Sonia Boyce: An Awkward Relation

  • two figures, a black female and a white male, with their hair braided together

    Sonia Boyce, Exquisite Tension, 2006, Single-channel HD colour video with sound and archive colour photographic print. Video duration: 4 minutes © Sonia Boyce.All Rights Reserved, DACS/Artimage 2024Courtesy of the artist, APALAZZO GALLERY and Hauser & Wirth Gallery.

Tickets available

2 Oct 2024 - 12 Jan 2025

Galleries 8 & 9

Monday Closed
Tuesday 11am–6pm
Wednesday 11am–6pm
Thursday 11am–9pm
Friday 11am–6pm
Saturday 11am–6pm
Sunday 11am–6pm

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Exhibition
Sonia Boyce: An Awkward Relation

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An Awkward Relation is a new exhibition from artist and educator Sonia Boyce (b.1962, London, UK).  It has been especially conceived to be in dialogue with the exhibition of Brazilian artist Lygia Clark, The I and the You showing at the Gallery concurrently.

Boyce was introduced to Clark’s work in the 1990s and felt a strong synergy with the Brazilian artist’s experiential and participatory practice.  An Awkward Relation brings together a number of pivotal and rarely seen works to explore themes of interaction, participation and improvisation – all of which have played a definitive role in Boyce’s practice since the 1990s and reflect a shared interest with many of the radical approaches that Lygia Clark pioneered in her work.

Works on display include a series of works exploring Boyce’s fascination with hair as both a material and cultural signifier, as well as the multimedia installation We move in her way (2017). The exhibition also presents visitors with a dedicated section exploring the intersection between the two artists’ practices by pairing a selection of works from each artist.

An Awkward Relation explores the feelings of both involvement and uneasiness intrinsic to an approach that invites visitors to engage, touch and experience artworks and their surroundings in new and unscripted ways. The title of the exhibition is indicative of this complex, often difficult, relationship between artists, works and audiences.  It also recognises that while there are similarities between Boyce and Clark’s work, there are also clear differences which necessarily, and inevitably, stem from the very different artistic, geographical and socio-political contexts in which the artists were working, as well as the specific intentions behind what they were doing.

Sonia Boyce: An Awkward Relation  is presented in dialogue with Lygia Clark: The I and The You .

Read the full exhibition press release.

About Sonia Boyce

Dame Sonia Boyce DBE RA (b. London, 1962) is an interdisciplinary artist and academic working across film, drawing, photography, print, sound, and installation. In 2022, she presented FEELING HER WAY for the British Pavilion at the 59th Venice Biennale for which she was awarded the Golden Lion for Best National Participation. Boyce came to prominence in the early 1980s as a key figure in the burgeoning British Black Arts Movement with figurative pastel drawings and photo collages that addressed issues of race and gender in Britain. Since the 1990s, Boyce has shifted significantly to embrace a social practice that invites improvisation, collaboration, movement, and sound with other people. Working across a range of media, Boyce’s practice today is focused on questions of artistic authorship and cultural difference.

In 2016, Boyce was elected to the Royal Academy of Arts in London and in 2023, she was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Science in Boston. In 2014 she became a Professor at University of the Arts London, where she holds the inaugural Chair in Black Art & Design. In the 2024 King’s New Year Honours List, Boyce was awarded a Damehood. Her work is in many UK and international museum collections including TATE, London; Saastamoinen Foundation, Finland; Centre Pompidou, France and Hirschhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, USA.

 


Generously supported by:

Cockayne – Grants for the Arts: a donor advised fund held at The London Community FoundationHauser & WirthThe Sonia Boyce Exhibition and Patron CirclesThe Lygia Clark Exhibition Circle:Toluwani Adejuyigbe, Ayo Adeyinka, Bimpe Nkontchou and Oba Nsugbe

With thanks to:APALAZZOGALLERYOMNI Colour

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