Rita Keegan: Somewhere Between There and Here
Fire Station Galleries, South London Gallery
Opening 17th September – 28th November 2021
FREE

Rita Keegan, Love Token, 1996, photo album and photocopies hand-tinted with watercolour and colour pencil
Rita Keegan’s first solo exhibition in more than fifteen years features artworks that reflect the intersection of new media experimentation, feminist practice and the Black Arts Movement of the 1980s.
Combining digital animation, textiles, painting and copy art with experiential media such as scent, Keegan’s tactile practice grapples with the elusive and enduring powers of memory, often drawing on her extensive family archive: a photographic record of a Black middle-class Canadian family from the 1880s to present day. With these images, Keegan charts the politics of dress, adornment and self-definition, bringing this personal history to bear on self-portraits and conceptual clothing that create affirmative and complex representations of Black female identity. As Keegan articulated in a 1988 interview; ‘What else do we have? We have no property, no money, no bodies of our own. We have to work from ourselves and speaking from my own experience it is not easy for large, Black, women to celebrate ourselves!’
Alongside paintings and copy art collages – some never previously exhibited – will be a new mixed-media installation revisiting the work Cycles (1992) originally presented at the Bluecoat, Liverpool as part of Trophies of Empire curated by Keith Piper. Keegan describes Cycles as an attempt to ‘personalise issues of the African diaspora’, collaging family photographs with historical images relating to the enslavement of African people, and embedding this material within an installation of spices such as turmeric and cumin, mounds of sand, tar-stained shipping ropes and wax print fabric designed by Europeans for the African market. At the heart of Keegan’s reimagining, will be a Social Fabric quilted from A4 patchworks donated by a global network of friends, family and collaborators. This collectively crafted textile makes material the many threads of Keegan’s kinship relations, while also calling for more communal understandings of art-making and identity, as Keegan acknowledges: ‘I’m made of many places, people and things.’
The exhibition also presents archival material, paintings by Keegan’s uncle Keith Simon and will be accompanied by a series of events. Follow us on social media or sign up to receive our monthly newsletters for further information and updates.