
Azza El Siddique
that which trembles wavers

Azza El Siddique, that which trembles wavers, 2023. Exhibition view, Bradley Ertaskiran, Montreal (Canada).
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Azza El Siddique, that which trembles wavers, 2023. Exhibition view, Bradley Ertaskiran, Montreal (Canada).

Azza El Siddique, that which trembles wavers, 2023. Exhibition view, Bradley Ertaskiran, Montreal (Canada).

Azza El Siddique, that which trembles wavers, 2023. Exhibition view, Bradley Ertaskiran, Montreal (Canada).

Azza El Siddique, that which trembles wavers, 2023. Exhibition view, Bradley Ertaskiran, Montreal (Canada).

Azza El Siddique, that which trembles wavers, 2023. Exhibition view, Bradley Ertaskiran, Montreal (Canada).

Azza El Siddique, that which trembles wavers, 2023. Exhibition view, Bradley Ertaskiran, Montreal (Canada).

Azza El Siddique, Still waters, 2023. Steel, rust. 91.4 x 61 x 2.5 cm. (36 x 24 x 1 in.).

Left to right: Black Earth (2023), Slow Fade (2023), Open Quake (2023). Steel, black porcelain, stainless steel. 38.1 x 30.5 x 25.4 cm. (15 x 12 x 10 in.) each.

Azza El Siddique, Black Earth, 2023. Steel, black porcelain, stainless steel. 38.1 x 30.5 x 25.4 cm. (15 x 12 x 10 in.).

Azza El Siddique, Black Earth, 2023. Steel, black porcelain, stainless steel. 38.1 x 30.5 x 25.4 cm. (15 x 12 x 10 in.).

Azza El Siddique, Dig, spit, sift, 2023. Steel, black porcelain. 50.8 x 30.5 x 7.6 cm. (20 x 12 x 3 in.).

Azza El Siddique, Slow Fade, 2023. Steel, black porcelain, stainless steel. 38.1 x 30.5 x 25.4 cm. (15 x 12 x 10 in.).

Azza El Siddique, Opening of the mouth, 2023. Steel, black porcelain. 50.8 x 30.5 x 7.6 cm. (20 x 12 x 3 in.).

Azza El Siddique, Mastery, 2023. Steel, black porcelain. 50.8 x 30.5 x 7.6 cm. (20 x 12 x 3 in.).

Azza El Siddique, between the thighs of your mother, 2023. Steel, rust. 152.4 x 121.9 x 3.2 cm. (60 x 48 x 1.2 in.)

Azza El Siddique, that which trembles wavers, 2023. Steel, bisque fired porcelain, water, pump, head pags, Sandalia. Variable dimensions.

Azza El Siddique, that which trembles wavers, 2023. Steel, bisque fired porcelain, water, pump, head pags, Sandalia. Variable dimensions.

Azza El Siddique, that which trembles wavers, 2023. Steel, bisque fired porcelain, water, pump, head pags, Sandalia. Variable dimensions.

Azza El Siddique, that which trembles wavers, 2023. Steel, bisque fired porcelain, water, pump, head pags, Sandalia. Variable dimensions.
Bradley Ertaskiran is pleased to present that which trembles wavers, a solo exhibition by Azza El Siddique. Conceived specifically for the Bunker, El Siddiqueâs immersive sensorial environment features multi-tiered steel architecture interspersed with sculptural forms made from water, clay, metal, and oil, all undergoing entropic transformation. that which trembles wavers manifests El Siddiqueâs ongoing investigation into Egyptian and Nubian myth and history, notably the transcultural exchanges and embedded power dynamics, reinterpreted through poetic materiality.
Egyptian culture fuelled the European imagination as 19th-century colonial expeditions spurred a frenzy for collectables. Aptly coined Egyptomania, this period spearheaded a mass excavation of archeological treasures, and with it, cultural erasure in favour of the classification and accumulation of objects, which constitute Western museum collections to this day. Centuries of looting across the African continent, marked by a craze for cultural goods and a conquering of peoples and their wealth, call for a slow look backwards, a need to unearth alternative or forgotten histories, myths, and memories. El Siddiqueâs artworks, evidence of a material dexterity ripe with possibility and discovery, aim to erode the stories and knowledge systems that are immortalized into history and reveal those which have been left behind.
Past and present conflate in a slow burn of steel, black porcelain, and scented oil. Fractured ceramic urns and hand-cast African masks rest on blackened steel mounts, mimicking a sort of precious display method that has come to be associated with ethnographic museological exhibits. Nearby rust paintings feature intricate, oxidizing images of carved mirrors excavated from Nubia and Egypt, pulled from the artistâs visual repertoire. True to the sensorial alchemy in which El Siddique has become known, heat-activated scent chambers release Sandalwood throughout the room, a nod to the artistâs research into ancient Sudanese perfumery. El Siddiqueâs work exists in the slippages between personal and archival, a reinterpretation of history that prioritizes fluidity and change over rigidity and permanence.
Seated upon a raised steel platform, surrounded by corroding metal scaffolding, is a monumental double-headed snake, a symbol of power adorning Egyptian and Nubian artifacts alike. Made of bisque-fired porcelain, the giant serpent degrades and tarnishes in real time due to the slow drip of the overhead irrigation system. Navigating El Siddiqueâs multilayered installation, viewers are met with sensorial curiosities, as if exploring a vast mausoleum. Yet, unlike the longevity attributed to monuments and artifacts, carved into stone and conserved in museum vaults, El Siddiqueâs artworks are ruins in constant states of becoming. Poignantly unpredictable, her work welcomes transformation and questions the permeability of relics and the colonial legacies they embody.
Azza El Siddique (b. Khartoum, Sudan) lives and works in New Haven, CT. Recent solo exhibitions have been presented at MIT List Visual Arts Centre (Cambridge), Helena Anrather (New York), and Cooper Cole (Toronto), among others. Her work has been included in group exhibitions at MOCA Toronto, Gardiner Museum (Toronto), Oakville Galleries (Toronto), Shin Gallery (New York), Green Hall Gallery (New Haven), and Bradley Ertaskiran (Montreal). El Siddique received an MFA from Yale University School of Art in 2019 and a BFA from Ontario College of Art and Design University in 2014. She was a Skowhegan resident in 2019 and was a 2022 finalist for the Sobey Art Award, issued by the National Gallery of Canada.