Spotlight

Spotlight artist Bisila Noha

Championed by Dr Jareh Das
The Wick Culture - Bisila Noha, Baney Clay Part 4
Photo by Maxine Pennington
Above  Bisila Noha, Baney Clay Part 4 Photo by Maxine Pennington
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The Wick Culture - Bisila Noha
Photo courtesy of Bisila Noha
Above  Bisila Noha Photo courtesy of Bisila Noha
Interview
Bisila Noha
23 October 2024
Interview
Bisila Noha
23 October 2024
London-based ceramic artist Bisila Noha’s two current exhibitions both showcase works from her Baney Clay project. The evolving, ongoing project began in 2020, and so far counts four iterations, and a total of 53 pieces, each made with various mixes of Baney Clay – the name the artist gives to the clay foraged and brought back to her studio from her family’s land in the Equatorial Guinean village of Baney, her paternal ancestral home. Also employing stoneware and porcelain, each of the sublime, incredibly sensual vessels, some evoking female bodies, that together form this immense project operates simultaneously on several levels, as Noha explains.

“There’s the political side, as I challenge how women’s labour has been perceived, studied and document throughout history, specially in the case of pottery. There’s the more technical ceramics side to it too – exploring how the clays interact once fired depending on the mixes.” The project also have a personal, emotional aspect “it has been key in my own identity journey, embracing my blackness and my African roots.” While the clay directly represents the artist’s connection to the earth of Equatorial Guinea, the forms and techniques forge a line with her heritage, with the long-practiced traditions of pottery in Equatorial Guinea, and across Central Africa.

Other collections inspired by this body of work that have followed in recent years have been acquired by the V&A Museum amongst many others both in the UK and the USA, and exhibited across Europe. But now the clay has returned there, in two concurrent exhibitions taking place at the Spanish Cultural Centres in the cities of Bata and Malabo. Noha reflects: “being able to exhibit some of these pieces in Equatorial Guinea at the moment feels like a full-circle moment, a huge achievement and an incredible opportunity to connect with the country and its women.”
Noha’s champion for The Wick is Dr Jareh Das, esteemed scholar and curator. “Bisila Noha is an exceptional ceramicist, activist, and artist deeply dedicated to her ongoing research project on matrilineal and global pottery traditions centred on women makers. I first met her when I invited her to participate in an exhibition I curated in 2022 called Body Vessel Clay: Black Women, Ceramics & Contemporary Art. Her work, which I discovered through a New York Times article featuring Black ceramicists rethinking British ceramics, is a testament to her dedication. Noha’s explorations of clay, identity, and its transformative and connective qualities are reflected in the ceramics, bronze, and plaster forms she creates. Since then, Noha has not only become a dear friend but also a valued sounding board for all things ceramics. I am grateful for the many exchanges, experiences, and laughter we continue to share.”

It is an exciting time ahead for Noha. Next month, she travels to West Africa, first to Dakar to surf, make and explore. Then she will be resident at Yinka Shonibare’s Guest Artists Space (GAS) Foundation before returning to Senegal to participate in a residency programme at Thread, organised by the Joseph and Annie Albers Foundation. Yet of all her cherished moments with her work to date, Noha mentions in particular “all the connections I have made with people — specially women of colour — through my work in the past years.” The power of her vessels lies in their ability to activate conversations, and to join communities across continents, beyond the borders of countries or bodies.

About the champion

The Wick Culture - Dr Jareh Das

Dr. Jareh Das is an independent curator, scholar and occasional florist focusing on performance art. She holds a Curating Art and Science doctorate from Royal Holloway, University of London. She has curated projects such as “Body Vessel Clay: Black Women, Ceramics and Contemporary Art,” which explores underrepresented ceramics narratives, particularly those of Black women artists. Das’s work spans various disciplines and contributes significantly to a broader understanding of contemporary art practices. She has received awards, including British Academy / Leverhulme Trust Small Research Grants (2023), Paul Mellon Centre inaugural New Narratives awards scheme (2022) and AHRC Collaborative Doctoral Award: Curating Art and Science: New Methods and Sites of Production and Display (2013-2016). She is currently working on her first book-length publication.

“Noha’s explorations of clay, identity, and its transformative and connective qualities are reflected in the ceramics, bronze, and plaster forms she creates.”

Dr Jareh Das

Place of Birth

Zaragoza, Spain

Education

I studied a BA in Translation and Interpreting and later a masters in Diplomacy and International Relations, both in Madrid.

Current exhibitions

Miradas ecofeministas en el arte ecuatoguineano (An ecofeminist look into the Equatoguinean art) at the Spanish Cultural Centres in Bata and Malabo (Equatorial Guinea)4 October – 22 December 2024 (Bata), February 2025 (Malabo); Baney Clay Part IV at Thrown Contemporary, an online solo show open until October 27.

Spiritual guides, Mentors

I guess that because of my interest in spirituality, I have a good bunch of friends with whom I can share it and learn from; like Maxine, Karina and my sister, Nieves. I don’t have an ‘official’ mentor, but I’m lucky to keep crossing paths and working with humans that champion and inspire me; like Claire Pearse (Thrown Contemporary), Prince Malik (Galerie Revel), Sabine Zetteler, Simone Brewster or Preston Fitzgerald.


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