4.6 • 1.1K Ratings
🗓️ 2 May 2024
⏱️ 68 minutes
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We meet artist Leilah Babirye to discuss her inspiring multidisciplinary practice, her major solo show at Yorkshire Sculpture Park and new sculptures in the Venice Biennale 2024.
Transforming everyday materials into objects that address issues surrounding identity, sexuality and human rights, the artist fled her native Uganda to New York in 2015 after being publicly outed in a local newspaper. In spring 2018 Babirye was granted asylum with support from the African Services Committee and the NYC Anti-Violence Project.
Composed of debris collected from the streets of New York, Babirye’s sculptures are woven, whittled, welded, burned and burnished. Her choice to use discarded materials in her work is intentional – the pejorative term for a gay person in the Luganda language is ‘abasiyazi’, meaning sugarcane husk. “It’s rubbish,” explains Babirye, “the part of the sugarcane you throw out.” The artist also frequently uses traditional African masks to explore the diversity of LGBTQI identities, assembling them from ceramics, metal and hand-carved wood; lustrous, painterly glazes are juxtaposed with chiselled, roughly-textured woodwork and metal objects associated with the art of blacksmithing. In a similar vein, Babirye creates loosely rendered portraits in vivid colours of members from her community.
Describing her practice, Babirye explains: “Through the act of burning, nailing and assembling, I aim to address the realities of being gay in the context of Uganda and Africa in general. Recently, my working process has been fuelled by a need to find a language to respond to the recent passing of the anti-homosexuality bill in Uganda.”
For her Yorkshire Sculpture Park solo, Babirye spent the summer of 2023 at YSP making a clan of seven larger-than-life-size figures in wood and five coloured ceramics. Supported by YSP’s technical team, the seven sculptures were carved using a chainsaw and chisels from trees that had reached the end of their life on site. The artist describes being guided by the wood itself, sketching the initial forms directly onto the sectioned tree for carving. Once carved, the figures are refined and their surfaces sanded to highlight the grains of the tree. The sculptures are then burned a deep black, the charring once used to make the works ‘disappear’ but which is now a gesture of celebrating their beauty. Details of the sculptures are treated with a blowtorch before the surfaces are carefully waxed to acknowledge the skin of the piece and the tree from which it came. The final stage is one Babirye calls ‘taking the girls to the salon’, in which found elements complete the sculptures, including bicycle chains, nails and copper from a dismantled boiler, as well as redundant stainless steel teapots.
Follow @BabiryeSculptor and @YSPsculpture
Visit: https://ysp.org.uk/profile/leilah-babirye
Leilah Babirye: Obumu (Unity) runs at Yorkshire Sculpture Park until Sunday 8th September 2024.
https://ysp.org.uk/whats-on/exhibitions/leilah-babirye-obumu-unity
Her work is also part of the Venice Biennale 2024
Thanks to YSP, Stephen Friedman Gallery and Gordon Robichaux.
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0:00.0 | As you're listening to me, Daisy, Apple's iPhone disassembly robot, is dismantling an iPhone |
0:06.4 | into lots of recyclable parts. That's how Apple recovers more materials than conventional recycling methods. |
0:13.0 | Thanks, Daisy. |
0:15.0 | There's more to iPhone. |
0:17.0 | Good afternoon, good morning, good evening, whatever you are in the world, I'm Russell Tovey and I'm Robert Diamen. |
0:26.2 | And this is Talkart. Welcome to Talkart. |
0:28.9 | How are you today Robert? Today Russell, I am feeling unified and I am feeling united and emboldened with the |
0:39.3 | inspiration that I take from today's guest's work and actually at the very core of today's |
0:44.7 | guest work is pretty much the reason I got into art because I think art has the |
0:49.7 | power to not only empower the individual who's even making the art to be able to use the |
0:56.0 | platform of their artwork to express their feelings and emotions but also often very |
1:02.1 | like political kind of subjects just by existing and |
1:05.5 | being ourselves we end up being political and I think today's guest work reaches |
1:10.6 | out to so many of us in the queer community but also wider and there's a kind of solidarity within the work and I think people of all different backgrounds can actually come together and support each other and I am so excited because right now an exhibition has just opened at the Yorkshire |
1:28.0 | Sculpture Park and I first discovered today's guest work through Stephen |
1:31.4 | Friedman Gallery and I've seen her work in exhibitions |
1:35.1 | but also at art fairs and every time I'm in a different art fair I will often go and look at |
1:40.1 | her work because I love it so much. I particularly am drawn to the ceramic sculptures and her work |
1:46.7 | transforms everyday materials. So the current show at Yorkshire Sculpture Park was actually born out of a residency and includes all kinds of wood and found materials. |
1:57.0 | But our guest lives in New York and we'll also explore the idea of New York as a kind of canvas in a way or at least a place to sort of find materials. |
2:08.1 | It's kind of like detritus or things that other people have thrown away as trash that then become the actual content of the works. |
2:15.8 | So I'm so excited and really proud to welcome to Talk Art. |
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