Archipelago:

Visions in Orbit

The archipelago is diffracted, fractal, necessary in its totality, fragile or contingent ​in its unity, passing through and remaining, it is a state of the world.

-- Édouard Glissant

Bringing together a diverse range of artists, perspectives and mediums, ​Archipelago: Visions in Orbit takes the physiology of an archipelago – a cluster of ​distinct but connected islands – as a metaphor to frame and relate seemingly ​disparate artistic positions.

With society becoming increasingly fragmented, exacerbated by heightened ​global geo-political tensions, the exhibition proposes an ‘archipelagic’ approach, ​aimed at illuminating a shared cultural fabric, while at the same time allowing for ​complex differences.


Through the enigmatic and ethereal works of Esther Teichmann (b. 1980, ​Germany) and Jakob Rowlinson (b. 1990, UK); portrayals of emergence and ​reflection in the paintings of Jade de Montserrat’s (b. 1981, UK) and sculptural reliefs ​of Cameron Ugbodu’s (b. 2000, Austria), alongside considerations of diasporic ​histories in the performance documentations of Daniella Valz Gen (b. Unlisted, ​Peru) and Güler Ateş (b. 1977, Turkey), the exhibition presents a constellation of ​contemporary myth-makers, dreamers and artistic documentarians. Through ​their collective and individual narrative imaginings, the artists explore themes of ​migration, belonging and connection.


The exhibition speaks to, and of, the Gallery’s historic location in Whitechapel, ​East London, a place that has and continues to see the coming together of migrant ​communities in a time of political polarisation.

Archipelago: Visions in Orbit is an original exhibition curated by students from ​the MA Curating Art and Public Programmes course – a unique one-year ​professional placement qualification, organised in collaboration with London ​South Bank University (LSBU).


The exhibition is accompanied by a public programme including performances ​and discursive events with artists and curators. For more information, visit ​whitechapelgallery.org/events.

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