Artist statement
Adele Dipasquale (IT, 1994) is a visual artist and researcher currently based in The Hague (NL), where they have graduated from the MA Artistic Research at the Royal Academy of Arts KABK in 2020.
Working across various mediums as moving images, analog film, voice experimentations and text, their work questions the limits of cultural binarism–from femininity to naturality, from fiction to facts–and explores language. Their artistic practice deals with the politics of language and the relationship between magic and words. This research starts from a deep inquiry into the power of naming: how words produce worlds and allow for certain things to exist and not for others. The power of words to shape realityas a spell makes something appear or disappear—is, for them, the most powerful and evident form of magic. In their practice, they investigate how linguistic constructs shape reality, how they operate and how they can be both tools of oppression and resistance. In this process, they often try to look for strategies of refusal and, possibly, reparation from normative definitions and taxonomies. Therefore, many of their works use some forms of defiance of language and representation as a first spark. Inspired by magical practices as a methodological tool, but also as a joyful invitation, their work tries to challenge fixed notions of meanings using miswords, miscomprehension, silence, language games and the never-fixed boundary between sound and voice.
Bio
Their work has been displayed internationally at art venues and film festivals such as Sonnenstube (CH), The Clemente (US), Marres (NL), Kurzfilmtage Oberhausen (DE), Page Not Found (NL), Kinemastik ISFF (MT), Het Nieuwe Instituut (NL), WORM (NL), Filmhuis Den Haag (NL), Beursschouwburg (BE). Their work has been supported by research fellowships and artist grants from institutions such as Cripta747 (IT), Mondriaan Fonds (NL), Stroom Den Haag (NL). Recently, their last film, ‘Lose Voice Toolkit’ (2024) has had its world premiere at the International Film Festival Rotterdam (NL). They are also part of the artist-run filmlab and collective Rotterdam Filmwerkplaats, a group of artists that focus on the use of analogue film in contemporary art practices.