The Schirn presents the first comprehensive exhibition in Germany of John Akomfrah's installations
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The Schirn presents the first comprehensive exhibition in Germany of John Akomfrah's installations
John Akomfrah, Vertigo Sea, 2015, Three channel video, installation, 7.1 sound 48:30 min., film still, © Smoking Dogs Films / Courtesy Smoking Dogs Films and Lisson Gallery.



FRANKFURT.- John Akomfrah (b. 1957) creates thoughtful video works of haunting audiovisual intensity. He tells of the radical changes and crises of the present and past on characteristic large-format screens. From November 9, 2023 to January 28, 2024, the Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt is presenting for the first time a comprehensive overview of the artist’s work in Germany, featuring a selection of three major multichannel installations from recent years: The Unfinished Conversation (2012), Vertigo Sea (2015), and Akomfrah’s new work, Becoming Wind (2023). A co-founder of the influential London-based Black Audio Film Collective (established in 1982), Akomfrah’s work interweaves newly shot film sequences with archival material to create multilayered, at times associative collages, frequently in the form of simultaneous narrative structures. Akomfrah’s immersive installations critically examine colonial pasts, global migration, and the climate crisis. He addresses one-dimensional historical representations by allowing multiple perspectives to emerge in the narrative, disrupting the notion of linearity and the illusion of a one and only truth.

Dr. Sebastian Baden, director of the Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt, says: “What makes John Akomfrah’s work so impressive is the consistency with which he keeps connecting narrative strands concerning migration, the climate crisis, and colonial pasts. He seeks to raise awareness of these major contemporary issues as an international artist. His timeless installations blend newly filmed sequences with archival material to produce images charged with evocative emotionality. There is no better moment than now to bring Akomfrah’s complex questions about the coexistence of human nature and the environment to Germany and to the Schirn, in order to discuss them here.”

Julia Grosse, the exhibition’s curator, notes: “John Akomfrah aims to create what is unseen, untold, and unheard. His installations evoke poetic and powerful images to describe the urgency of these themes, yet without moralizing about them. As an artist, he manages to integrate and represent complex associations in a manner that is multidimensional and differentiated. Rather than confining his interest to human viewpoints, Akomfrah is always mindful of the narratives of other life forms that share our planet, such as plants and animals. His work provides a shift in perspective and questions the consequences of collective and individual action. Essentially, he would like to create a space of empathy with visitors.”

OPEN READING ROOM

The exhibition commences with a reading room, which can be accessed free of charge during the Schirn’s opening hours, even without a ticket for the exhibition. The publications that have been assembled there relate directly or by association to John Akomfrah’s oeuvre and the core themes of his work. The collection of books from his own library has been supplemented with additional volumes. The works produced by this artist are invariably preceded by extensive research, which incorporates both material on film and a highly diverse range of books. The open reading room can be used for various activities: for browsing, being lost in thought, or having conversations. Creative reading sessions of the SCHIRN BOOKCLUB and workshops also take place here.

THE UNFINISHED CONVERSATION
2012, Three channel HD video installation, 7.1 sound, 54:48 min.


The Unfinished Conversation pays homage to the well-known influential British cultural theorist, sociologist, and founder of cultural studies, Stuart Hall (1932–2014), with whom Akomfrah was long acquainted. The artist recounts a sensitive, almost poetic exploration of Hall’s legacy, using the sociologist’s own life story as a springboard for examining his theories and ideas about identity, immigration, and colonialism. Akomfrah masterfully weaves together assorted material from sources such as Hall’s own extensive archive, including his speeches and interviews as well as photos, and historical events. The resulting multilayered acoustic and experiential space directs a critical gaze at British society. The Unfinished Conversation begins with colorful Caribbean landscapes that Akomfrah combines with black-and-white scenes from industrial England. Hall, who was born in Jamaica in 1932, came to Oxford to study literature in 1951. Akomfrah links Hall’s theoretical work and his radio and television appearances in the 1950s and 1960s with recordings of events and the people who shaped British society during this period, including the unsolved murder of the Antiguan Kelso Cochrane, the campaign for nuclear disarmament, and the Aldermaston marches. There are also literary references to figures such as William Blake, Charles Dickens, and Virginia Woolf. Jazz music is another central aspect that runs through the film, both as a soundtrack and as film footage of musicians playing live and rotating record discs. The film installation reflects Hall’s approach that identity is not a state of being but rather a process of “becoming,” that is, constantly in flux, a product of history, memories, and intersections between the public and private spheres. Hall did not regard identity and ethnic affiliation as fixed terms but rather as elements of an “ever-unfinished conversation.” The Unfinished Conversation can be read both as an experimental extension of a documentary aesthetic and as a comprehensive critical visualization and questioning of one-dimensional narratives about what life is really like for Black people in Great Britain.

