198 Gallery
London
198 Railton Road
+44 (0) 207 737 5315 FAX +44 (0) 207 737 5315
WEB
Anissa-Jane
dal 27/4/2005 al 10/6/2005
+44 020 79788309 FAX +44 020 77375315
WEB
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27/4/2005

Anissa-Jane

198 Gallery, London

Womanyfestations: the beauty in manipulation. The artist investigates personal and collective experiences of cultural displacement and their effects. Her non-wearable garments made using materials such as brown paper, cocoa butter and hair express how people have been forced to change and adapt under societal pressures in their non-native surroundings.


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Womanyfestations: the beauty in manipulation

198 Gallery is pleased to present the first major solo exhibition of work by Anissa-Jane, a young emerging artist based in London.

Presenting work developed from her project Wo-manifestation, an exploration of her roots, Anissa-Jane investigates personal and collective experiences of cultural displacement and their effects. Her non-wearable garments made using materials such as brown paper, cocoa butter and hair express how people have been forced to change and adapt under societal pressures in their non-native surroundings.

In her hands, brown paper, a material more familiar used as packaging or as envelopes, becomes “a metaphor for [her] own brown skin.” Part of the message is a celebration of “the accomplishments of [her] forebears who have lived through and adapted to their changing social situation over the centuries.” While her personal standpoint is that of a British West Indian female, her work has a wider relevance: the works can hold meaning for any person who has been subjected to social forces and pressures that have necessitated changes in their way of being.

Anissa-Jane draws on fashion, theatre and popular culture for her methodology and presentation. Made by manipulating brown paper in different ways such as “twisting, crumpling, oiling, threading and staining,” her beautifully handcrafted theatrical and sculptural garments such as Wo-manifestation gain a life of their own, transcending boundaries and restrictions. The material has changed through these processes, but its original identity can still be perceived. There are also intriguing contrasts in
the qualities of her work such as flexibility and fragility, strength and delicacy.

She has exhibited in many venues in London and the surrounding areas, including the oh!art centre at Oxford House last year.

Supported by:
Lambeth Arts
Association of London Government

Launch Event: Thursday 28th April, 6.30-9.00pm

198 Gallery
198 Railton Road, Herne Hill SE24 0LU - London

IN ARCHIVIO [11]
The Urban Vision - Metropolis
dal 23/6/2005 al 29/7/2005

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