Artists announced for 2020 Folkestone Triennial

Richard Deacon, Shezad Dawood, Rana Begum, Gilbert & George and Pilar Quinteros among artists announced for Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020 – The Plot

Shezad Dawood, Where do we go now, 2017

Shezad Dawood, Where do we go now, 2017

Creative Folkestone has announced details of the artists participating in the fifth Folkestone Triennial, The Plot, running Saturday 5 September – Sunday 8 November 2020.

Some 20 artists, including Richard Deacon, Shezad Dawood and Rana Begum, have been commissioned to create new artworks to be exhibited across Folkestone for one of the UK’s most ambitious art exhibitions.

Following the Triennial, some works will remain as permanent additions to the UK’s largest urban exhibition of contemporary art, Creative Folkestone Artworks.

The Plot invites visitors to discover new artworks whilst exploring the town and its urban narratives. The artworks will be sited along three routes associated with particular stories: the streets associated with physician William Harvey, noted for his ‘discovery’ of the circulation of the blood; St Eanswythe’s Watercourse; and Folkestone’s industrial road ‘The Milky Way’.

Encouraging viewers to question the gap between the tales and the urbanism of the town, The Plot invites consideration of the concept of ‘place-making’; ‘‘Although set in Folkestone, theexhibition’s theme is a universal one, prompting us to consider the relation between stories and material realities everywhere in the world. Everyone becomes aware at some point of the gap between our lived experience and what is narrated about it. Sometimes this gap is so extreme that we assume it is the result of malice – it’s a plot.

“With conspiracy theories becoming ever more popular, it’s never been more urgent to think about the gap between the talk and the action, between our stories and our realities,” says Lewis Biggs, Curator of Creative Folkestone Triennial.

Pilar Quinteros, Friendship of Peoples Fountain, 2014.

Pilar Quinteros, Friendship of Peoples Fountain, 2014.

Artists selected for Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020 include Rana Begum, Sam Belinfante, Stephenie Bergman, Patrick Corillon, Shezad Dawood, Richard Deacon, Jacqueline Donachie, genuinefake, Gilbert & George, Helga Griffiths, Mariko Hori, Christopher Houghton Budd, Atta Kwami, Morag Myerscough, Jacqueline Poncelet, Pilar Quinteros, Mike Stubbs, Jason Wilsher-Mills, Winter / Hörbelt and HoyCheong Wong & Simon Davenport & Shahed Saleem / Makespace.

Among the new commissions, Rana Begum (b. 1977, Bangladesh) will create a special colour scheme for the replacement beach huts on Lower Saxon Way. Set with the challenge of encompassing the whole promenade in her scheme, Begum’s designs will reflect her studiopractice – often concerned with geometry, colour and light – to create intriguing results.

Located at the Central Library, Shezad Dawood (b. 1974, UK) presents Leviathan Legacy 2- the second element of his VR trilogy. Leviathan is a major five-year multifaceted project that looks at the intersection between climate change, migration and mental health. The work is part of UP Projects’ digital commissioning programme This is Public Space, supported by a grant from the European Union CUPIDO fund.

Sculptor Richard Deacon’s (b. 1949, UK) Benchmark nos 1-5 is a result of his preoccupation with plinths and the crucial role they have played in the development of sculpture. In researching his contribution to the Triennial, he discovered five existing platforms in the scenic Kingsnorth Gardens. The welcome of these empty platforms inspired him to create five new sculptures in granite.

At the Harbour Arm, Atta Kwami (b. 1956, Ghana) presents sculptures that are three- dimensional paintings, incorporating his signature use of colour and abstract painting style. A published author on urbanism and the history of African modernism, Kwami will use his knowledge to place the traditional home-made street vending kiosks of West Africa in dialogue with the commercially produced food-vending kiosks indigenous to East Kent.

Sol Calero, Casa Anacaona, 2017, part of Folkestone Artworks, commissioned by Creative Folkestone. Image by Thierry Bal

Sol Calero, Casa Anacaona, 2017, part of Folkestone Artworks, commissioned by Creative Folkestone. Image by Thierry Bal

Co-commissioned by England’s Creative Coast, a landmark partnership project connectingthe landscape and arts organisations across the South East coast, artist Pilar Quinteros (b.1988, Chile) presents Janus’ Fortress: Folkestone - a monumental sculptural head sited on a cliff top that looks both outwards at Europe and inward to England, contemplating the mixed fortunes of what connects us but what also divides us.

The 5th edition of Creative Folkestone Triennial will open to the public on Saturday 5 September with a press preview on Thursday 3 September.

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For more info: https://www.creativefolkestone.org.uk/folkestone-triennial/folkestone-triennial-2020-the-plot/