Dying Under Your Eyes: a new film commission by Oreet Ashery
Wellcome Collection is pleased to announce 'Dying Under Your Eyes', a new 25 minutes long film by Oreet Ashery. This film will be shown for the first time as part of the exhibition 'Jo Spence and Oreet Ashery: Misbehaving Bodies', at Wellcome Collection running until 26 January 2020.
'Dying Under Your Eyes' explores the sudden death of Ashery’s elderly father in 2018, focusing on ageing, dying, mourning and intimate surveillance. Merging depictions of everyday life with symbolic undertones, the film explores end of life care, ageing and intergenerational dynamics. It incorporates diaristic footage shot on the artist’s smartphone over the last seven years of her father’s life, alongside constructed scenes with apparitional figures.
The film narrates daily routines leading up to Ashery’s father’s fall and subsequent hospitalisation and her mother’s move into a care home after 70 years of them living together. The film shows Ashery’s increasingly frail father negotiating his immediate environment accompanied by a carer, often under the watchful eye of her mother. The film’s ethereal tone and music soundtrack evokes the charged and surreal atmosphere of looming grief and decline. Ashery’s family members, frequently appear throughout the film acting as guardian angels and representing the unconscious.
Ultimately, 'Dying Under Your Eyes', offers a tender family portrait. By turning the camera on her parents, Ashery – as a daughter and as an artist - subtly rewrites the family album and offers a frank story of ageing, dying and love.
In this film, Ashery shows her father’s playfulness, potentially shadowed by dementia, while documenting her parent’s relationship through a series of intimate exchanges that often address the camera. Ashery uses the camera lens as a listening device that mediates, while the process of documentation becomes another of her forms of care. At points Ashery dresses up as her father, reenacting his fall and his newspaper reading, to embody, and perhaps, further empathise with him, attempting to process and make sense of recent histories.
'Dying Under Your Eyes' has been commissioned by Wellcome Collection and will be part of 'Jo Spence and Oreet Ashery: Misbehaving Bodies', a major exhibition which brings together two artists who explore the representation of chronic illness and experiences of care. Through their work, the exhibition foregrounds health diversity and challenges our understanding of ‘untypical’ bodies, reflecting on how illness can disrupt and shape the way we think about the body, family and identity.
'Jo Spence and Oreet Ashery: Misbehaving Bodies' runs at Wellcome Collection from 30 May 2019 until 26 January 2020. It is curated by Bárbara Rodríguez Muñoz and George Vasey and is accompanied by a programme of live events and discussions, developed in collaboration with Ashery.
The exhibition will be accompanied by Oreet Ashery’s forthcoming book, 'How we die is how we live only more so', published by Mousse. It includes writings by Bárbara Rodríguez Muñoz, TJ Demos, Imani Robinson, Mason Leaver Yap, Rizvana Bradley, and an interview between George Vasey and Ashery, and the full script of Ashery’s work 'Revisiting Genesis'.
Misbehaving Bodies: Event series with Oreet Ashery
- Dying Under Your Eyes
Thurs 10 October, 19.00 - 20.30 - Free | Book from 27 September
Join Oreet Ashery for the public launch of her newly commissioned film, followed by responses by Helena Reckitt and Stephen Wilson and a Q&A. - Care and Survivance
Thurs 31 October, 19.00 – 20.30 - Free | Book from 27 September
This inclusive Long Table discussion led by Lois Weaver with contributions by artists and researchers: Oreet Ashery, Ragu Rage, Rehana Zaman, Amanda Millis, Julia Warr, Hannah Catherine Jones and health care practitioner, Vanda Playford, focusing on attitudes and approaches to self-care and collective care. - Death, Dying and Digital
Thurs 7 November, 19.00 – 20.30 - Free | Book from 25 October
Oreet Ashery, Korina Giaxoglou and Elaine Kasket discuss narrative perspectives on death and mourning and how in online spaces: forms of ecstatic sharing, modes of death writing and networked emotions. - How we die is how we live only more so
Thurs 5 December, 19.00 – 20.30 - Free | Book from 29 November
Readings and responses in celebration of Oreet Ashery’s forthcoming book, published by Mousse.
For press information please contact:
Juan SanchezComms Lead, Wellcome Collection
Notes to editors
About Oreet Ashery
Oreet Ashery (b.1966 Jerusalem) is a UK based interdisciplinary artist whose practice includes time-based image, performance, text, sound and music. In 2017, Ashery won the 10th Film London Jarman Award. Ashery’s work has been exhibited and performed at the Brooklyn Museum, ICA (London), Kettle’s Yard (Cambridge) and Tate Modern (London), as well as in biennales including Rennes, Thessaloniki, Venice and Whitstable. Her large-scale commissions include Artangel and LPS Malmo. Ashery’s work is held in a number of collections including Museo Reina Sofía (Madrid), ZKM (Karlsruhe), and the Brooklyn Museum and she is currently an Associate Professor of Fine Art at the Ruskin School of Art, University of Oxford. 'Revisiting Genesis' was commissioned by Stanley Picker Gallery, Kingston University London, and supported by the Wellcome Trust, Tyneside Cinema, fig-2, and Arts Council England 2016. 'Dying Under Your Eyes' was commissioned by Wellcome Collection.
About Wellcome Collection
Wellcome Collection is a free museum and library inspired by the medical objects collected by Henry Wellcome. It connects science, medicine, life and art. Through its exhibitions, live programming, and digital and publishing activity, it makes thought provoking content which aims to challenge how we think and feel about health.
Wellcome Collection is part of Wellcome, which exists to improve health by helping great ideas to thrive. We support researchers, we take on big health challenges, we campaign for better science, and we help everyone get involved with science and health research. We are a politically and financially independent foundation. www.wellcomecollection.org