Terraforming: Mapping Space Through Pigment brings together five international artists reimagining London through colour, identity, and migration. Their works transform pigment into living geographies where memory and belonging converge.
Opening during Frieze Week at Museum Street, Bloomsbury.
Public view: 16–19
October Private View: 16 October, 7pm
Curated by Celeste Melgar
Terraforming gathers artists who explore how colour and material shape our understanding of place, identity and transformation. Through pigment, one of humanity’s oldest forms of communication, the exhibition reflects on how histories of movement, extraction, and exchange continue to mark the present.
Terraforming gathers artists who explore how colour and material shape our understanding of place, identity, and transformation. Through pigment, one of humanity’s oldest forms of communication, the exhibition reflects on how histories of movement, extraction, and exchange continue to mark the present. To terraform is to make new ground, to imagine a terrain where different ways of living and seeing can coexist. Here, pigment becomes an agent of renewal and possibility. It traces the layered connections between body and land, migration and belonging, memory and matter. Terraforming invites viewers to consider how colour carries not only beauty but history, how it moves across borders and surfaces, and how it can propose new ways of inhabiting the world.
Celeste Melgar
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