Filtering by: Curation

This is a FOREST - Exhibition, Leeds
Oct
6
to Nov 26

This is a FOREST - Exhibition, Leeds



Through art, sculpture, film and data, This is a FOREST explores what might be possible if we work with - rather than against - nature, exposing systems and structures that prevent ecosystems from thriving.

This project sees uInvisible Flock collaborate with Anushka Athique, Vandria Borari, Nwando Ebizie, Outi Pieski and Jenni Laiti as we  journey across 50 sites in Leeds in an  attempt to reclaim a part of the city as a forest.

Together these artists and a number of collaborators will present an exhibition and land based interventions that invite us to explore ownership of earth, soil, air and water and how it is valued, asking what is land worth in ecological, health and  social terms, as opposed to just financial ones.


Co-produced by LEEDS 2023 and Invisible Flock. Made possible with National Lottery Heritage Fund. Supported using public funding by the National Lottery through Arts Council England.

@anushkaathique @vandriaborari @nwando_ebizie @outipieski @jennilaiti @leeds2023 @invisibleflock

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Extreme Unction: The Audio Journey hosted by Take Me Somewhere
May
23
7:00 PM19:00

Extreme Unction: The Audio Journey hosted by Take Me Somewhere

An hour-long exploration of radical care, pleasure and transformation for BIPOC bodies – a binaural audio journey, for headphones in a darkened room – followed by a 30-minute cinematic coming-together to regroup, where you will feel heard, supported and held.

We invite you to join us in recognising the urgency of care, of pleasure, of transformation, for BIPOC bodies. We present a revolutionary journey into the psyche, a washing away of our supposed shared reality, a gathering together of the fragments of which we’re comprised, transmuting into something rich and strange and new. Diving deep into our unconscious desires, our buried joys, the top/bottom of our collective to-do lists. This is a cleansing, a preparation, an opening for the new cycle: the universal cycle of life-death-life. Decide what your transformation will be. Prepare for the liberation of pleasure, for viridity, for new life.

PLEASE NOTE: This event is only open to Black, Indigenous and People of Colour (BIPOC.) We understand that not everybody will use this term to describe themselves, please see further detail below:

Please only attend this event if you are a person who is racialized with experience of racism, which may include People of African or Caribbean heritage, People of Asian Heritage (South, East, Southeast, Central) People of Middle Eastern, South American, Islander or Indigenous heritage.

It is important that you do not attend or book this event if the above does not apply to you. You will be asked to confirm this during and after booking the event.

This will be a limited capacity event, and will require booking a space in advance. Booking will open 12 May here.

Supported by Something to Aim For, Buzzcut, Take Me Somewhere, BAC with further support from LADA and University of Glasgow.

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Snape Maltings/Mahogany Opera Residency
Feb
1
12:00 PM12:00

Snape Maltings/Mahogany Opera Residency

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Hildegard: Visions was developed in its early stages during a Residency at Snape Maltings. The Residency programme supports artists and researchers who are in need of development time, are creatively curious, and have exciting, adventurous ideas to explore. 

During this week-long R&D, Nwando and her collaborators created Extreme Unction : a piece for 8 loudspeakers, 3 singers, 2 bodies and water.

(Extreme Unction backing track -  Nwando Ebizie  feat. Cevanne Horrocks-Hopayian, Lore Lixenberg and Yfat Soul Zisso)

You arrive at the venue. You are directed to the door where this ritual will take place. You are met at the threshold by a woman - the Guardian at the Crossroads. She is wearing an excessively 80s wedding dress. She invites you in with warmth and potential. She sprays the air around with you a citrussy, cleansing spray. You feel the fine mist of water drop around you. 

Around her are large bowls of steaming water filled with scents of cedar wood, chamomile, spearmint and frankincense.

You can wash your hands in the bowls. You can refresh your face.

She advises you that you can sit on chairs, lie (on comfortable beanbags) or stand anywhere. This space is here for you.

You feel you are entering a space both sacred and profane. Both of this world and an alternate reality.

Your eyes take a while to adjust.

So first of all, you notice the perfumed air. You have your own associations with the scents drifting around you. Maybe memories surface.