VERTIGO SEA
2015, Three channel HD color video installation, 7.1 sound, 48:30 min.


Vertigo Sea is a poetic meditation on film that shifts from one century to another in its exploration of the relationship between people and the sea. Across three large screens, Akomfrah juxtaposes footage he has shot himself in Scotland on the Faroe Islands and Skye, and in Norway, with archive material that includes breathtaking excerpts from BBC nature documentaries and fragments recited from the books Moby Dick (1851) by Herman Melville and Whale Nation (1988) by Heathcote Williams. One focus is the sea and the exploitative structures with which it is associated, but the work also addresses current ecological issues. The artist illustrates this by linking the whaling industry with the abduction of millions of African people during the transatlantic slave trade. Refugees currently attempting to cross the sea similarly play a role. Beauty and terror go hand in hand in tightly edited images. Akomfrah shows one scene from a movie that depicts the real-life massacre of over 130 enslaved people by the crew of the British ship Zong in 1781. A figure in historical uniform appears repeatedly in the video installation as an embodiment of Olaudah Equiano (1745–97), who was abducted from Nigeria as a child and enslaved, but after emancipation became a key campaigner against the slave trade. Interweaving biographies such as these is a tactic typically used by Akomfrah to shift the focus to overlooked histories. The intersection of genres, epochs, and perspectives is another recognizable stylistic device the artist employs in Vertigo Sea to create unexpected associations and disrupt our notions of linear narration.

Vertigo Sea premiered at the 56th Venice Biennale (2015) as part of Okwui Enwezor’s exhibition All the World’s Futures and is one of Akomfrah’s central works.

BECOMING WIND
2023, five channel HD video, color and black-and-white, 7.1 surround sound, 31:45 min.


In his new work on five screens, Becoming Wind, Akomfrah creates an allegorical representation of the Garden of Eden and its disappearance. In elegiac black-and-white scenes, the installation evokes a past when an abundant diversity of plant and animal species still existed on the planet, while also directing a gaze at the precarious humancentric ecosystem of the Anthropocene, the current epoch of climate change. Phrases frequently appear on the screens bearing sentiments that many people feel apply to them, relating to the climate crisis, for example: “We need to be quick” and “It moves among us.” Children are repeatedly seen playing on the beach or in the waves. Simultaneously the video accompanies trans* actors and activists in their everyday lives. The artist is interested in a specific experience from which something very universal can be read: the deep-seated need to be able to develop one’s own identity freely. The flexible identities of the future face challenges that have never existed before. This is where Akomfrah identifies intersections with dramatically changing ecological spaces and future adaptations to them. “We almost need to become wind-like to get there,” says the artist with respect to the rapid changes occurring in the present day.

The video premiered in 2023 at the 15th Sharjah Biennale.

JOHN AKOMFRAH (b. 1957) lives and works in London. In 1982, Akomfrah co-founded the influential Black Audio Film Collective in London. His solo exhibitions include: Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, DC, USA (2022); Remai Modern, Saskatoon, Canada (2022); Towner Eastbourne, Eastbourne, UK (2021); Fundació Antoni Tàpies, Barcelona, Spain (2021); Centro Andaluz de Arte Contemporáneo, Seville, Spain (2020); Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, Washington (2020); Secession, Vienna, Austria (2020); BALTIC, Gateshead, UK (2019); ICA Boston, MA, USA (2019); Museu Coleção Berardo, Lisbon, Portugal (2018); New Museum, New York, USA (2018); Bildmuseet, Umeå University, Sweden (2018, 2015); SFMOMA, San Francisco, CA, USA (2018); and Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid, Spain (2018). His participation in international group shows includes: Sharjah Biennial 15, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates (2023); The Africa Institute, Sharjah, UAE, and Accra, Ghana (2022); North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh, NC, USA (2022); Museum of Contemporary Art Busan, Busan, South Korea (2021); Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia (2021); Art Museum KUBE, Ålesund, Norway (2021); Taipei Fine Arts Museum, Taipei, Taiwan (2021); City Gallery, Wellington, New Zealand (2020); Ghana Pavilion, 58th Venice Biennale, Italy (2019); New Museum, New York, USA / The Store X, London, UK (2018); Prospect 4, New Orleans, LA, USA (2017); Museum of Modern Art, New York, USA (2017); 56th Venice Biennale (2015); and The Power Plant, Toronto, Canada (2015). Akomfrah’s works have also been shown at many international film festivals, including the Sundance Film Festival, Utah, USA (2013, 2011) and the Toronto International Film Festival (2012). In 2017, he was awarded the Artes Mundi Prize. He will be representing Great Britain at the 60th Venice Biennale in 2024.










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