Close Menu
  • Home
  • Free Gifts
  • Self Help
  • Make Money
  • Video
  • Hot Deals
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Judge Blocks Trump From Invading Portland
  • Rafiatu Lawal sets record at World Championships
  • When the victim isn’t perfect
  • Emmett Till’s Cousin, Priscilla Williams-Till, Runs For U.S. Senate
  • ‘The fear was immense’: al-Shabaab exploits fragmented politics to reclaim land in Somalia | Somalia
  • ‘We all need someone’: the hairdressers tackling stigma of mental health issues in west Africa | Africa
  • Strategy and Fun in the World of Online Casinos: A Nigerian Perspective
  • Top 10 Safest Countries in Africa 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube TikTok
Afro ICONAfro ICON
Demo
  • Opinion
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Society
    1. Art and Culture
    2. Education
    3. Family & Relationship
    4. View All

    When the victim isn’t perfect

    October 5, 2025

    Strategy and Fun in the World of Online Casinos: A Nigerian Perspective

    October 4, 2025

    In the age of artificial intelligence democracy needs help

    October 3, 2025

    The Promising Future of Biblical Counselling in Africa

    October 2, 2025

    Nepal’s Gen Z reckoning

    September 29, 2025

    Rising Political Frustration in Zambia

    September 26, 2025

    10 Mistakes I Made Navigating Theological Differences

    September 23, 2025

    Vacancies: AMALI Research Officer/Senior Research Officer

    September 20, 2025

    ‘We all need someone’: the hairdressers tackling stigma of mental health issues in west Africa | Africa

    October 5, 2025

    Silence and retrogressive culture: Femicide in Busia, Kenya

    October 2, 2025

    Tokyo scores on policy but loses on scale | Article

    September 17, 2025

    South Sudan vice-president charged with murder and treason

    September 11, 2025

    When the victim isn’t perfect

    October 5, 2025

    ‘We all need someone’: the hairdressers tackling stigma of mental health issues in west Africa | Africa

    October 5, 2025

    Strategy and Fun in the World of Online Casinos: A Nigerian Perspective

    October 4, 2025

    In the age of artificial intelligence democracy needs help

    October 3, 2025
  • Lifestyle
    1. Foods & Recipes
    2. Health & Fitness
    3. Travel & Tourism
    Featured
    Recent

    Judge Blocks Trump From Invading Portland

    October 6, 2025

    Rafiatu Lawal sets record at World Championships

    October 6, 2025

    When the victim isn’t perfect

    October 5, 2025
  • International
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • North America
    • Oceania
    • South America
Afro ICONAfro ICON
Home»Society»Art and Culture»Maimouna Guerresi: VOLTA New York
Art and Culture

Maimouna Guerresi: VOLTA New York

King JajaBy King JajaApril 10, 2024No Comments0 Views
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
Maimouna Guerresi: VOLTA New York
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Maimouna Guerresi: VOLTA New York

09/04/24 at 10:00 am by admin

Maimouna Guerresi will be represented by Mariane Ibrahim Gallery, Seattle on VOLTA New York, March 5 until March 8. From March 20 on she will have a solo show in the same gallery. Until May 1.

Light Bodies, 2014.
(First published: February 15, 2015)

 

 

About:

MGWhiteRubberTireFirstLesson2014White Rubber Tire – First Lesson, 2014.

Perspective on the relationship between women and society, with particular reference to those countries in which the role of women is most marginalized. For over twenty years Guerresi’s work has been about empowering women and bringing together individuals and cultures in an appreciation for a context of shared humanity, beyond borders – psychological, cultural, and political. She uses recurrent metaphors such as milk, light, the hijab, trees, and contrasting white on black to create awareness of the vital unifying qualities of the feminine archetype and its special healing potential. Guerresi’s art is uniquely authentic. Her work is inspired by personal experience and cultural contexts that reference universal myths, the sacred realm, and the female condition, all of which are seen as vital expressions of the human form: an essentially spiritual and mystic body. Through photographs and videos of silent, austere, veiled women in domestic scenes and individual poses, her work functions as both metaphor and provocation. Guerresi’s images are delicate narratives with fluid sequencing, as well as rational analyses: women dressed in white, enveloped in chadors, fixed within their own tradition and isolated from and by it in the contemporary world. Her Fatimah image suggests the woman as Mother-Earth supporting us in the original energy cycle of Space-Universe-Infinity.
(from website artist)

Maimouna-Guerresi-M-eating-Teacher-and-Students-2013--1024x405M-eating – teacher and students, 2013.

“In the continued violence of the twenty-first century there is something critical and compelling about work that brings ideals of humanity, spirituality and empathy into the frame through a language that is affective and poetic. There is something hopeful about art’s capacity – visually, sonically, spatially, experientially, imaginatively – to counter the violence of empirical, didactic, authoritarian thought, and current political atmospheres of disillusionment in the aftermath of revolutions that bring no peace. Simultaneously, there is always the risk, in work that reaches for the spiritual and affective, of re-inscribing languages that obscure actual power relations (including those that may be embedded in spiritual practices and their deployment). These tensions bring critical depth to MaÏmouna’s work and open up further possibilities for reflecting on her significance as an artist.”
(from essay Yvette Greslé on Africanah.org)

MGM-Eating, Sufi, 2013M-eating, Sufi, 2013.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
King Jaja
  • Website

Related Posts

When the victim isn’t perfect

October 5, 2025

Strategy and Fun in the World of Online Casinos: A Nigerian Perspective

October 4, 2025

In the age of artificial intelligence democracy needs help

October 3, 2025
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

© 2025 Afro Icon. Powered by African People.
  • Home
  • Privacy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact us
  • Terms of Use

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version