Alberta Whittle

Alberta Whittle Trailers

Lagareh - The Last Born TrailerWhat is a better life (exorcised in the middle) Trailerbusiness as usual : hostile environment Trailer

Alberta Whittle is an artist, researcher and curator. She was a RAW Academie Fellow at RAW Material in Dakar in 2018 and is the Margaret Tait Award winner for 2018/9. She is a Committee Member at Transmission Gallery in Glasgow and a Board Member of SCAN (Scottish Creative Art Network). ​Her creative practice is motivated by the desire to work collectively towards radical self-love. Informed by diasporic conversations, Alberta considers radical self-love and collective care key methods in battling anti-blackness. Her practice involves choreographing interactive installations, using film, sculpture and performance as site-specific artworks in public and private spaces. Alberta has exhibited and performed in various solo and group shows, including at GoMA, Glasgow (2019), The City Arts Centre, Edinburgh (2019), The Showroom, London (2018), National Art Gallery of the Bahamas (2018), RAW Material, Dakar (2018), FADA Gallery, Johannesburg (2018), the Apartheid Museum, Johannesburg (2017), FRAMER FRAMED, Amsterdam (2015), Goethe On Main, Johannesburg (2015), at the Johannesburg Pavilion at the 56th Venice Biennale, Venice (2015), and BOZAR, Brussels (2014), amongst others. The Contemporary Art Research Collection at Edinburgh College of Art recently purchased several of her works. Over 2019, Alberta will be showing her work at the 13th Havana Biennale, Cuba, Pig Rock Bothy at the National Galleries of Scotland, (Edinburgh), displaced at The Travelling Gallery (various locations Scotland), UNFIX festival at the CCA, (Glasgow), The Imagined New at the University of Johannesburg (Johannesburg), Stalking the Image: Margaret Tait and her Legacy at GoMA (Glasgow), How flexible can we make the mouth at the DCA (Dundee), Without Tides, an invitation at Edinburgh Printmakers (Edinburgh) and Business as Usual at The Reid Gallery (Glasgow). Alberta’s writing has been published in MAP magazine, Visual Culture in Britain, Visual Studies, Art South Africa and Critical Arts Academic Journal.

Most Popular Alberta Whittle Trailers

Total trailers found: 7

between a whisper and a cry Trailer (2019)

25 February 2019

The 2018/19 Margaret Tait Award commission by Alberta Whittle. Whittle’s film seeks to challenge conditions of racialised abjection and find new methods for refusal.

What is a better life (exorcised in the middle) Trailer (2021)

06 November 2021

In the words of Christina Sharpe, a "visually and sonically rich" work inspired by Dionne Brand's "A Map to the Door of No Return: Notes to Belonging.

HOLDING THE LINE Trailer (2020)

01 January 2020

Edited during the BLM rebellions in June 2020, HOLDING THE LINE connects with Saidiya Hartman’s research on waywardness - dreaming and longing for a whole life nurtured in self-compassion, possibility and love, outside of the spectre of racialised violence and surveillance.

Mammmmmywata presents life solutions international Trailer (2016)

01 January 2016

Disrupting binaries of identity, Mammmmmmmywata represents a hybrid identity, personifying a culture of mixedness, rooted in both miscegenation and love.

business as usual : hostile environment Trailer (2020)

23 April 2020

A working iteration of the project "business as usual : hostile environment". Originally co-commissioned with Glasgow Sculpture Studios as part of Event Scotland’s Year of Coasts and Waters, the project was conceived to explore Glasgow’s Forth and Clyde Canal as both a literal and poetic route through which to reflect on the role of waterways in the voluntary and involuntary movement of people.

Lagareh - The Last Born Trailer (2022)

23 April 2022

‘Lagareh’ – which translates from the Mandinka language as ​‘The Last Born’ – is a work anchored around theories of abolition, rebellion, ancestral knowledge and love.

What Sound Does the Black Atlantic Make? Trailer (2019)

01 January 2019

What sound does the Black Atlantic make, 2019 is imagined as a visual and sonic concomitance of racial infrastructures and refusal.