Climate and Community Justice through Food with GramOunce
Made in the Middle
Courses for Dis-Course(s)The Podcast and Publication
Material Matters- Bloomberg New Contemporaries
- Manji, Charpai, Daybed x Greenwich & Docklands International Festival
Don’t play with your food - Jalebi Press
- Hospital Rooms x Sandwell CAMHS
- Rhythm with Osman Yousefzada Aftercare with Liverpool Biennial
- Comrades (Midlands) with Outside In x EXPLORERS project
2023 ++ - Courses for Dis-Course(s)
- Quisse of the Komagata Maru
- Khao, peyo, aish karo, but don’t hurt anyone’s heart
- Care Work ft Desi and Disabled
- But what if I gave myself an ounce of the care I show for others?
2022 ++ - DIY Disability
- (Astral Village) slooooowwwww with Sahjan Kooner
- Nangal Pend-ing/ DarkVillage.stl with Sahjan Kooner
- Daybed Charpai Manji Very Modern Stylish
- breathe, spirit and life 呼吸、靈魂與生命 with Katherine Ka Yi Liu
- Searching for Sangat with Artlicks
2019 - 2021 ++
Diva BLEEP!- Rankin x Water Aid
- at Niru Ratnam with Jan Agha
- Joya: arte + ecología / AiR
- As round as the Son with Sharonjit Sutton
Khadi with Bharti Parmar - Cold Comfort and Cultural Identity
- The Encyclopaedia of Cultural Dysphoria
- Nangal Khera
- Coordinates - curating beyond the crisis
- The Anthropology of the Self
- Cooking in Crisis
- Ghar
- The art world Birmingham as seen by Franny
- Panj Din
- Cha Wali
- Everything, Everywhere all at once
- Pittu Garam and other stories
About
©2024 Roo Dhissou and Jalebi Press. Please ask for permission when referencing my writing because it may contain original references to my PhD, or using my images as they may belong to one of my many photographer friends.
But what if I gave myself an ounce of the care I show for others?
Get Well Soon (prologue) is a group exhibition drawing a connection between human and planetary exhaustion. Curated by Lucy Lopez, the exhibition brings together works by Roo Dhissou, Kyla Harris & Lou Macnamara, Rowena Harris, Bint Mbareh, Harun Morrison (with Satpreet Kahlon), Jamila Prowse, Benoît Piéron, Lorenzo Sandoval, and Rehana Zaman.
Find out more here.
A prologue for a long-term project, the exhibition hosts works which set intentions for less extractive worlds. Get Well Soon borrows its title from a 2020 text by Johanna Hedva, written in the midst of the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic. Hedva wrote that we were experiencing what happens ‘when care insists on itself, when the care of others becomes mandatory, when it takes up space and money and labour and energy’ (Hedva, 2020). They chart the revolutionary potential of sickness: ‘a revolution… might look like hundreds of thousands of bodies in bed, organising a rent strike, separating life’s value from capitalist productivity’ (Hedva, 2020). The long-term project Get Well Soon acknowledges a state of sickness: societal, planetary, interpersonal. We are living through a time of planetary burnout, climate emergency, extractivism and exhaustion; of late-stage capitalism and austerity logic; a time where care is in crisis, privatised beyond recognition. Amongst these crises, how can the space of art model new imaginaries and ways of living? How can we work in and of a place of sickness, rather than under the illusion of wellness? How can we build rest, community care and restorative justice into our work?
Get Well Soon (prologue) engages with ideas of pacing: from the engineered flows of waterways, to the way time is experienced—sometimes measured in spoons—for disabled, crip, and chronically ill communities, to the way that routines as personal as daily meals can be imbued with ideas of family and grief. From Rehana Zaman’s exploration of the social currencies and economies of modern agriculture in Arbroath, Scotland, to Lorenzo Sandoval’s narrativizing of ecological degradation in south-eastern Spain, the works exhibited also play witness to the impacts of capitalist and colonial extraction on both our bodies and our environments. Sitting with ideas of sickness, burnout and loss, the exhibition aims to also depict the joys and world-building possibilities of thinking from this perspective.
Design by Rose Nordin.