As your eyes adjust you see a shaft of light breaking through the darkness. This lights figures on the stage - three singers. Each dressed in beautiful outfits that you feel somehow suits each of their characters. Each has an individually crafted crown.

You notice that there is the gentle sound of dripping water all around you.

There are loudspeakers surrounding you - creating the sensation that you are bathed in sound.

The sound drifts around the space, as if chasing itself.

It gives the sensation that you are in a hamam - a marble room with a dome where water is dripping. The room has an odd reverb, making you feel like you are not where you are. The water sounds close, almost like it could be touching the back of your neck and sliding down your spine.

Sometimes it sounds like it is water dripping onto hard stone, sometimes a gentle stream falling into a copper bowl. 

Eventually you notice a final woman in the shadows – let’s call her The Celebrant. She is dancing with the shadows, she is dancing with the light. 

The singers begin to breathe deeply, breathing in the atmosphere.

They dance with the shadows, they dance with the light.

You begin to hear them sing. Softly at first, barely understandable words. Unfamiliar chants. The snatches of song you hear - the words do not matter - what you feel is that they are deeply personal to the singers. Songs that somehow connect with them. Voices that feel intrinsic to them as human beings. 

The Celebrant and the Guardian weave their way through the space, coming together on the stage.

They lay out their bowls and jugs of water. The Celebrant bends over her bowl, allows her hair to fall into the steaming water. She undulates her body, swaying from side to side.

The Guardian takes a piece of cloth and carefully washes it, wringing it out again and again into her bowl.

Their movements are precise and soft. Full of meaning but ultimately practical. The sounds they make connect to the sounds of the hamam around you.

You feel that they are preparing for the rites to come.

You feel yourself drifting into a softer state of being. Here but not here. There but not there.

The singer's voices melt into recognisable fragments of Hildegard’s music - ‘Favus Distilans’. Melisma chases melisma, weaving through the air. One singer moves over to a table and places a new crown on her head. She taps the crown intermittently, sending beautifully distorted versions of her voice out into the air.

The singers fall silent. The sound changes - a rhythmic metallic ringing. As if the copper bowl used in the hamam is being played. The Guardian and The Celebrant take their places on small logs and begin to move. By now, maybe you are halfway to dreaming. But you recognise their movements - they are washing, scrubbing their bodies, flinging water onto themselves. Familiar and yet more lyrical. Incredibly frenzied.

The singers begin to cry. Softly, sobbing. Until they wail. The gentle sounds of the hamam build into a waterfall, a whirlpool. The sound moves around you, making you feel dizzy.

The lights fade. There is movement, sound, water and darkness.

And then again, silence.

The shaft of light returns.

You hear last drifts of Hildegard. 

End.

Workshop artists: Cevanne Horrocks-Hopayian / Lore Lixenberg  / Tom Richards / Yfat Soul Zisso / Guardian Wennifer / Steph Singer

 
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Distorted Constellations - Liberty
Nov
22
to Nov 24

Distorted Constellations - Liberty

  • Waltham Forest Borough of Culture (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS
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Nwando Ebizie's Distorted Constellations, presented as part of Liberty Festival, created an immersive installation using ambisonic sound and projections onto gauze to transport the audience into the imagined landscape of the artist’s perceptual reality. Here, visitors traveled through a fragmented labyrinth inspired by Ebizie’s rare neurological disorder, Visual Snow, a condition where the artist’s vision is continually full of swirling coloured, translucent dots (like a George Seurat painting), with glowing lines, auras, light bursts and halos.


Through Distorted Constellations Ebizie proposed an acceptance of a neuro-diverse spectrum as a radical way to make changes in society, establishing one in which all diversity is allowed space to flourish. She presented us with a visceral new world that draws upon the language of sci-fi and ritualistic practice to further warp and bend reality towards a landscape for new, transformative encounters. From this exploration of atypical perception, she encourages us to question how much we can trust our senses and therefore our understanding of our own environments. She asks us to recognise that our own unique neurology has an implicit effect on how we perceive the world - forming bias and prejudices - and map our place within it.


