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Shiraz Bayjoo’s first solo show with Ed Cross Fine Art – ‘Apart Bez, Tu Korek’ – considers the implications of social and colonial hierarchies on both communities and environments of the Indian Ocean.

Across the exhibition’s two floors, the artist presents painting, photography, sculpture and installation to articulate his ongoing multidisciplinary and research-based practice.

‘Apart Bez, Tu Korek’ grapples with the visual language of European status imposed on native populations and reconfigured by Bayjoo materially and conceptually. The exhibition’s archival genealogies stem from Malagasy culture as well as Bayjoo’s own Mauritian heritage; its Creole title, meaning ‘everything’s fine except for the fuckery’, wryly illuminates the exploitation which brought the region’s linguistic diversity into being.

Shiraz Bayjoo, from Coral Island, 2021. Detail and glaze on terracotta.Shiraz Bayjoo, from Coral Island, 2021. Detail and glaze on terracotta.

For the exhibition, Bayjoo presents a series of new ceramic works: The Coral Continent. Characteristic of his practice in their layering of meaning and material, each object is detailed with a sketch made by Dutch sailors and reinterpreted by printers who made them into lithographs before finding their final incarnation beneath Bayjoo’s fired glaze. Representing the unfamiliar lands, creatures and abundant resources encountered on the sailors’ journeys to and around Africa, the small drawings are nestled in textured clay and moulded into ornate frames nodding to Europe’s colonial opulence. Hung in small arrangements to enhance the intimacy of the individual works, The Coral Continent runs through the exhibition both spatially and conceptually: here, the natural world is just as much subject to colonialism’s heavy exploitation as human populations.

Shiraz Bayjoo, En Cour (diptych), 2021. Acrylic and resin on wood.En Cour (diptych), 2021. Acrylic and resin on wood.

Bayjoo’s experiments with scale and significance extend to En Cours, a series of paintings emerging from his Politique de Races panels (2018) and ranging from jewel-like keepsakes to larger triptychs the size of altarpieces. Recuperating images of Magalasy royalty and society from French colonial archives, the series highlights the powerful and dignified presences of historically othered subjects through a multi-layered artistic technique, thus reversing the archival process by which such imagery has been wielded to oppress.

Bayjoo positions the social technology of textiles – from traditional Kanga cloths to the ostentatious European drapery of flags and military standards – in conversation with the leap in maritime technology that facilitated the first colonial expeditions. San Vizyon, a large triangular swathe of Panama woven fabric trimmed with gold tassels, features three young individuals; their eye contact with the photographer transcends space and material to meet the viewer’s own gaze. The encounter trills with snapshot immediacy, vibrating against the solemnity suggested by its royal medium.

Shiraz Bayjoo, San Vizyon (detail 3), 2021. Approx. 1.5 x 2m.Shiraz Bayjoo, San Vizyon (detail), 2021. Approx: 1.5 x 2m.

San Vizyon’s trio is pictured on a canoe, likely made of East African hardwood – perhaps Sapele, from which Bayjoo has constructed the neighbouring Sambo sculpture. For all its maritime inferences – Sambo’s Kangas might be mistaken for sails, its beams for masts – the installation foregrounds sacredness over seafaring. Hanging from Sambo’s Sapele struts, small objects recall The Coral Continent and En Cours, articulating intimate presences and places within a revered space. Shrine-like, Sambo invites the viewer to imagine a hand at work beyond the artist’s: that of a devotee, a mourner or a celebrant.

‘Apart Bez, Tu Korek’ examines what materials themselves are able to testify to; the ideas they might be able to articulate which evade their more mediated subjects. From considering the manipulation of visual languages imposed by colonising cultures, Bayjoo’s work moves to investigate the possibilities of reformulating, setting new terms for its own thinking. ‘Apart Bez, Tu Korek’ begins with the ‘archive’, but its closing remarks offer new articulations – of meaning, of visuality, of materiality – in the present.

The exhibition was developed by Shiraz Bayjoo in a curatorial conversation with Ilaria Conti, who has written an accompanying text for the project. ‘Apart Bez, Tu Korek’ will be on view at Ed Cross Fine Art, London, from the 16th of June until the 11th of July 2021.

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