Un peu de répit dans la hesse

Research residency – Gemma Ushengewe

28.03.24 – 27.04.24

 

Restitution 27.04.24 – 18h

We need to make common cause with desires and (non)positions that seem crazy and unimaginable. We must, in the name of this alliance, refuse what was refused to us in the first place; reshape desire, reorient hope and re-imagine possibilities out of that refusal, and do so independently of the dreams nested in entitlement and respectability. If there is no respite from mess, if there is study rather than the production of knowledge, if there is a way of being together in the midst of heartbreak, if there are undercommons, then we must all find the path that leads us there.”

Fred Moten and Stefano Harney. The Undercommons: Fugitive Planning & Black Study. Minor Compositions, 2013.

Gemma Ushengewe is interested in the question of fugitivity in systems of control and hyper-surveillance. Situating themself as a racialized person living in Europe who is confronted with both direct and structural racism, they speak of a fugitive subject. This fugitivity is linked to a colonial history that lives on in our contemporary period – the same categorisations are used to assign identities to the same populations. 

 

A racialised subject is turned into a category of people to be controlled – at the border, on trains, in shops, by surveillance cameras, security guards, the police. Subjected to racial hierarchies and therefore controlled in their day-to-day movements, these populations have developed their own strategies for refusing, fleeing, camouflaging or becoming invisible; strategies that have been passed on in the course of struggles and demands for rights. 

 

Espace 3353 is located on Rue du Tunnel 9. Tracing the link between fugitive and underground path, for the artist the tunnel recalls the hidden, silent and subterranean places of escape found by racialised people who are too visible in the public space (through racial profiling, surveillance, etc.). The tunnel is thus a symbol of transition, undergone or chosen to rediscover our bearings and redraw our trajectory, while blurring our traces on the surface. 

 

Through a series of videos they construct an imaginary setting in which the reality of everyday life infuses into networks of resonance, inching toward the creation of a fugitive commons.

Gemma Ushengewe (*1995) is an artist who skilfully navigates between documentary and experimental film, writing and performance. With a keen interest in narrative reappropriation, their research focuses on the critical examination of surveillance, structural racism and neo-colonialism. Seeking to go beyond storytelling, they explore counter-forms that can lead to liberation. Graduating from HEAD in 2020 with a Bachelor’s degree in cinema and a Master’s degree in visual arts in 2023, their films have been acclaimed at various festivals, including Dei Popoli, Black Box, EEEEh and Paraponera Festival.

Graphic Design : Li Chao Lin

Photography : Román Alonso

Vernissage 27.03.25 - 18h / a night of barely an hour and a half / Juli Sando & Alex Ghandour / 29.03.2025 - 26.04.2025