Distorted Constellations subverted the space it was located in order to go beyond its physical limitations. The electronic score, projections and recursive surfaces helped create this visceral new world by distorting senses of sight, sound, the vestibular sense (perception of body position in space). This process revealed to the audience how distinct each navigation of space is - further emphasising the artist’s call for a celebration and acceptance of individual diversities.
Through Ebizie’s personal quest, we were guided to tap into ritualistic practices of transformative healing that disorient space and present it as an illusion - left with the reminder that; (according to neuroscientists), reality is subjective, perception is fallible and how we experience the world is due to our own specific neurology.

“We are delighted to be working with the Mayor of London to bring Liberty to Waltham Forest London Borough of Culture 2019. As we move towards the end of the year, we can showcase some of the fantastic work developed through our grants programmes this year, alongside some of the nation's leading companies working with D/deaf and disabled artists. Liberty is an example of our commitment to supporting the capacity of local businesses and venues to host cultural activity, and to make what they do more accessible and inclusive for all”.

Cllr Claire Coghill, Leader of Waltham Forest Council

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Distorted Constellations - Brighton Festival
May
4
to May 19

Distorted Constellations - Brighton Festival

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Curation of touring exhibition, Distorted Constellations, as part of Lighthouse Festival, 2019.

Enter an Afrofuturist, mythical landscape that explores what it’s like to see the world through someone else’s eyes.

Presented in partnership with Brighton Festival, Distorted Constellations is an exhibition that uses sound, projections and holograms to immerse the audience in the imagined landscape of the artist’s brain.

The work is inspired by Ebizie’s rare neurological disorder Visual Snow, which causes visual distortions such as flickering dots, auras and glowing lines. The audience will experience a mythical version of the disorder, entering an alternate Afrofuturist reality, inspired by research into the neuroscience of perception and drawing on rituals of African origin.

In the exhibition, partitions, screens and threads will create a labyrinth through the space, with walls doubling up as screens where holograms and videos are projected. These architectural elements will guide the audience through the space, and create the experience of Visual Snow.

Distorted Constellations is an interdisciplinary exhibition that combines art and science, and aims to increase our understanding of rare neurological disorders and the subjective nature of sense perception.

Nwando Ebizie presented Distorted Constellations alongside a series of programmed events and talks.

Watch video about the experience >>

Listen to Dr Francesca Puledda talk on Visual Snow >>

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Distorted Constellations Exhibition
Jan
11
to Jan 23

Distorted Constellations Exhibition

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Nwando Ebizie's Distorted Constellations, presented as part of Liberty Festival, created an immersive installation using ambisonic sound and projections onto gauze to transport the audience into the imagined landscape of the artist’s perceptual reality. Here, visitors traveled through a fragmented labyrinth inspired by Ebizie’s rare neurological disorder, Visual Snow, a condition where the artist’s vision is continually full of swirling coloured, translucent dots (like a George Seurat painting), with glowing lines, auras, light bursts and halos.


Through Distorted Constellations Ebizie proposed an acceptance of a neuro-diverse spectrum as a radical way to make changes in society, establishing one in which all diversity is allowed space to flourish. She presented us with a visceral new world that draws upon the language of sci-fi and ritualistic practice to further warp and bend reality towards a landscape for new, transformative encounters. From this exploration of atypical perception, she encourages us to question how much we can trust our senses and therefore our understanding of our own environments. She asks us to recognise that our own unique neurology has an implicit effect on how we perceive the world - forming bias and prejudices - and map our place within it.


Distorted Constellations subverted the space it was located in order to go beyond its physical limitations. The electronic score, projections and recursive surfaces helped create this visceral new world by distorting senses of sight, sound, the vestibular sense (perception of body position in space). This process revealed to the audience how distinct each navigation of space is - further emphasising the artist’s call for a celebration and acceptance of individual diversities.


Through Ebizie’s personal quest, we were guided to tap into ritualistic practices of transformative healing that disorient space and present it as an illusion - left with the reminder that; (according to neuroscientists), reality is subjective, perception is fallible and how we experience the world is due to our own specific neurology.

