Introduction
‘The Healing Pavilion’ consists of two large-scale tapestries hung within a site-specific structure, created by British-Kenyan artist Grace Ndiritu. The installation radically reimagines what textiles and architecture can do in a museum burdened by colonial history. It is deeply connected to Ndiritu’s ongoing body of work, ‘Healing the Museum’. Combining her artistic and esoteric spiritual practices, the artist uses socially engaged artwork to inspire non-rational ways of seeing. Her work looks to transform our contemporary world to allow a different kind of future.
Ndiritu identified two archival images from Wellcome Collection, London, and the Ethnologisches Museum, Berlin. She had the photographs enlarged and woven into two large-scale tapestries, titled ‘The Twin Tapestries: Repair (1915) and Restitution (1973)’ respectively. Together they reveal violent pasts and hidden power dynamics at the foundation of Western museology and reflect attitudes and practices towards African collections in many European museum collections. Through the material and symbolic weight of the tapestries she conveys the complexity of troubled histories and asks what, if anything, has changed since the photographs were taken.
Inspired by Zen Buddhist temples in Japan, the pavilion is designed to re-activate the museum as a space to encounter, contemplate, ask questions, exchange, listen, share and meditate. Lined with walnut panels taken from the ‘Medicine Man’ gallery of objects from Sir Henry Wellcome’s collection, which closes shortly after this exhibition opens, the structure embodies a physical transformation of the past. Through this work, Ndiritu asks how we might energetically and architecturally reinvent the role of contemporary museums and transform these institutional spaces.
The exhibition is accompanied by an audio walkthrough and guided meditation from the artist. You can access this through the digital guide.