Evan Ifekoya

Mirage, 20 Years On @ ICA, Oct 30 + 31

30 October 2015

The ICA marks the 20th anniversary of Mirage: Enigmas Of Race, Difference and Desire with a panel discussion on Frantz Fanon and his writings on post-colonialism, identity, cinema and psychoanalysis at their London space on October 30.

The original exhibition, curated by David A Bailey, used one of Fanon’s key texts, Black Skin, White Masks, as a starting point for artist responses, and 20 years later, the ICA returns to reflect on how artistic practice intertwines with race.

Organized in collaboration with Bailey, the discussion and screening take place on October 30, with the symposium occurring on October 31, kicking off with an introduction by Bailey, a discussion on the role of institutions in structural violence, and speeches by, among others, Morgan Quaintance and Evan Ifekoya

See the ICA discussion and symposium pages for details. **

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Recommended for you @ Ali Baba Juice, Oct 1 – Oct 4

30 September 2015

London’s Ali Baba Juice is presenting an epic video playlist titled Recommended for you at the Peckham juice vendor, launching on October 1 and running during Art Licks Weekend to October 4.

Presented by the recent Ariel 2.0 performance programme organiser Leo Liccini along with Dylan Spencer-Davidson, the exhibition will open with a party and performances by the latter artist and Zoe Marden, and feature videos by a slew of artists on 80 smartphones, .

The list of contributors includes @gaybar‘s Hannah Quinlan Anderson and Rosie Hastings, Ilja Karilampi, and Eva PapamargaritiHannah PerryJala Wahid and Oskar ProctorJosh Bitelli, Tami Tamaki and Evan Ifekoya, to name a few.

See the Facebook event page for details.**

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Evan Ifekoya: ‘Visible Edges’

1 September 2015

Don’t assume you know Evan Ifekoya. They’re an artist who likes to keep things fresh – in the past they have made collage, knitting and drawings – at the moment they work predominantly in video and performance. At a recent live event at David Roberts Art Foundation in London, Ifekoya performed ‘Let The Rhythm Keep Pulling You Towards Your Edges’ (2015) – a DJ set that included artists as musically divergent as X-Ray Spex and Felix Da Housecat and played over a two projections. One was a live-updated Twitter feed and the other was a hypnotic looping video montage. Ifekoya’s ongoing series of music videos includes the catchy ‘Ojulowo’ (2014), which questions the notion of cultural or personal authenticity, ‘The Gender Song’ (2014), that attempts to playfully unpick pervasive gender binaries, and ‘Disco Breakdown’ (2014), its lyrics expressing the desire to dance over images of the artist as they painstakingly construct a disco ball out of silver card.

As part of an ongoing series of artist profiles in partnership with Video In Common, aqnb visited Ifekoya at their home, to talk about why they place importance on physical making, how to show the banal side of life, and what it means to be ‘entertaining’. There’s dancing (although often unenthusiastic), craftsmanship (collaging, or knitting with broomsticks), and banal activities like hair-combing and tooth-brushing. Don’t expect cleanliness or sterility – Ifekoya likes to take a hands-on approach.

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Produced in partnership with Video in CommonThis project has been made possible through the generous support of Arts Council England.

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