Art Now: Sophia Al-Maria: Beast Type Song – Exhibition at Tate Britain | Tate

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A new film exploring the erasure and revision of identities and histories past and future



































The work features performances by Yumna Marwan, Elizabeth Peace and boychild, and by Al-Maria herself. Each one is cast against the science fiction backdrop of a solar battle, as evoked by Etel Adnan in her 1989 war poem, The Arab Apocalypse. Beast Type Song was shot in the derelict former campus of Central Saint Martins School of Art and Design in Holborn, London. In the poem, Adnan uses drawing to communicate what cannot be expressed in words. Similarly, Al-Maria explores the revision of history through graphic and bodily gestures. When words cannot express trauma, a new language of drawings, movement and music gives voice to the speechless.Drawing on personal heritage and fictional future projections, the protagonists reflect on the narratives and languages they have inherited as children of various colonial legacies. Each figure encounters some form of violence either through the hostile gaze of the camera or through the imposition of narrative. We are told stories of a violence inflicted on the body, but at the same time are asked to consider the violence of the storytelling itself.By weaving together music, literature, oral history, film and dance, Beast Type Song serves as an escape route from the repetition of dominant narratives of an oppressive past.​The work is accompanied by an installation of script pages, correspondence and photographs relating to the research and making of the work.Sophia Al-Maria was born in 1983. She lives and works in London.Made possible with the kind assistance of Anna Lena Films.Art Now is a series of free exhibitions showcasing emerging talent and highlighting new developments in British art.Curated by Nathan Ladd







































Tate Britain







MillbankLondon SW1P 4RGPlan your visit



















Dates



20 September 2019 – 23 February 2020



















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Supported by

















The Art Now Supporters Circle



Matthew Slotover and Emily KingAlexandra and Guy HalamishPrincess Alia Al-SenussiLyndsey Ingram LtdCourtney PlummerCharles AspreyEmma and Fred GoltzTierney HorneJames LindonHélène Nguyen-BanCatherine PetitgasThomas Dane GalleryRussell ToveyThe William Brake Charitable TrustAnd those who wish to remain anonymous

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Art Now: Sophia Al-Maria: Beast Type Song – Exhibition at Tate Britain | Tate Tate Britain Main address: Tate Britain Millbank SW1P 4RG London, Tate Britain Millbank SW1P 4RG London, A new film exploring the erasure and revision of identities and histories past and future



































The work features performances by Yumna Marwan, Elizabeth Peace and boychild, and by Al-Maria herself. Each one is cast against the science fiction backdrop of a solar battle, as evoked by Etel Adnan in her 1989 war poem, The Arab Apocalypse. Beast Type Song was shot in the derelict former campus of Central Saint Martins School of Art and Design in Holborn, London. In the poem, Adnan uses drawing to communicate what cannot be expressed in words. Similarly, Al-Maria explores the revision of history through graphic and bodily gestures. When words cannot express trauma, a new language of drawings, movement and music gives voice to the speechless.Drawing on personal heritage and fictional future projections, the protagonists reflect on the narratives and languages they have inherited as children of various colonial legacies. Each figure encounters some form of violence either through the hostile gaze of the camera or through the imposition of narrative. We are told stories of a violence inflicted on the body, but at the same time are asked to consider the violence of the storytelling itself.By weaving together music, literature, oral history, film and dance, Beast Type Song serves as an escape route from the repetition of dominant narratives of an oppressive past.​The work is accompanied by an installation of script pages, correspondence and photographs relating to the research and making of the work.Sophia Al-Maria was born in 1983. She lives and works in London.Made possible with the kind assistance of Anna Lena Films.Art Now is a series of free exhibitions showcasing emerging talent and highlighting new developments in British art.Curated by Nathan Ladd







































Tate Britain







MillbankLondon SW1P 4RGPlan your visit



















Dates



20 September 2019 – 23 February 2020



















Share



EmailTwitterFacebook

















Supported by

















The Art Now Supporters Circle



Matthew Slotover and Emily KingAlexandra and Guy HalamishPrincess Alia Al-SenussiLyndsey Ingram LtdCourtney PlummerCharles AspreyEmma and Fred GoltzTierney HorneJames LindonHélène Nguyen-BanCatherine PetitgasThomas Dane GalleryRussell ToveyThe William Brake Charitable TrustAnd those who wish to remain anonymous
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