Hypersea at Port Hercule / Monaco

Hypersea at Port Hercule, Monaco, artmonte-carlo


Hypersea curated by Juliette Desorgues 

26-29 April 2018 

Participating Artists: Nils Alix-Tabeling, Lou Cantor (Józefina Chętko and Kolja Gläser), Mimosa Echard, Rebecca Jagoe, Anna Solal, Marian Tubbs, Jala Wahid, Young Girl Reading Group (Dorota Gawęda and Eglė Kulbokaitė).  

Port Hercule, 
Monaco,
artmonte-carlo




Nils Alix Tabeling, Marian Tubbs, Mimosa Echard


Anna Solal


Anna Solal, Lou Cantor



Anna Solal


Anna Solal


Marian Tubbs


Marian Tubbs


Marian Tubbs


Jala Wahid




Jala Wahid


Jala Wahid, Rebecca Jagoe




Mimosa Echard


Mimosa Echard


Lou Cantor


Lou Cantor, Rebecca Jagoe


Marian Tubbs, Mimosa Echard


Mimosa Echard


Nils Alix Tabeling, Marian Tubbs, Mimosa Echard


Rebecca Jagoe


Rebecca Jagoe



Rebecca Jagoe


Rebecca Jagoe

Rebecca Jagoe


Young Girl Reading Group


Young Girl Reading Group, Rebecca Jagoe


Young Girl Reading Group




Text written by Juliette Desorgues 

Watershed pollution, a theory of embodiment, amniotic becomings, disaster, environmental colonialism, how to write, global capital, nutrition, philosophy, birth, rain, animal ethics, evolutionary biology, death, storytelling, bottle water, multinational pharmaceutical corporations, drowning, poetry.[1]

Such are the concerns described by Astrida Neimanis for feminist thinking in today’s neo-liberal world. Reflecting on her concept of ‘hydrofeminism’, the work of eight artists is brought together in dialogue and tension on a yacht moored in the port of Monaco, a site which becomes a prime symbol of today’s complex dystopian conditions.    
Water is considered here an entity in and of itself, as well as a metaphor. Water not only largely constitutes our planet, but also our bodies and those of other species that inhabit its surface. Its cyclical flow comes to undermine the Western individualistic view of humanity as an all-permeating species. Our watery bodies are similar to the watery bodies of others that populate this world.[2] We become entangled and enmeshed in a community of bodies, of membrane and flesh, that are also ‘animal, vegetable, geophysical, meteorological, and technological’.[3]

Water, through its constant flow, is considered expansive, pluralistic, relational, and beyond categorisations. It is also viscous, porous, allowing forms of tension and resistance. It becomes a metaphor, engaged with feminist, queer, post-colonial and ecological, presents and futures. Like the cyclical movement of the oceanic tides it ebbs, flows and oozes against the solid shores, against dominant neo-liberal power structures.

Ashes to ashes, water to water

We are all bodies of water[4]



[1] Astrida Neimanis ‘Hydrofeminism: Or, On Becoming a Body of Water’ in Undutiful Daughters: New Directions in Feminist Thought and Practice, ed. Henriette Gunkel, Chrysanthi Nigianni, and Fanny Söderbäck (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012), p. 95
[2] Mark A. S. McMenamin and Dianna L. S. McMenamin, Hypersea: Life on Land (New York: Columbia University Press, 1996)
[3] Astrida Neimanis ‘Hydrofeminism: Or, On Becoming a Body of Water’ in Undutiful Daughters: New Directions in Feminist Thought and Practice, ed. Henriette Gunkel, Chrysanthi Nigianni, and Fanny Söderbäck (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012), p. 96
[4] Ibid., p. 91 and p.1.