Sculptures made from tarpaulin lie directly on the floor, unfurl in piles, line the walls and drape from the ceiling. Alkadhi has a long engagement with this material, typically polyester fabric bonded with polyvinyl chloride (PVC), which speaks to the artist’s interests: its fossil-fuel origins and traversals across borders attest to a specific ecological and political reality; and the raw tarp material has an agency of its own. Iraq, where the artist lived as a child, is the world’s fifth largest oil and petroleum producer, and the industry has had devastating environmental effects. The tarps in the exhibition have been salvaged from transport lorries, those that ubiquitously cross state and national borders with an ease denied to migrants criminalised at the same crossings. Additionally, the material is physically recalcitrant, it can be formed, but only to a degree. The work we encounter in the gallery is of an exchange between the artist, the material, and the life the material has lived.
The adjacent gallery is transformed into a reading room space entitled The Land and the People that sets the tone for a colonial context where place and people enclosed by colonial borders. Representations of critical documents, correspondence, and governmental agreements relate to the establishment of the modern-day political borders in Iraq, drawn by the British and French c. 1916-1923. The early colonial lens on the people of Iraq is exemplified through the inclusion of a publication series begun in 1935, The Anthropology of Iraq which indexes anthropometric data, including comparative measurements of body parts, racialised categorisations, and photographs of people identified only by number. The study, conducted by Henry Field, emphasises an enduring geopolitical link between Britain and the US in the region. Its data supplied Franklin D. Roosevelt’s top-secret ‘M’ project, designed to identify potential resettlement areas (’M’ for migration) for the millions expected to be displaced by WWII in ‘under-populated’ regions in North Africa and the Middle East.
Alongside these historic records, Alkadhi seeds another narrative: the presence of a speculative rebel element emerges from inside the reading room materials, accompanied by related documents. Photographic portraits of these rebels reclaim representation, imagining countless unrecorded insurgencies by nonconforming women, racialised and ethnic minorities, workers, communists, and others. The rebels exist outside of time, defy categorisation, and bring an anti-colonial strategy into the present.