Watch Interview >>

>> Press

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Lady Vendredi performance - Live Art Bistro present Apocalypse Wow
Oct
6
7:00 PM19:00

Lady Vendredi performance - Live Art Bistro present Apocalypse Wow

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For 14 hours, over four floors, you are invited to revel in the apocalypse with hosts Live Art Bistro and a roster of talent from across the UK including Daniel Oliver, KP Culliver, Jim Burrows, Liddya, Adam Ekin, Adam Young, Sam Kennedy, Moa Johansson, Chillify the News, Edythe Woolley, Oozing Gloop, and Lady Vendredi.

Nwando Ebizie performed as Lady Vendredi at this fun live event.

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 Crystal Opening featuring Lady Vendredi
Sep
28
5:00 PM17:00

Crystal Opening featuring Lady Vendredi

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A curated happening, Nwando Ebizie performed as Lady Vendredi for ‘Crystal Opening’ at Site Gallery, Sheffield.

‘Forget everything you know about what a performance ‘should’ look like, or sound like, or even feel like. Leave your preconceptions about music theatre at the door. Because you are about to enter Lady Vendredi’s futuristic, bizarre, psychedelic and sexy mystical world creatively directed by visionary Jonathan Grieve.’

-A Younger Theatre

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Liberate the Fluid - Ritual DJ
May
19
9:00 PM21:00

Liberate the Fluid - Ritual DJ

Shu Lea Cheang, Fluidø, 2017. Photo by J. Jackie Baier

Shu Lea Cheang, Fluidø, 2017. Photo by J. Jackie Baier

Based on the presumptuous sci-fi scenario of the speculative forthcoming sequel film Fluidø 2, the ICA Theatre is transformed into a hyper-playground where the gender conforming and nonbinary, chasers and chased and liberators and liberated find themselves in unexpected acts of intimacy. A selected ensemble gleaned from an open casting steal the spotlight with impro-performative-acts, manifesting the powers of intervention and resistance. 

Nwando Ebizie spun celestial sounds for the evening in a ritualistic dj performance.

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Wellcome Collection Lates
Dec
1
6:30 PM18:30

Wellcome Collection Lates

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On 1st December 2017, MAS productions presented a Friday Night Spectacular at the Wellcome Collection. Curated by Nwando Ebizie and Directed by Jonathan Grieve. A night of visceral performance and conversation, exploring altered states, visual illusions, hallucinations, and how these are linked to the creative act. Curated by Nwando Ebizie and Jonathan Grieve it featured 50 performers, artists, scientists and cultural commentators. 

Perception is fundamental to who we are and how we experience life. But how much can we actually trust our senses? A scientific, philosophical and creative approach to this question will invite you on a journey into your inner and outer experiences of the world.

Watch Event >>

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Your Reality is Broken
Feb
1
to Feb 26

Your Reality is Broken

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According to curator and performance artist Nwando Ebizie (a.k.a Lady Vendredi), our realities are broken. It certainly feels that way. In these times of “alternative facts”, some catharsis-by-art and deep delving into the politics of perception feels fitting and necessary. The month long festival, Your Reality is Broken (YRIB), taking place 2 -28 February, welcomes artists, neuroscientists and audiences to contribute to a collective re-thinking of notions of objectivity and what we assume to be reality.  

Curated by Nwando Ebizie and Jonathan Grieve of MAS productions, numerous multi-disciplinary interactive events including film, workshops, and live music took place as part of artist Yinka Shonibare’s Guest Projects in Hackney, which “provides an alternative universe and playground for artists.”

Supported by Arts Council England and Arts Admin

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New Art Exchange, DJ Set
Jan
13
6:00 PM18:00

New Art Exchange, DJ Set

Photo credit: nae.org.uk

Photo credit: nae.org.uk

Produced by New Art Exchange and curated in collaboration with NAE by Paul Goodwin and Hansi Momodu-Gordon, UNTITLED: art on the conditions of our time showcased a leading generation of contemporary African diaspora artists in the UK.

 The show adopted a progressive stance on exhibition-making to allow new ways of thinking about art by African diaspora artists to emerge. In a bold move, fixed curatorial themes were stripped out to create a stimulating space where artworks can be experienced more openly, and where the interplay between the artists' practices can be observed. 

The exhibition curators state, "This is not a show 'about' a coherent movement – instead it presents works by British African diaspora artists outside of the usual framing". 

As a leading voice, Nwando Ebizie was invited to the event and DJ’d her mix of celestial sounds.

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