The exhibition A Journey You Take Alone by Emma Talbot focuses on birth and death – the beginning and end of human life. Her works, whether it be her densely woven sequences of images on silk, videos or three-dimensional objects, all deal with archaic aspects of love and mourning, age and transience, as well as with themes such as gender inequality,
With works by more than 60 artists, this large-scale, interdisciplinary exhibition seeks to define the phenomenon of creativity from a broad, humanistic perspective. What are the conditions for creativity in society today? And is there reason to fear that
Emma Talbot (* 1969 in Stourbridge, lives in London and Italy) develops a site-specific installation for the 20-metre-high Kesselhaus at KINDL, consisting of paintings on silk, sculptural ensembles, and hanging objects, in which archaic voices are brought back
to life: Furies, sirens, oracles, witches, and spirits warn of the environmental and political disasters of our present. They tell a story of toxicity and healing and point to alternatives that make a positive future conceivable.
Curator: Kathrin Becker