Social States. The artists were awarded 12 week residencies at Delfina Foundation. During their stay they were invited to respond to the environment surrounding the Pump House Gallery and to explore its social and physical landscape through engaging with the people in the local borough of Wandsworth. This research served as the starting point for new work presented as part of this exhibition.
Delfina Foundation, in partnership with Pump House Gallery and The Creative India Foundation, are
delighted to announce an exhibition of new work by Baptist Coelho and Nadia Kaabi-Linke, curated in
collaboration with George Unsworth.
Baptist Coelho (Mumbai, India) and Nadia Kaabi-
Linke (born in Tunisia, lives and works in Berlin)
were awarded 12 week residencies at Delfina
Foundation. During their stay they were invited to
respond to the environment surrounding the Pump
House Gallery and to explore its social and physical
landscape through engaging with the people in the
local borough of Wandsworth. This research served
as the starting point for new work presented as
part of this exhibition.
During their residencies, Coelho and Kaabi-Linke
investigated how we communicate individual and
historic experiences of social conflict. The resulting
sculptures and installations have been developed
through close personal encounters with individual
participants. Coelho's work engages in our
perception of the military and events specific to
World War II, whilst Kaabi-Linke explores the marks and scars of domestic abuse. The enormous
breadth of these themes allows for reflection on the ways in which we approach and understand
psychological experiences.
Through the exploration of the history and geography of Battersea Park, Baptist Coelho has developed
work related to the park's significance during World War II. In particular, Coelho produced work at the
specific sites where bombs fell, utilising both the physical sites as well as the incident report forms that
were published and stored within local archives. Coelho explores the role of the park as a collective
resource made available to the public through the provision of allotments, and its function as a support
structure for the war campaign. This history has informed a series of performative acts in the park
during which Coelho would interact with members of the public whilst dressed as a British soldier. These
interactions evolved into a series of installations where Coelho draws on conflicting representations of
the soldier as both an individual as well as a symbol of force and authority, to gather responses,
recollections and ephemera that comprise his artworks.
Nadia Kaabi-Linke will premiere the first works from her ongoing
project Impunities. During the residency, Kaabi-Linke worked in
close collaboration with several shelter organisations to make
visible acts of physical and psychological domestic violence.
Impunities presents a series of glass panes that have suspended
within them the impressions of scars obtained through acts of
domestic abuse, a form of violence commonly hidden behind a
wall of silence, and often unreported to the authorities. Kaabi-
Linke has used forensic processes to present these physical and
emotional scars, creating an archive of latent crimes.
Social States reflects the depth of engagement and exploration in
the practices of these two international artists during their
residencies. Their contemporary and international approach to
social engagement continues to develop and translate complex
scenarios and historical events, as well as transforming private
and personal perceptions of society.
The exhibition is supported by Arts Council England and Sula
Wines.
Baptist Coelho (b. 1977, India) frequently merges personal research with collaborations from various
cultures, geographies and histories. His work begins to take the form of human-shaped media-
landscapes which often contend with history, the environment, conflict, emotion and randomness. As
part of his practice, Coelho incorporates installation, video, sound, photography, found objects, site-
specific works and public-art projects. He lives and works in Mumbai, India
Solo Exhibitions include Grand Palais, Bern (2009); Project 88, Mumbai (2009); Visual Arts Gallery,
Delhi (2009) and BIAD, Birmingham (2006). His work has been exhibited at galleries and institutions,
including Contemporary Art Centre, Lithuania (2011-12); Zacheta National Art Gallery, Poland (2011);
Gwangju Museum of Art, South Korea (2010) and Devi Art Foundation, India (2008).
Nadia Kaabi-Linke was born in 1978 in Tunis to a Ukrainian mother and Tunisian father. Her
installations, objects and pictorial works are embedded in urban contexts, intertwined with memory and
geographically and politically constructed identities. Kaabi-Linke is represented by Green Cardamom,
London and Lawrie Shabibi Dubai.
She held her first major solo show Tatort at Galerie Christian Hosp, Berlin in 2010. She has participated
in international group exhibitions which include Drawn from Life, Green Cardamom (2009 – 10) and
Abbot Hall Art Gallery, Kendall, UK (2011); 9th Sharjah Biennial (2009); El arte contemporáneo en el
Magrreb: dos orillas, at Círculo de Bellas Artes in Madrid (2011); The Future of a Promise: the first Pan-
Arab contemporary art exhibition at the 54th Venice Biennial, Venice (2011). In 2009 she was awarded
the Jury Prize by the Alexandria Biennale. In 2011, she was a recipient of the Abraaj Capital Art Prize.
Delfina Foundation is an independent, non-profit foundation dedicated to facilitating artistic exchange
and developing creative practice through residencies, partnerships and public programming, with a
special focus on international collaborations with the Greater Middle East & North Africa.
Delfina Foundation works through a constantly evolving network of partners. This first-ever
collaboration with Creative India Foundation and Pump House Gallery saw the first Indian artist-in-
residence at Delfina Foundation, alongside an artist from the Greater Middle East and a British curator,
creating international connections between creative practitioners. In 2013, Delfina Foundation will
expand into the building next door in Catherine Place SW1, doubling the number of residencies as well
as the size of their exhibition space.
The Pump House Gallery is a public contemporary visual arts space on the lakeside in Battersea Park,
South London. The gallery is owned, managed and funded by Wandsworth Council and plays a leading
role in the cultural life of the borough. It is the highest profile public visual arts space in Wandsworth,
attracting over 30,000 visitors a year.
Collaborative partnerships are central to Pump House Gallery’s future curatorial vision: to create
opportunities for artists to explore new modes of practice and enquiry, engage with social and civic
spaces, extend the cultural experience of audiences and create catalytic sites for exchange, dialogue
and debate.
The Creative India Foundation was founded in August 2010 to promote awareness of Indian art and
culture and enhance its appreciation throughout the world. As its first initiative, The Creative India
Foundation has undertaken the task of enhancing the presence of Indian sculptors globally. Although
India has one of the world’s oldest sculptural traditions, opportunities for contemporary public display
and exhibitions of outdoor sculpture are limited. The Creative India Foundation has been creating
opportunities for Indian sculptors to explore and push their creative horizons internationally as part of
residency programs, exhibitions, and sculpture festivals.
This project is The Creative India Foundation’s first reciprocal exchange with the UK and it will enable
an Indian artist and a British curator to engage in a cross-cultural context, thus enabling The Creative
India Foundation to re-invest this experience into local networks, as well as its long-term plan for a
residency programme and sculpture park in India.
Image: Baptist Coelho
“Why is he here?”
2011-12
Performance
Photo: Miranda Sharp
Courtesy the artist and Delfina Foundation
Press Contacts:
Kristina McLean at Sutton PR
Kristina@suttonpr.com
+44 (0) 207 183 3577
Laura Eldret at Pump House Gallery
info@pumphousegallery.org.uk
+44 (0) 208 871 7572
Artist tour and talk: 14 March, 2012 at 18:00, followed by an opening reception at 18:30 until 20:30
Monthly Do at PHG: 18 March 11:00-15:00 led by one of the exhibiting artists Baptist Coelho
The Monthly Do is an opportunity for families and individuals of all ages to drop-in, see the show and
get hands on with some art making. Once a month, through the year, contemporary artists set the
scene with activities, from print making to music making, to get you creative
Opening Reception: Wednesday, 14 March 18:00 – 20:30
Pump House Gallery
Battersea Park, London
Opening Times: Wednesday, Thursday, Friday 11am - 5pm. Saturday and Sunday 11am - 4pm. Closed Monday and Tuesday and during exhibition installations
Admission free