Edinburgh Art Festival 2023: what to see
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Edinburgh Art Festival 2023: what to see

Sep 04, 2023

What to see at Edinburgh Art Festival 2023, championing women and queer artists, whether exploring Scottish bogland on film or casting hedonism in ceramic

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Edinburgh Art Festival (EAF) is running throughout August in its 19th edition, with a new director and many changes in its format. Championing women and queer artists, the programme spans independent venues and local institutions, and encompasses film, sounds, performance, installation and painting, ceramic, tapestry and sculpture across 35 venues throughout the city. While the curatorial approach addresses socio-political issues being tackled at the cutting edge of the art world, these intersect with more traditional exhibitions.

Development for Rabindranath X Bhose’s Dance in the Sacred Domain (see the film at the end of this article)

Festival director Kim McAleese, who took on the role a year ago, has put together a collaborative programme that brings together Edinburgh institutions of all sides, hosts visiting collectives and provides space for the commissioned programme.

Tarek Lakhrissi, I wear my wounds on my tongue (II) at Collective, 2023

From Rabindranath X Bhose’s Dance in the Sacred Domain exploration of the ambiguity of Scottish bogland through their non-binary identity and Tarek Lakhrissi’s twisting resin tongues and soundscape I wear my wounds on my tongue – both installed at Collective, at the top of Carlton Hill overlooking the city – to the dreamlike paintings of Andrew Cranston at Ingleby Gallery in New Town, you have the full swathe of Scottish contemporary art if you choose to seek it out.

Lindsey Mendick, ‘SH_TFACED’ (2023), installation view at Jupiter Artland

‘You can come up here and have, a lovely time walking about these beautiful, cobbled streets,’ McAleese explained to Wallpaper*. ‘But if you look at the public space around you and where that money has come from… I guess I want the role of the festival to be very much entangled with that. I'm not saying that we’re going to answer all those questions, but at least bring artists in, and work closely with them to make space to ask them.’

Lindsey Mendick, I tried so hard to be good (2023), installation view at Jupiter Artland

Lindsey Mendick’s ‘SH*TFACED’ at the stunning Jupiter Artland is a wonderful, unblinkered, hilarious and moving look at hedonism and alcoholism and the art party scene.

The sculpture park and gallery will host its Jupiter Rising festival, the 2023 iteration being a series of live events curated by Mendick, from 19 – 20 August.

Haven for Artists’ executive director Dayna Ash and creative director Yasmine Rifaii, ahead of the festival’s opening

In a concerted effort to combine local issues with the international, Haven for Artists, a queer-led multi-faceted artists’ space in Beirut, has been invited to take part in a residency at EAF and participated in a talk looking at art space and social politics with the 2021 Turner Prize winning Belfast based-collective Array.

Alberta Whittle, Lagareh - The Last Born, (film still - single channel video), 2022

Looking at colonial issues is Barbadian-Scottish artist-on-the-rise Alberta Whittle’s exhibition ‘Create Dangerously’, at Modern One. Her largest show to date, it looks at issues of race and identity through the mediums of tapestry, film, photography, print and mixed media.

Keg de Souza, Green Hell, 2023. Installation view in Inverleith House, Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh

Also looking at these themes is Australian artist Keg de Souza, in her sensory and thoughtful show ‘Shipping Roots’, the culmination of a residency at Inverleith House in Edinburgh’s Botanical Gardens. Drying branches of heady-scented eucalyptus hung with terracotta fabrics, and interactive batik works and drawings illustrate the journeys and histories of certain plants in this educative and interactive exhibition.

Still from Sean Burns’ Dorothy Towers

Another highlight of EAF is Sean Burn’s film Dorothy Towers, which shares a venue with Haven for Artists at the French Institute. The film explores a pair of residential tower blocks in Birmingham, next to the city’s Gay Village neighbourhood and a haven to its community. In presenting the stories of people who lived in and frequented the towers, including LBGTQ icon Twiggy, Burns seeks to create a record for future generations, as well as an artwork for today.

‘These stories contain knowledge that future artists, writers, students, and young queer people will hopefully find as vital, funny, fascinating and moving as I have/do,’ he explained. ‘As assured as I am in recording histories, I am sensitive to how that information enters different spheres and the politics engaged in it becoming material for an artwork. I want my work to articulate its material’s complexity – and opacity, if necessary.’

Grayson Perry, Sponsored by You, 2019, woodblock print

Politics and social issues touch every corner of the festival – from ‘Smash Hits’, Grayson Perry’s survey at the National Galleries of Scotland, to ‘Scottish Women Artists: 250 Years of Challenging Perception’ at Dovecot – and this is complemented by the commissioned schedule of younger or emerging artists to offer a rewarding programme.

Sekai Machache, Light Divine Sky 2, 2021, from the exhibition ‘Scottish Women Artists – 250 Years of Challenging Perception’ at Dovecot

As McAleese looks to the future of the festival, she wants to build up a longer-term commissioning side and deepen partnerships locally and internationally, building on the long history of the festival with a concrete curatorial focus that extends bridges and supports Scottish artists at a time when resources are being cut. Next year should be interesting…

Until 27 August 2023, edinburghartfestival.com

Watch Rabindranath X Bhose’s Dance in the Sacred Domain

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Watch Rabindranath X Bhose’s Dance in the Sacred Domain