Wavelength Space
Address: 854 McCallie Avenue, Chattanooga , TN 37403
Dates: February 11 - March 11, 2023
Hours: February 11 from 5pm - 8pm, February 25 from 5pm - 8pm, open-by-appointment through March 11 with booking available through their website or Instagram pages
Website: wavelengthspace.com
Opening Reception Note: Ticketed entry and limiting availability for people 18+ and older: https://buy.stripe.com/14kbLJh1LfiF7h65kw
whether that be from personal experiences of survival or through a desire to mend generational and systemic wrong. Utilizing the visual language of sculpture they draw out emotional, physical, and spiritual wounds from within the body, into the air, and into communal view. Ali Waller states, “Although our wounds come from different sources we are both working to heal them.” Over the next months, Ayo and Ali will be working collaboratively to locate areas of connection between their practices and to realize installation and sculptural works in the space that will bridge gaps between the varied contexts of healing that their works address.
Ali Waller works primarily with casting methods and natural materials to produce installation and sculptural works that have direct connection to the body. For the past three years, Ali has been working on a communal project titled “Weight” in which she creates body casts of survivors of sexual assault. To date, Ali has created a total of over 1,300 chest casts and she plans to continue this outreach for years to come. Ali’s practice requires the creation of safe spaces where she leads survivors through an intimate process in which they can literally and metaphorically ‘get something off their chest.’ Ali says, “While individual casts carry deeply personal meaning, the piece as a whole emphasizes a broader mission: autonomy. ‘Weight’ is just as much about the process as it is the final work. The act of casting offers people, whose mind and body may be at war in the wake of an assault, a chance to reclaim their voice and ground themselves in their present growth. It empowers survivors to see their bodies as art, to take hold of their own narratives, and to bear witness that they are not alone.” Ali also engages in works that relate to self-portraiture, family dynamics, purity culture, and religious trauma.
Ayo Janeen Jackson has a background as a dancer and choreographer. In recent years, she expanded her movement-based practice to create body-based visual work with a mission to ‘heal the fantastic black body’. Her work takes form via texts, sculpture, image and video, satire, and healing practices. Ayo utilizes folklore and fantasy references such as a black unicorn in her work as a vehicle to “transform ideologies and reconfigure history to resolve urgent concerns of the current racial climate.”
Opening Reception Note: Ticketed entry and limiting availability for people 18+ and older: https://buy.stripe.com/14kbLJh1LfiF7h65kw