, spanning politics, science fiction and personal biography, realised in collaboration with Victoria Sin.
Sophia Al-Marias residency has been supported by the Barjeel Art Foundation
Sophia Al Maria (b. 1983, US) is a Qatari-American artist, writer, and filmmaker. Al-Maria has exhibited work at New Museum, New York, NY, USA (2015); Gwangju Biennale, Gwangju, South Korea (2013); Waqif Art Centre, Doha, Qatar (2007); and Townhouse Gallery, Cairo, Egypt (2005), among other places. Al-Maria has also been invited to participate in the 2016 Biennale of Moving Images (BIM), organized by the Centre dArt Contemporain in Geneva, Switzerland and is a root researcher in the 2016 Shanghai Project. In 2015 she guest edited issue 8 of The Happy Hypocrite entitled Fresh Hell. Her first solo exhibition, Virgin with a Memory, was presented at HOME, Manchester in 2014. Her critically-acclaimed memoir, The Girl Who Fell to Earth (2012), was published by Harper Perennial. Her writing has also appeared in Harpers Magazine, Five Dials, Triple Canopy, and Bidoun. She studied comparative literature at the American University in Cairo, and aural and visual cultures at Goldsmiths, University of London.
Victoria Sin (b. 1991, Canada) is an artist using speculative fiction within performance, moving image, writing, and print to interrupt normative processes of desire, identification and objectification. This includes Drag as a practice of purposeful embodiment questioning technologies of representation and systems of looking. Drawing from close personal encounters of looking and wanting, their work presents heavily constructed fantasy narratives on the often unsettling experience of the physical within the social body. Their long-term project Dream Babes explores strategies of queer resistance that reject pre-existing historical and social infrastructures. It has included science fiction porn screenings and talks, a programme of performance at Auto Italia South East (2016), a publication and a science fiction reading group for queer people of colour.