From the Ethics of Acting to the Empire without Signs. The artist makes a new installation referencing the changing environment of his atelier as well as his unique collaboration with French theatre director Jean Michel Bruyere.
curated by Koyo Kouoh
“Issa Samb is considered a total artist. His practice ranges from acting, for both
theatre and cinema, to writing (poetry, essays, novels), installing, performing,
painting and sculpting... yet his work is unclassifiable.” Curator Koyo Kouoh.
Iniva (Institute of International Visual Arts) is pleased to present the first UK solo
exhibition of artist Issa Samb at Rivington Place this summer, curated by Koyo
Kouoh, Artistic Director of Raw Material Company based in Dakar. Samb will
make a new installation referencing the changing environment of his atelier as
well as his unique collaboration with French theatre director Jean Michel
Bruyère.
Born in Dakar in 1945, Samb founded the Laboratoire Agit’Art with a group
including filmmaker Djibril Diop Mambety, painter El Hadj Sy, and playwright
Youssoufa Dione in 1974. From its inception the Laboratoire was a revolutionary
and subversive artist collective that brought together many creative disciplines
from painting to performance.
Samb has developed a recognisable approach of provocation, collective action
and improvisation that is rooted in modes of contemporary art and theatre, the
role of the artist in the society, and the interactivity of traditional African
performance. This comes together in sculptural form at the courtyard of his
atelier in the Rue de Jules Ferry in Dakar, where found and transformed objects
and materials including threads, fabrics, clothing, branches, stones and other
ephemera are installed around a tree. A total artwork, this dynamic
arrangement provides an entry point into the spirit of Issa Samb as an artist as
well as the Laboratoire Agit’Art as a collective.
The gallery installation at Rivington Place will include materials and works
shipped from Senegal as well as found elements collected in London’s street
markets. Central to the exhibition will be fragments of the artist’s writings and
footages and videos as well as short films from the oeuvre of French director
Jean Michel Bruyère in which Samb plays the role of an actor at the service of
Bruyère’s durational performance-installations. An archival display of material
will also position Samb’s work in relation to his engagement with Laboratoire
Agit’Art and to Senegalese art and politics.
This exhibition is part of Practice International, a project supported by the
Culture Programme of the European Union.
Issa Samb was born in 1945 in Senegal and lives in Dakar. He studied art at Institut National des Arts
and philosophy, law, and sociology at Université de Dakar in the late 1960s. In 1974 he founded,
together with a group of artists, writers, film- makers, performance artists and musicians, the
Laboratoire Agit’Art, whose aim was to transform the nature of artistic practice from a formalist,
object-bound sensibility to practices based on experimentation and agitation, process rather than
product, ephemerality rather than perma- nence. With a focus on the contingent character of
actions, Laboratoire Agit’Art was informed by a critique of institutional power. He lives among his
artworks in his courtyard-home-studio, which combines all sorts of objects: a permanent exhibition
that varies on a daily basis. Samb has never seeked to be exhibited, preferring to show his works in
his studio to escape the conformism of exhibition spaces. He nevertheless co-founded Galerie Tenq
– Village des Arts. He is the author of numerous plays, poems and essays. A retro- spective of his
work was held at the National Art Gallery, Dakar in 2010. His work has been included in exhibitions
such as dOCUMENTA (13), Kassel, 2012, Biennale de l’Art Africain Contemporain, Dak’Art, Dakar,
2008 and ’Seven Stories of Modern Art in Africa’ , Whitechapel Gallery, London, 1995.
Word!Word?Word! Issa Samb and the undecipherable form, his first solo exhibition in Europe
was on view at OCA, Office of Contemporary Norway in 2013.
Jean Michel Bruyère is a French born artist, writer, director and graphic designer based in
Marseille and Berlin. His theatre-performance based work is grounded in the tradition of
improvisation and actionism. He is the director of numerous films, videos and plays. His most recent
works include Return to Chicago – Tribute to Fred Hampton (2013), Le Progrès de l’Immobilisme
(2013), Polyptych Bobby Seale (2012) and Le Préau d’Un Seul #12 (2012). He is a founding member
of the artists collective LFKs based in Paris, Marseille and Berlin. Bruyère is a regular guest at
Festival d’Avignon and his work was shown at the Logan Center, Chicago, ZKM, Zentrum für Kunst
und Medientechnologie, Karlsruhe, 9th Shanghai Biennial among other venues. His animated
sculpture-installation Le Chemin de Damastès (The Path of Damastes) is on view in the exhibition
„Art Robotique“ curated by Richard Castelli at Epidemic in Sevran until January 2015.
Koyo Kouoh is an exhibition maker and cultural producer whose curatorial work revolves around
the redefinition of the contemporary African persona. She is the founding artistic director of RAW
Material Company, a center for art, knowledge and society in Dakar. She has served as curatorial
advisor to documenta 12 in 2007 and to d(OCUMENTA) 13 in 2012. She has collaborated with the
Dakar Biennale from 2000 to 2004 and co-curated the Les Rencontres de la Photographie Africaine
in 2001 and 2003. Her most recent projects include Word!Word?Word! Issa Samb and the
undecipherable form, OCA Office of Contemporary Art Norway and Raw Material Company,
2013, Chronicle of a Revolt: Photographs of a season of protest, Raw Material Company and
Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin, 2012, Condition Report on Building Art Institutions in Africa
(Hatje Cantz Publishers, 2013), a collection of essays resulting from the eponymous symposium
held in Dakar in January 2012, Kouoh is the curator of the education programme of 1:54
Contemporary African Art Fair whose inaugural edition took place in London in October 2013. She
lives and works in Dakar and Basel.
Practice International is an initiative of CasCo (Utrecht), Iaspis (Stockholm), and Iniva (London). The project aims to reflect on our positions as artists, curators and institutions, to think how we can embody and meet new forms of practice involving agents of social change, introduce new terms into the discourse, and question institutional habits.
About Iniva
Iniva (Institute of International Visual Arts) works at the intersection of society and politics. It engages with new ideas and emerging debates in the contemporary visual arts, reflecting in particular the diversity of contemporary society. We work with artists, curators, creative producers, writers and the public to explore the vitality of visual culture. (www.iniva.org) Iniva is supported by Arts Council England.
About Rivington Place
Opened in 2007, Rivington Place is home to Iniva and Autograph ABP. Designed by architect David Adjaye OBE, this award winning building is dedicated to the display, debate and reflection of global diversity issues in the contemporary visual arts. Rivington Place is home not just to two exhibition spaces but also Iniva’s Learning Space and unique research library, the Stuart Hall Library.
Images: Issa Samb, Untitled, drawing, Dakar, no day (Dakar, pas de jour). Courtesy Raw Material Company. Issa Samb portrait, photo by Christa Holka, 2014.
For further information and images please contact:
Sheena Balkwill sbalkwill@iniva.org +44 (0)207 749 1246
Press view: 3 June, 10am – 12pm / Preview (with performance): 6:30 – 8:30pm
Rivington Place, London, EC2A 3BA
Rivington Place public opening hours:
Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday: 11am – 6pm
Late Thursdays: 11am – 9pm
Saturday: 12noon – 6pm
Admission: free