Extreme Unction Vol.2 at Arts Admin
Part of What Shall We Build Here, Artsadmin’s festival of art, climate and community from 28 June – 2 July 2023.
ALL | PERFORMANCE | MUSIC | SOUND DESIGN | COMPOSER | CURATION | EXHIBITION | RESEARCH | CONSULTANCY | NEURODIVERGENT DESIGN | LECTURE | RITUAL DJ
Part of What Shall We Build Here, Artsadmin’s festival of art, climate and community from 28 June – 2 July 2023.
Nwando will be in residency at BAC as part of her Foyle Foundation Commission.
She is developing ‘The Swan’: a performance lecture interrogating the erasure of black histories and ritual cultures.
Nwando wants to develop sensory environments for neurodivergent audiences, and use access creatively throughout the process to question “how do we continue to make work that is evolving accessibility wise?”
Distorted Constellations Melbourne, photo credit Alan Weedon 2021.
Book your free place for the upcoming workshop.
Join us in Nwando’s divine tent, a multisensory, Covid-safe geodesic dome structure, for an hour-long ritual of sensory immersion, stimulation, and relaxation.
Nwando will be hosting a self-care workshop as part of the Season for Change Programme 'The Space Between'
Blowing off Steam, Festival UK* 2022 – An Experiment in Creativity
WITCHI - Women In Technology Creative industries Hub Podcast Interview with Bishi.
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
The SWCTN Immersion Showcase demonstrates the breadth of the conversation across practitioners from wildly different traditions – writers, artists, theatre makers, engineers, games designers, dancers, coders and more – who have gathered in the place called ‘immersive’. Nwando Ebzie was a guest speaker and gave a talk on Distorted Constellations: Ritualising Augmented Reality: Accessibility as Innovative Creativity and the Use of the Sensory Space.
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 >>
>> Press review
An improvised gathering of diasporic thinkers and practitioners, the day of study will seek to critically reverberate fugitive senses, feelings and transmissions of an uncommon and unknowable in advance, ‘brown commons,’ in the words of José Esteban Muñoz. Nwando Ebizie is invited to Amsterdam to be a guest speaker: Distorted Constellations: Afrofuturist Landscapes.
Watch the video >>
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