
Portrait of Yto Barrada. Photograph by Benoît Peverelli
£10 / £5 MEMBERS / £5 CONCESSIONS
Join artist Yto Barrada in conversation with Sarah Allen, Head of Programme at the South London Gallery. They will discuss Barrada’s new exhibition Thrill, Fill, Spill and her wider practice.
Barrada’s multidisciplinary practice has long addressed micro-histories, borderlands, cultural phenomena, and strategies of resistance. She is renowned for her commitment to building communities and fostering cultural exchange. The Mothership is Barrada’s artist-led natural dyes centre, a residency space and eco-campus where artists, gardeners and creatives come to work and study. In 2007, she founded the Tangier Cinémathèque, North Africa’s first art house cinema and cultural centre.
ABOUT YTO BARRADA
Yto Barrada is recognized for her multidisciplinary investigations of cultural phenomena and historical narratives. Engaging with the performativity of archival practices and public interventions, Barrada’s installations reinterpret social relationships, uncover subaltern histories, and reveal the prevalence of fiction in institutionalized narratives.
Informed by postcolonial thought and sociopolitical concerns, Barrada’s interests range from the tensions around borders, immigration, and tourism to the urban landscape, and from children’s toys to botany and paleontology. Her practice encompasses photography, film, sculpture, painting, printmaking, and publishing, while her installations often comprise both original work and found objects.
Barrada’s work has been exhibited at the Renaissance Society, University of Chicago (2011); Tate Modern, London (2011); Walker Art Centre, Minneapolis, Minnesota (2013); The Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, North Adams (2021); The Museum of Modern Art, New York (2021); and the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam (2022). In 2007, Barrada was selected to participate in the Venice Biennale. The artist has received multiple awards, including the Deutsche Guggenheim Artist of the Year (2011); the Abraaj Group Art Prize, UAE (2015); the Roy R. Neuberger Prize (2019); Mario Merz Prize (2022); Queen Sonja Print Award (2022), and Soros Arts Fellowship (2023). Works by Barrada are held in public collections worldwide, including Centre Pompidou, Paris; International Center of Photography, New York; Kunsthalle Basel; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; and The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, among others.
ACCESS
- Wheelchair Access and Disabled Toilets are available at this site.
- Seating is available.
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- If you would like to attend this event but the ticket price is a limitation please get in touch as we have reserved a number of free tickets for low-income individuals. Contact us at: mail@southlondongallery.org
TICKET INFORMATION
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- All tickets purchased through the South London Gallery’s website and/or the South London Gallery’s Eventbrite account are non-refundable.