Migrant stories at Contemporary Art Batumi
Artwork inspired by experience of refugees and migrants across the world will come to the foreground with a display of a group of artists at Contemporary Art Space Batumi, a gallery venue in the Black Sea coastline city, starting next week.
In an “attempt to tell different stories from different perspectives”, organisers and curators will bring works by eight creatives who made trials of forcefully displaced people their own or have themselves faced the troubles of relocation due to external forces.
Under the title Shipwreck, the exhibition seeks to highlight exhibits that became fruits of effort by the involved group to work away from the headline-focused media narratives of displaced individuals throughout the recent years. The resulting art has been aimed at re-personalising the stories and presenting dignified angles on this challenging worldwide development of recent times.
Initially conceived a decade ago when the works were curated by Alfons Hug and Asli Samadova in Baku, from video exhibits by Adad Hannah and Marcel Odenbach to self-portraits by photographer Omar Victor Diop, centred around a reconstruction of black freedom movements.
Georgia has much to tell about migration. It is a home to many internally displaced Georgians, as well as a shelter for refugees and migrants from neighbouring countries. It is also a country that has lost almost a quarter of its population to immigration” – preview for the display