PRESS RELEASE
ONE LAST CRY
OCTOBER 18 – NOVEMBER 23, 2023
LAFAYETTE ANTICIPATIONS, PARIS
Akeem Smith’s exhibition, One last cry, is an assemblage of memories.
The artist has compiled a collection of artefacts, including VHS tapes, rare photos and clothing, from various Afro-Caribbean social scenes connected to Dancehall, a musical movement born in Jamaica in the late ‘70s. Smith revisits these objects to offer them new life, and to preserve what once was.
Smith’s formal approach is informed by the “architecture of necessity” (Ernesto Oroza, For an Architecture of Necessity and Disobedience), a type of informal construction produced in response to individual or collective needs. His work thus celebrates customised alterations made in neighbourhoods and homes in response to political and economical restrictions.
The exhibition presents works made of salvaged materials from Kingston, Jamaica. These transplanted shanty fragments, with their origins still visible, are transformed and embellished with fine details, reconfigured with new purpose.
In the staircases, the visitor is accompanied by a soundtrack made of samples pulled from Smith’s personal recordings. The exhibition brings together a new series of sculptures, the result of a production residency at Lafayette Anticipations, with Dovecote, a 2020 two-channel video work. Both works enable resurrect forms and hold a sacred function as protective vessels, testaments of Smith’s practice of archival custodianship.
Curator: Rebecca Lamarche-Vadel