Zineb Sedira : Can't You See the Sea Changing? at Dundee Contemporary Arts

© Copyright, 2023, dca.or.uk
This major solo exhibition by Zineb Sedira, developed in collaboration with De La Warr Pavilion, Bexhill-on-Sea, will be her first project in UK public galleries for 12 years.
Beginning from Sedira’s fascination with the sea as an enigmatic yet geopolitically charged space, as well as the coastal contexts of Dundee Contemporary Arts and De La Warr Pavilion, the exhibition spans a period from 2008 to the present day and brings together photography, installation, film and archival material.
Sedira draws upon her personal history and close connection to Algeria, France and the UK to explore ideas of identity, gender, environment and collective memory. Throughout her career, she has become a leading voice in addressing the question of what it means to live between different cultures, often bringing together autobiographical narration, fiction and documentary genres. Through these varying approaches to storytelling, Sedira interrogates what she refers to as ‘spaces where mobility expires’, exploring the ability or otherwise of individuals to depart, return, escape, or exist in transit between certain lands and identities. Whilst her narratives are embedded with histories of migration and exile, particularly in relation to her home countries of Algeria and France, through her work Sedira considers what it means to be transported through visionary acts of imagination, acts that carry us to different places through the merging of past and present time frames.  
The title of the exhibition, Can’t You See the Sea Changing? is especially timely and directly evocative of rapidly shifting coastlines and geopolitical borders, where the legacy of colonialism and greed has created a climate crisis that sees shores swallowed by the sea, and bodies of water dry up inland. This rapid change has caused the forced migration of many communities, who now leave behind ancestral lands in search of security and resources. Sedira nods to the impossibility of this situation, where the people most affected are left behind to continue to produce and export to those who feel they have no need to fear the rising tide. 
To learn more about this solo show please click here
Exhibition dates : 29.04 to 06.08.2023
2 May 2023
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