Enclosed, 2012-ongoing

Amina Menia
Enclosed, 2012-ongoing
Video, colour, sound
8 minutes, 53 seconds
Photographs, plans, postcards, coin, banknote, stamp, documents
Mixed media
Dimensions variable
Installation view
Co-produced by the Royal Hibernian Academy, Dublin, Ireland, and Sharjah Art Foundation
Courtesy of the Artist

Biography

Amina Menia is interested in architecture as an archaeology of the culture and history of a city, as well as the symbolic territory for the frenzies of men and their desire for power. Recently, she has extended her research from heritage to more contemporary political and postcolonial topics.

She creates installations and sculptures that investigate the relations between historical memory, urban space, and architecture. In a series titled ‘Extra Muros’ (2005-ongoing), Menia creates and proposes interventions in historically charged sites around the city of Algiers.

Menia’s work has been exhibited both nationally and internationally, including at the Royal Hibernian Academy, Dublin, Ireland (2013); National Museum of Carthage, Tunisia (2012); Cornerhouse, Manchester, UK (2011); Musée national d’art moderne et contemporain, Algiers (2010) and the Pontevedra Bienal, Spain (2008).

She took part in a long-term residency in the city of Marseilles (2012), working on the common architectural heritage of Algiers and Marseilles through the inspiring figure of the architect Fernand Pouillon.

Menia graduated from Ecole Supérieure des Beaux-Arts of Algiers.

She was born in 1976 in Algiers where she continues to live and work.

SAF participation:
Sharjah Biennial 11

Related

Menia, Amina

do it بالعربي

Join in, take part and collaborate as individuals, families, friends – as a community, together in do it بالعربي [in Arabic] – a project organised by Sharjah Art Foundation.

Menia, Amina

Enclosed

Enclosed revisits the extraordinary history of a monument located in the heart of Algiers.

Menia, Amina

A Peculiar Family Album

This video is based on materials from the personal archive of Jacques Chevallier, who was mayor of Algiers from 1953 to 1958, a key period in the architectural, social and political history of Algiers.