Bronze, acrylic and steel, 180 x 230cm
Process, hybridity, and materiality are important strands in the practice of Kedisha Coakley and ones that often begin with a personal investigation into childhood memories, ritualistic practices and their universal signification.
The work exhibited, under the title of Horticultural Appropriation (a booklet of the same name published by Claire Ratinon & Sam Ayre in 2021), is an archive of memories and experiences through botanical and natural objects curated as a ‘cabinet of curiosities.’ Some, such as volcanic rock and salt crystals, have been gathered by the artist, whilst others such as passionfruit and lychee form part of her daily ritual. Together they are an investigation into the idea of repatriating knowledges and untold stories, personal experience and legacy. Through this work Coakley is inviting us to question what remains - and what is lost - when botanical objects are removed from their native and indigenous lands. Can a type of reparation for these less tangible objects take place?
The artist’s research was largely focused on the history of the breadfruit, a large starchy fruit that originated in the Malay Archipelago and is widely grown in Jamaica. Researching at both Kew Gardens and the Eden Project, Coakley has been looking at how botanical specimens came into existence in these spaces, their connection with the British Empire, and the ways in which they have been documented, archived and categorised.
The resulting sculptures act as an intersection for the mapping of stories, locations, cultural experiences and spiritual beliefs. Using a method of colliding, Coakley is bringing together multicultural meanings, a connection to the British Empire, and real-life experiences, tracing - through the natural object – a sense of rootedness and a passing down of knowledge through tradition.
Objects: Passion fruit, sharon fruit, lychee, tamarind, cotton pod, acorn, oyster shells, volcanic rock, feather, dead sea salt crystals, shells, drift wood, beach rocks.