4.6 • 1.1K Ratings
🗓️ 14 March 2025
⏱️ 63 minutes
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We meet poet, artist and filmmaker Julianknxx. We explore themes within his work of inheritance, loss and belonging as he crosses the boundaries between written word, music and visual art.
Sierra Leonian artist Julianknxx uses his personal history as a prism to deconstruct dominant perspectives on African art, history, and culture. Rich with symbolism, his work conveys the Black experience of defining and redefining the self, rejecting labels to form new collective narratives.
Offering song and music as forms of resistance, the exhibition invokes new understandings of what it means to be caught between, and to be of, multiple places. Choirs and musicians from cities across Europe give voice to a single refrain: ‘We are what’s left of us’, transforming the Curve into a collaborative space of communication. As the philosopher Édouard Glissant has written: ‘you can change with the Other while being yourself, you are not one, you are multiple, and you are yourself.’
Julianknxx’s work merges his poetic practice with films and performance; he engages in a form of existential inquiry that at once seeks to find ways of expressing the ineffable realities of human experiences while examining the structures through which we live. In casting his own practice as a ‘living archive’ or an ‘history from below’, Julianknxx draws on West African traditions of oral history to reframe how we construct both local and global perspectives. He does this through a body of work that challenges fixed ideas of identity and unravels linear Western historical and socio-political narratives, attempting to reconcile how it feels to exist primarily in liminal spaces.
Follow @JulianKnxx
Visit #JulianKnxx’s two new exhibitions @BuroStedelijk, Amsterdam until 24th April and @CAMGulbenkian, Lisbon until 2nd June 2025.
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0:00.0 | Good afternoon. Good morning. Good evening. Wherever you are in the world. I'm Russell Tovey. |
0:10.1 | And I'm Robert Diamant. And this is Talkart. Welcome to Talkart. How are you today, Robert? |
0:16.3 | Today, Russell, I am feeling like a complex human. |
0:21.8 | Oh, okay. |
0:30.7 | Yeah, because in the research for this episode, today we're about to meet an artist who I have loved for quite a few years now. |
0:36.7 | And I've even actually shown a film work and installation by them in Margate in a group show curated by Ronan McKenzie. |
0:42.8 | But in an early interview, he talked about this idea of how complex humans are. |
0:47.2 | And there's this really beautiful quote, which was there is a whole universe within each and every one of us. |
0:48.5 | And that idea to limit things just to one place is just bizarre. |
0:52.5 | Borders and national identities are crazy. |
0:55.4 | So the dual identity thing is a constant. |
0:58.3 | Now, he talks about this dual identity because he grew up in Sierra Leone. |
1:03.7 | And then I think briefly went to Gambia, maybe. |
1:05.7 | We can check that when we start chatting to him. |
1:08.2 | And then came to London. |
1:09.2 | And there's this idea of these, you know, two places predominantly, which was Sierra Leone and the UK, |
1:15.2 | and how it can become so much part of your identity. |
1:18.2 | But on a wider kind of level, if you actually look at his practice, which originates in poetry |
1:23.2 | and being a poet, and then has kind of gone into filmmaking and connecting with musicians and |
1:29.1 | music and spoken word and performance and dance and movement and the body in terms of how it |
1:35.1 | exists in relation to architecture. It's just so complex and there is no way of pinning down |
1:40.8 | just one kind of channel or route within his work because it's so expansive and |
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