dead Daughter, a solo exhibition by Diamond Stingily, is on at London’s Cabinet, running September 9 to October 30.
With flower arrangements, cast bronze sculptures, synthetic braided hair locks and chains, dead Daughter alludes to ambiguous traces of memory, race, and domestic life, with a degree of unsettling tension. An excerpt from the artist’s booklet of poetry produced for the exhibition reads: “My resilience of control in this room was found to be disgusting and inflammatory to the voices that taunted.”**