Igshaan Adams
Multidisciplinary artist Igshaan Adams (born 1982 in Cape Town, South Africa) explores how people inhabit and move through space. Adams utilizes practices of weaving to make visible everyday patterns of movement that speak to forms of care, survival, and resistance in post-apartheid South Africa. Adams鈥檚 recent large-scale woven tapestries point to the interconnectedness of the artist鈥檚 spirituality, familial histories, and local community narratives as rooted in his South African heritage, as well as the fraught land use in the region. He draws inspiration from the urban planning term 鈥渄esire lines鈥濃攑aths created by pedestrians over time that fall outside of planned walkways. In Adams鈥檚 practice and in South Africa, the establishment of desire lines represents an act of transgression in the face of fixed boundaries enforced by the government during the apartheid era to forcibly separate communities along racial castes.
Lynloop, Adams鈥檚 monumental new commission for the ICA/Boston, is a multipart experimental weaving developed in response to the architecture of the museum and the artist鈥檚 childhood memories. It is based on aerial images of the intersecting footpaths between a sports field and a walled-off recreational space south of where Adams grew up. Through the work, Adams considers the impact of childhood experiences and memories on the trajectory of one鈥檚 life. He writes, 鈥淚n sitting with the discomfort of growing up among these hypermasculine spaces, the installation explores how I have had to superimpose my own fantasies onto memories in a way that softens the hard edges and coldness of this area.鈥 In hues of pink with beads, rope, chain, and mohair, Lynloop is a stunning and tactile mapping of space, human interaction, and memory.
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Multidisciplinary artist Igshaan Adams (born 1982 in Cape Town, South Africa) explores how people inhabit and move through space. Adams utilizes practices of weaving to make visible everyday patterns of movement that speak to forms of care, survival, and resistance in post-apartheid South Africa. Adams鈥檚 recent large-scale woven tapestries point to the interconnectedness of the artist鈥檚 spirituality, familial histories, and local community narratives as rooted in his South African heritage, as well as the fraught land use in the region. He draws inspiration from the urban planning term 鈥渄esire lines鈥濃攑aths created by pedestrians over time that fall outside of planned walkways. In Adams鈥檚 practice and in South Africa, the establishment of desire lines represents an act of transgression in the face of fixed boundaries enforced by the government during the apartheid era to forcibly separate communities along racial castes.
Lynloop, Adams鈥檚 monumental new commission for the ICA/Boston, is a multipart experimental weaving developed in response to the architecture of the museum and the artist鈥檚 childhood memories. It is based on aerial images of the intersecting footpaths between a sports field and a walled-off recreational space south of where Adams grew up. Through the work, Adams considers the impact of childhood experiences and memories on the trajectory of one鈥檚 life. He writes, 鈥淚n sitting with the discomfort of growing up among these hypermasculine spaces, the installation explores how I have had to superimpose my own fantasies onto memories in a way that softens the hard edges and coldness of this area.鈥 In hues of pink with beads, rope, chain, and mohair, Lynloop is a stunning and tactile mapping of space, human interaction, and memory.
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The Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston unveiled a captivating installation titled 鈥淟ynloop鈥 by South African artist Igshaan Adam, adorning the prestigious Sandra and Gerald Fineberg Art Wall at the entrance.