Overview
In Darija, a north African dialect, a tkaf is a curse invoked by someone close to you. When Latifa Echakhch visited a sanctuary near El Jadida, Morocco, where witchcraft is still practised, she encountered handprints and marks made straight onto the walls with reddish clay.
Inspired by this, she created a work that brings sacred ancestral traditions into the realm of contemporary art. In her installation, smashed and pulverised bricks are spread across the floor and stain the walls of the exhibition space like traces of blood.
2013
This project was part of Sharjah Biennial 11
Project Images
Tkaf
Latifa Echakhch
2011
Bricks and pigment
Dimensions variable
Installation view
Image courtesy of the Artist and Kamel Mennour, Paris
Related
Echakhch, Latifa
Latifa Echakhch responds to political and cultural issues through objects, images and texts that question meaning and appearance.
March Meeting 2013: Towards a New Cultural Cartography
This publication takes as its starting point Yuko Hasegawa’s curatorial concept for Sharjah Biennial 11: Re:Emerge – Towards a New Cultural Cartography and March Meeting 2013.