“One never begins in a pure space, but rather on a surface saturated with images and unexpressed thoughts.” - Seloua Luste Boulbina
Photo essay | | 22 September 2021
The celebratory intervention Homecoming takes over Alserkal Avenue from September to December 2021. Curator Janine Gaëlle Dieudji (France/Cameroon) responded to Alserkal Arts Foundation’s invitation to reinvigorate our public realm with works by Lakwena Maciver (UK), Kameelah Janan Rasheed (USA) and Augustine Paredes (Philippines/UAE). Homecoming | A space for you deploys the power of language through the capacity of text-based artworks to inhabit physical and psychological space, generating a collective experience while acknowledging the importance of identity and self-recognition.
Across both internal and external areas at Alserkal Avenue, home to a diverse community and a wide public audience, Homecoming activates cultural space as a source of comfort and well-being in these challenging times. Large-scale artworks engage social dynamics in ways that are poetic and playful, questioning knowledge production and reception. Immersing the viewer in associative arrangements of letters, words and shapes that invite an embodied and intuitive reading, these interventions allow for multiple readings and moments of awareness. Activating memories, creating a sense of shared public space, and offering both affirmation and critical engagement in a moment that demands hope, Homecoming is an invitation to recollect ourselves in the present moment.
The project launches with three works by Lakwena Maciver, welcoming audiences back to Alserkal Avenue for the fall season. Lift you Higher and Just Passing Through appear at the pedestrian entrance, while The Best is Yet to Come embellishes the outer facade on the corner of 17th Street and First Al Khail Street.
Biographies
Janine Gaëlle Dieudji is currently Exhibitions Director at the Museum of African Contemporary Art Al Maaden (MACAAL) in Marrakesh (Morocco). As a cultural activist and multilocal, at MACAAL she’s committed to building an inclusive museum, through the curation and production of exhibitions, as well as educational programs and artists residencies. A native of France and Cameroon, Janine moved to Florence (Italy) in 2011 and has gained a broad range of experience in arts and culture over the years.
Experiences include exhibitions and projects in collaboration with Le Murate Art District, American Academy in Rome, Villa Romana, Gallerie degli Uffizi as Co-director and Vice-President of the cultural association BHMF (Black History Month Florence).
Lakwena means ‘messenger of the chief’ in the northern Ugandan language Acholi. Born in 1986, her name is reflected in her artistic practice, which is concerned with messages. Utilising bright colour and bold text, her eye-catching paintings explore and gently subvert ideas relating to decolonisation, redemption, escapism, afrofuturism, and utopia.
Currently based in London, her work has been shown internationally in cities including London, New York, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Miami, and more. Perhaps best known for her murals, her work has also appeared in public spaces from Tate Britain, Somerset House, Facebook and the Southbank Centre in London, to the Bowery Wall in New York, a juvenile detention centre in Arkansas and a monastery in Vienna.