Tramway

Sammy Baloji and Bodys Isek Kingelez

Sammy Baloji and Bodys Isek Kingelez
THIS EVENT HAS EXPIRED
Tickets
Free - Drop-in - no ticket required
Dates and times
11th Jun - 25th Jul 2021
Check venue opening times
Age
All ages

Mondays - CLOSED
Tuesday - Friday 12 noon - 5pm
Saturday and Sunday 12 noon - 6pm

This exhibition is free and unticketed but we require all visitors to adhere to our Covid safety measures, including wearing a mask at all times, and 'checking in' on arrival. MORE >

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This exhibition brings together two artists from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Sammy Baloji and Bodys Isek Kingelez, whose work shares an exploration of warped colonial legacies alongside visions of future living. Whilst Kingelez makes precise, delicate and detailed models offering imagined propositions for a vibrant cityscape, Baloji draws our eye to people living in the city today and moments of utopia that exist in the day-to-day urban fabric.

Bodys Isek Kingelez (1948 – 2015) was born in the DRC when it was known as Zaire. Working in a period of socio-political shifts, Kingelez responded to an urgent need to transform urban reality.  The results are sculptures of imagined buildings that propose fantastical, utopian models for a more harmonious future society.

Kingelez referred to his works as ‘extreme maquettes’. Each can be thought of as a self-sufficient sculpture and also as a model for a future work, a building or urban masterplan to be realised in the world at some future time. From the late 1970s until 1985 he worked as a self-taught art restorer at the Institut des Musées Nationaux du Zaïre in the capital Kinshasa, which gave him access to supplies and materials, and a base to refine his practice. He created works from a variety of everyday and found materials such as coloured paper, cardboard, plastic and tape, meticulously repurposed in order to radically rethink the world around him.

Sammy Baloji (b. 1978) was raised in the mining town of Lubumbashi, the second largest city in the DRC. Through photography, collage, film and installation, he explores the ongoing impacts of colonial infrastructure and systems of capitalist extraction. Baloji's work is rooted in extensive archival research as well as lived experience. He uncovers layers of history in order to think about the ways in which the past continues to shape the present, through mechanisms such as transport infrastructure, land ownership, property rights and racialised divisions in urban planning.

On display are photographs from the series Urban Now, produced between 2013 and 2015 in collaboration with urban anthropologist Filip de Boeck. These photographs address the question of architecture in Kinshasa and the overlaps and disconnects between multiple visions of the city: from crumbling colonial infrastructure to airbrushed neoliberal futures manifested across billboards and advertisements. They ask us to think about interior spaces as affective landscapes and spheres for the imagination, which are simultaneously a part of the rest of the city and somehow apart from it.


This exhibition is part of the Director’s Programme for Glasgow International, Scotland’s largest festival for contemporary art.

Supported by The Henry Moore Foundation


Header Image: Bodys Isek Kingelez, Kimbembele Ihunga (1992) Courtesy of The Museum of Everything

Below: Sammy Baloji, Samuel Mandefu Biye. Municipality of Masina, Petro-Congo neighbourhood, 2015, courtesy of the artist and Imane Farès.


Accessibility guides

Read the Accessibility Guide for Tramway on AccessAble 

Large Print and Braille programme material available upon request. 

Some performances may also be BSL interpreted, audio described or have further assistance available. Access information for individual events is included in their event listing. 

 

Accessible toilets

Accessible toilets are available on all three levels of Tramway, and come equipped with handrails and emergency pull cords. Please contact Tramway prior to your visit if you have any additional requirements

Assistance dogs

Assistance dogs are welcome. We can provide a bowl of water for an assistance dog. The assistance dog toilet area is located to the rear of the building.

Assistance dogs are allowed in the auditorium.

Wheelchair access

There is level access to all Tramway spaces and the cafe, with lift access to the upper spaces.

There are designated spaces for wheelchair users in the theatre. 

 

Baby changing

Baby changing facilities are available on the ground floor

Baby feeding

Breastfeeding is welcome at Tramway

Cafe or restaurant

Full table service is not available. Food or drinks can be ordered at the counter and will be brought to the table.
No tables are permanently fixed.
No chairs are permanently fixed.

Menus are hand held only, but are clearly presented in contrasting colours. Menus are not available in Braille. 

Parking

On street only

Photography and video recording

At times, Glasgow Life will be on the premises to film and take photos. 

The public are only permitted to record and take photos where explicit permission has been granted in advance. 

Free wifi

There is free Wi-Fi available at Tramway, which you can access by registering through Facebook or an online form. Once registered, you can access free Wi-Fi whenever you are at Tramway.

Location Map

Tramway is a post-industrial venue with a range of unique and versatile spaces, popular with private and corporate clients looking for a venue ‘with a difference’. Tramway is an ideal space for performances, exhibitions, private viewings, seminars, meetings and smaller scale functions.

Visit Tramway's venue hire web page to find out more. 


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