Event

Exhibition Opening: Familiar Stranger

A dark room with a telephone on a stand in the centre and two framed images on dimly lit walls

When

Thursday, 6 April 2017, 8:00am

Location

4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art

181-187 Hay St, Haymarket

Exhibition opening:

Thursday 6 April, 2017

6.00pm-8.00pm

RSVP to the opening here.

Curator: Mikala Tai

Image: Shumon Ahmed, What I have forgotten could fill an ocean, what is not real never lived, 2013, polaroid photos, analogue telephone set, original soundtrack originally composed by Yusuf Khan and recited by Nader Salam. Courtesy the artist and Samdani Art Foundation & Project88, Mumbai, India.

OPENING NIGHT: THURSDAY APRIL 6, 2017.

Artists: Shumon Ahmed, Chun Yin Rainbow Chan, Bashir Makhoul, Veer Munshi, Shireen Taweel and Curtis Taylor.

The reconciliation between memory and reality plagues the act of returning. There is no resolution between the two. Memories are etched into the psyche hinged on topographical monuments, whispered words and subconscious everyday patterns while reality erases such symbology through the passing of time. Familiar Stranger examines this third, non-existent space that plagues the returnee as they seek to retrace their memories in places that have been rebuilt or reinscribed. With familiarity reduced to invisible archaeological sites the returnee searches for recognition and legitimacy in a now unacquainted geography.

The exhibiting artists examine the negation and erasure of familiarity by presenting place as a space defined by uncertainty. There is a continuing shift between points of view that begets the collapse of spatial certainty and becomes defined by its own instability. For the migrant the idea of returning becomes an implicit part of their identity; the constant oscillation between the possibility and impossibility of return a daily taunt. In Familiar Stranger the moment of return is the focal point where, for some, it is a wistful hope and for others a violent decimation of expectancy. Resisting melodrama, the artists turn to the familial archive and the personal memorial to bring form to the constant internal struggle between what is and what was.

This event starts at 6PM with drinks on arrival, followed by a brief opening address from Brendan O’Flynn, Human Rights Watch and 4A Director and curator Mikala Tai, and performance from Chun Yin Rainbow Chan from 7PM – 7.30PM.