Jamilah Sabur is a multidisciplinary artist whose work incorporates performance, video, and installation. Un chemin escarpé / A steep path (2018) is a five-channel video installation featuring her inner world, from a cricket field in the Blue Mountains of Jamaica to underwater geological features of the Caribbean sea and the Atlantic Ocean. The video bridges ritualistic practice with digital technology, evoking questions related to navigation between the material world and the transcendental plane. The piece is inspired by geophysical data taken aboard the retired research vessel Vema and the geological term escarpment, referring to a steep slope formed from erosion. Sabur also deconstructs the phenomenon known as the Rossby whistlea frequency emitted from the Caribbean Sea every 120 days that can only be detected from spaceusing it as inspiration for a sequence of movements she performs in the video and it is featuring it in the score.
In conjunction with the exhibition Hammer Projects: Jamilah Sabur.