ACCRA.- This August,
Gallery 1957 presents a solo exhibition by the award-winning Ivorian photographer and mixed media artist Joana Choumali, running from 24 August- 5 October 2019. Presenting new and recent works which blend photography with collage and embroidery, the exhibition will include works from the series Ça Va Aller, Translation, and Albahian. It will also debut additional works inspired by the artists early-morning explorations of Accra in the summer of 2019; marking a departure for the artist, this latest body of work sees the artist working on a larger scale (up to 2m x 1m), for the first time.
Choumali is known particularly for her photography work, including the critically-lauded series Hââbré/The Last Generation documenting portraits of a last generation of scarified Burkinabè men and women living in Abidjan, as well as individuals from Niger, Nigeria, and Benin. Following the 13 March 2016 terrorist attacks in Grand-Bassam, Côte dIvoire, Choumali instinctively turned to embroidery as a way to process the trauma of the event. Rather than dismiss her feelings with the favored Ivorian maxim Ça va aller (It will be OK), she chose to explore them via the gesture of slowly stitching, sometimes over several months. Richly worked, these small photographs accompanied her nearly constantly during their creation. They reflect not only the artists physical touch, but also her emotional evolution as she used this new way of art making to both process this moment of national grief and face challenges in her personal life. In the artists words, discovering embroidery opened a new gate in my life, through which she was free to be sensitive, to speak the unspoken, and to connect with others on a human level.
Transposing her inner landscape on top of the visible world, Choumali overlays gauzy panels of embroidered chiffon and tulle on collaged cell-phone photographs of figures and cityscapes. Like dreams overlapping reality, it is unclear where one begins and the other ends. While depicting specific individuals she sees during early morning walks, these works contemplate what is the core of a human being, capturing their état desprit (state of mind). Through her textile interventions and collage, individuals encountered on the street move larger-than-life through silent cities at dawn. Faces blurred by motion or by fabric, their figures and gestures remain legible and become universal.
A cathartic and deeply intimate technique, Choumali found that what began as a quiet diary became a means of communication when she shared the resulting works publicly. The immediate response and connection she received from diverse viewers inspired the exhibitions title How do you spell a silent sound? Through these works, a wordless conversation begins between artist and viewer, transcending difference.
Curated by Maria Pia Bernardoni, the exhibition will be accompanied by a publication with essays by Kristen Windmuller-Luna and other contributors.
Joana Choumali, born in 1974, is visual artist/photographer based in Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire. She studied graphic arts in Casablanca (Morocco) and worked as an art director in an advertising agency before embarking on her photography career. She works mainly on conceptual portraits, mixed media and documentary photography. Much of her work focuses on Africa, and what she, as an African, learns about the innumerable cultures around her.
In her latest works, Joana embroiders directly on the images completing the act of creating the photograph image with a slow and meditative gesture. Joana has exhibited her work at the Museum of Civilizations-Abidjan, the Donwahi Foundation for Contemporary Art-Abidjan, at the Rotonde des Arts Contemporary Art Center - Abidjan, at the Vitra Design Museum-Basel, at the Museum of African Contemporary Art Al Maaden- Marrakech, at the Museum of photography -St Louis, Senegal, at the Tropen Musuem Amsterdam at the International Photography Biennale of Bamako, at the Photoquai Biennale (Quai Branly Museum- Paris), at the Lagos Photo Festival, and PhotoVogue festival. In 2014, she won the CapPrize Award and the 2014 Emerging Photographer LensCulture Award. In 2016, she received the Magnum Emergency Grant Foundation, and the Fourthwall Books Award in South Africa. In 2017, she exhibited her series "Translation" and "Adorn" at the Pavilion of the Ivory Coast during the 57th Venice International Biennale. Her latest mixed media series Alba'hian is exhibited at the Zeitz Mocaa Museum of Contemporary Arts-Capetown.
Her book "HAABRE", was published and edited in Johannesburg in 2016.