PBS' neighbours at Collingwood Yards, West Space, is proud to present the first major solo presentation by Akil Ahamat, part of their 2024 Commission series. It is opening November 16 and runs until January 18, 2025.
Combining sound production, literary studies, media theory and filmmaking, Extinguishing Hope articulates the aesthetics and psychosocial affect of always and ever-unfolding disaster. The work draws from big and small screen cinematic languages to produce a non-narrative atmosphere Akil describes as ‘slow cinema for short attention spans.’
Extinguishing Hope sees Akil further exploring his fraught, fictional and interspecies relationship with a snail – a recurring character in his works that embodies broader ideas of truth, navigation, and escape. Reminiscent of absurdist theatre, Extinguishing Hope presents variations of the same scene, in which the pair rehearse divergent and plural sensings of their situation.
Built in a games engine, within the world of Extinguishing Hope darkness is a motif representing our age of hyper-rationality, producing an excess of truth that is impossible to make sense of. Through hidden looping techniques that resemble the mechanics of social media platforms, the recursive gamespace inhabited by Akil and the snail becomes a site to consider the formation of our subjectivities under these conditions. How are our desires, imaginations and experiences shaped by crisis, as it is mediated through our information-saturated reality?
Drawing from Islamic theology, philosophy and the poetry of language and speech, at the core of Extinguishing Hope is the question, ‘how do we find our way in the dark?’
Extinguishing Hope is a West Space Commission, supported by Creative Australia and presented in partnership with UTS Gallery, Sydney. The exhibition is accompanied by a publication by Akil Ahamat and Alexander Tanazefti.
Opening Celebration Saturday 16 November, 4 → 6pm
The afternoon will feature a conversation between artists Akil Ahamat and Sarah Rodigari and West Space Curator Sebastian Henry-Jones at 4.30pm.
Sarah Rodigari is an artist whose practice addresses the social and political potential of art. Sarah's work is site responsive, employing, durational live action, improvisation, and dialogical methodologies to produce text-based performance and installations.
More info at westspace.org.au