فير زملر غاليري Sfeir-Semler Gallery

Yto Barrada
Agadir


The Curve, Barbican Centre, London

Opening 7 February 2018, Barbican Art Gallery presents artist Yto Barrada's first solo exhibition in a public gallery in London. For this new commission, Barrada transforms the sweeping form of the Curve with a dramatic site-specific installation—including a mural, a new film commission, sculptures, collages, and a series of live and recorded performances—to consider how a city and its people might address the process of reinvention following disaster. She takes as her starting point the hybrid novel-play by Moroccan writer Mohammed Khair-Eddine, Agadir (1967), which reflects on the devastating earthquake that destroyed much of the modernist city of Agadir, Morocco, in 1960. Weaving together personal narratives and political ideals, Barrada presents a complex portrait of a city in transition, resonating with many of the challenges we face in contemporary society. Yto Barrada: Agadir opens in the Curve on Wednesday 7 February 2018. The installation is part of the Barbican's 2018 season, The Art of Change, which explores how the arts respond to, reflect, and potentially effect change in the social and political landscape.

Over the past two decades, Barrada's multimedia practice has explored questions ranging from migration to abstraction, from fossils to botany. She examines the strategies of resistance employed every day in her native Morocco and traces the 'hidden transcripts' of objects and people in her work, guiding us through the overlapping realities and fictions of these narratives.

At the Barbican, Khair-Eddine's text provides the stimulus for Barrada's commission. Agadir was written following a mission instigated by the government of King Mohammed V to assess the devastation and reformation of the city. It involves a king, a psychic, a cook, a trade unionist, a goat, a female warrior, and others engaging in a fervent debate over how best to reform the structures governing their lives. Translated into English for the first time, the voices of these characters are manifested in a sound installation in the Curve, where the earthquake comes to represent the rising tensions of society facing the ruins of urban environment, political and religious power, and social relationships.

Live performances with Nick Armfield, Tallulah Bond, Rory Francis, Shalifa Kaddu, Jonny Lavelle and Ellie Rawnsley, 2018S

A vast monochrome mural stretches along the length of the gallery's wall, curved like the city's bay. Barrada sketches the architecture of Agadir beginning before the earthquake and continuing with the iconic buildings constructed following the disaster. Agadir was rebuilt by several architects and urbanists, whose use of bare concrete and rigorously structured forms, heavily influenced by the Brutalist style pioneered by French architect Le Corbusier, resonates with the Brutalist expression of the Barbican's buildings. Echoing the Barbican's own history as a site of post-war destruction rebuilt with utopian ideals, Agadir's reconstruction followed Morocco's newly gained independence from colonial rule.

Furniture-like sculptural interventions interject the visitor's journey through the space, created using traditional Moroccan wicker weaving techniques. Drawing on the history of the 'conversation chair' and the psychoanalyst's divan, their configurations manifest different typologies of sitting—from squatting to lounging—evoking the potential of sitting as a practice of waiting, protest, or rehabilitation.

Yto Barrada, Promenoire (Walker), 2018
wicker sculpture, various dimensions
Yto Barrada, Confident, 2017
rattan, 43 ⁠× ⁠26 ⁠× ⁠17 ⁠⁠cm
Yto Barrada, Danse Macabre (My-City-Knife-of-the-Sun), 2018
mobile out of wicker, 13 parts, 320 ⁠× ⁠738 ⁠× ⁠738 ⁠⁠cm

The Barbican Curve is as scary as a haunted house: some pretty great ghosts have already installed wonderful projects using the space in every possible way.And now for my sins, it's my turn.I'm honoured to have a chance to try.In my performance and installation piece, I will explore relationships between spatial proximity, affect, and trauma.The segmented architecture of Agadir embodies a visual repertoire for all dreamers of a New Town or even of a New World.

— Yto Barrada

Incredibly, this will be Barrada's first large-scale work shown in a public institution in London. As an artist at the cutting edge of contemporary art with a hugely eclectic, experimental practice, I am thrilled that Barrada has accepted this commission for the Curve. Focusing on the aftermath of the earthquake in Agadir in 1960, the commission is particularly relevant to the Barbican's history and foregrounds important contemporary debates around the rebuilding of society. I have no doubt that the installation, the 29th in the Curve programme, will be a highlight of the 2018 art calendar.

— Jane Alison, Head of Visual Arts

Yto Barrada, Untitled (collages), 2018
gouache, pencil, textile, cut-and-pasted photographs, paper on paper, 36.5 ⁠× ⁠27 ⁠⁠cm
Yto Barrada, Untitled (collages), 2018
gouache, pencil, textile, cut-and-pasted photographs, paper on paper, 36.5 ⁠× ⁠27 ⁠⁠cm
Yto Barrada, Untitled (collages), 2018
gouache, pencil, textile, cut-and-pasted photographs, paper on paper, 36.5 ⁠× ⁠27 ⁠⁠cm
Yto Barrada, Untitled (collages), 2018
gouache, pencil, textile, cut-and-pasted photographs, paper on paper, 36.5 ⁠× ⁠27 ⁠⁠cm

Yto Barrada, Anagramme Agadir (Agadir Anagram), 2018
extracts from Dernière minute: la tragédie d’Agadir, directed by Etienne Lalou, collage film, 16mm transferred to digital, 11 min (still)

Photo: Max Colson, courtesy Barbican Art Gallery