Archive 2021 KubaParis

Nils Alix-Tabeling, Sabrina Röthlisberger Belkacem, Bye Bye Binary, Ivan Cheng, Claude Eigan, Cédric Esturillo, Brandon Gercara, Tarek Lakhrissi, Élodie Petit, the Queer Ancestor Project, Sin Wai Kin (fka Victoria Sin), Simon Brossard & Julie Villard

Tarek Lakrhissi, The Art of Losing (extract), 2021, video
Tarek Lakrhissi, The Art of Losing (extract), 2021, video
Sabrina Röthlisberger Belkacem, "Trois Parcae" series, 2020, textiles, mixed techniques, 140 x 60 x 40 cm each
Sabrina Röthlisberger Belkacem, "Trois Parcae" series, 2020, textiles, mixed techniques, 140 x 60 x 40 cm each
Sin Wai Kin, She's Hopeful, 2018, make-up wipe, 21 x 17 cm and Part Two/The Reprise of Cthulhu, 2017, video
Sin Wai Kin, She's Hopeful, 2018, make-up wipe, 21 x 17 cm and Part Two/The Reprise of Cthulhu, 2017, video
Ivan Cheng, Changing Room 3 (OUIJA DM), 2020, video
Ivan Cheng, Changing Room 3 (OUIJA DM), 2020, video
Sabrina Röthlisberger Belkacem, "Trois Parcae" series, 2020, textiles, mixed techniques, 140 x 60 x 40 cm each and Cedric Esturillo, Icône I,the God.dess, 2021 and Icône III,the Passion, 2021, wood, paint, aerograph, and plexiglas
Sabrina Röthlisberger Belkacem, "Trois Parcae" series, 2020, textiles, mixed techniques, 140 x 60 x 40 cm each and Cedric Esturillo, Icône I,the God.dess, 2021 and Icône III,the Passion, 2021, wood, paint, aerograph, and plexiglas
Claude Eigan, Pissed (Aunt Charlie's dandelion), 2021, resin epoxy, pigments, ink, 68 x 36 x 2 cm
Claude Eigan, Pissed (Aunt Charlie's dandelion), 2021, resin epoxy, pigments, ink, 68 x 36 x 2 cm

Location

Maison populaire, Montreuil

Date

18.05 –10.07.2021

Curator

Thomas Conchou

Photography

Aurélien Mole

Subheadline

the many faced god·dess is a groupshow addressing drag and impersonation practices, performance and theatricality within queer contemporary practices.

Text

While borrowing its title to the faceless, avenging deity of Game of Thrones, the many faced god·dess draws inspiration from the influence of impersonation practices on queer theory and contemporary artistic practices, amongst which drag appears paramount. From the original observations of drag performances leading to Judith Butler’s seminal book Gender Trouble to Elizabeth Freeman’s temporal drag concept, investigating the pull of the past on the present through practices of retrogression, genealogy and memory, drag practices and their sister- practices (cosplay, fandom, comedy, performance, theatricality) create a strategic, politic and reflexive stage, engaging not only with how bodies are constructed but also inhabited and interpreted. But also with how chronopolitics come to play with them : allowing to perform a critical and historical genealogy. The exhibition will gather artistic and amateur practices around the ideas of mask- wearing, summoning ancestors and mythological beings, as well as performing strategic and fractal identities, and will channel a multitude of historical, fictional or contemporary characters, stressing the multiplicity of our belongings, the impermanence of our identities, and the power of our transformations.