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Familiar Phantoms

Larissa Sansour and Søren Lind

Exhibition

Event overview

Familiar Phantoms, the latest work by Larissa Sansour and Søren Lind, has its premiere exhibition at The Whitworth in Manchester this Spring.

Memory attracts familiar metaphors. Often envisioned as a deep well or a dark pool, memory is equally frequently imagined as a dark room (or rooms), its images materialising like ghosts, or like spectres on photographic paper. Just as apparent, perhaps, is that memory is myriad, mercurial, multiform. It can be personal and subjective, intergenerational and collective, immediate and vivid, yet also strangely hazy and elusive. Alluding to all these things and more, Larissa Sansour and Søren Lind’s 40-minute opus, Familiar Phantoms, is first and foremost a deep and atmospheric dive into Larissa Sansour’s family history. Bringing together Super 8 home movie footage, family album photos and newly shot set-piece tableaux, the piece’s shifting split-screen permutations trace multiple parallel temporalities as they follow Sansour’s father’s zigzag movements from Palestine to Iraq to the Soviet Union (where he met Larissa’s mother) and then back to Palestine (where Larissa and her siblings grew up). Filmed in an abandoned mansion whose empty rooms evoke places long departed and whose labyrinthine pathways suggest the complex internal architecture of the mind, Familiar Phantoms is also a dreamy, nostalgic recollection of everyday scenes from a cherished Palestinian childhood: the sight and scent of lemons in the kitchen, the sound of her father’s car starting in the morning, toy soldiers strewn across a bedroom floor. Memory emerges out of the shadows, it is said – and in Palestine those shadows run especially deep and far. Seen through the prism of recall of one particular family, Familiar Phantoms widens its lens to reflect both the vibrant identity and the enduring trauma of the Palestinian people. Leaving the viewer with a memorable trail of evocative images, it frames them within an equally haunting and resonant monologue, which not only adds to their power and poignancy but deftly draws attention to the nuances and vagaries and occasional downright falsities of memory itself.

Familiar Phantoms (2023) by Larissa Sansour and Søren Lind is co-commissioned by Film and Video Umbrella and the Whitworth, The University of Manchester in association with the Irish Museum of Modern Art with Art Fund support through the Moving Image Fund for Museums. This programme is made possible thanks to Thomas Dane Gallery and a group of private galleries and individuals. Supported by Arts Council England, Danish Arts Foundation, and Knud Højgaards Fond.

Event details

Details

2 March 2023 – 21 May 2023

The Whitworth

Tuesday to Sunday: 10:00 — 17:00
Thursday: 10:00 — 21:00
Monday: Closed

Free entry

More information

  • Assisted toilet facilities are available

  • Wheelchairs are available for public use

  • There is adequate seating with arms throughout the gallery

  • Light, handheld portable stools are available for use

  • Ear defenders can be borrowed from the Oxford Road desk.

  • Gallery staff can provide quieter spaces for visitors on request

  • The gallery normally has Quieter Hours after 3pm on a weekday and from 10-11am on a Sunday

  • There are 4 baby changing areas

  • There is a family room available for use downstairs on the Oxford Road side, accessible via a lift

  • Visitors can use coin-operated buggy locks and lockers

  • The gallery has large print information about all exhibitions

  • Food cannot be consumed anywhere in the gallery spaces, but visitors can eat on the Lower Promenade, visit the gallery's café or picnic in the Art Garden

  • There is disabled parking on Denmark Road, directly adjacent to the gallery: it has step-free access to both the Park Side and Oxford Road entrances. There are a total of 5 disabled bays, 9 spaces for car/bus drop-off and 7 double yellow line areas, which can be used by blue badge holders

  • Visitors are advised that the lighting levels can often be low due to the vulnerable nature of the gallery's collections

  • Assistance Dogs are welcome in the gallery

Full accessibility info is available here.

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