542 & 548 West 22nd Street, NY 10011, New York, United States
Open: Tue-Sat 10am-6pm
Thu 4 Sep 2025 to Sat 18 Oct 2025
542 & 548 West 22nd Street, NY 10011 Sonia Boyce. Improvise with what we have
Tue-Sat 10am-6pm
Artist: Sonia Boyce
Over the past four decades, Sonia Boyce DBE RA has cultivated a multidisciplinary practice that explores play, language and pattern, while questioning the nature of representation and authorship. For her inaugural exhibition with Hauser & Wirth, Boyce presents two new films alongside her latest wallpaper and photographic works.
In the first film on view, Boyce weaves together footage captured at a silent disco, a paradoxically hushed event in which a roomful of dancers responds to music heard only through headphones. Inspired by both Roy DeCaravaโs โDancers, New Yorkโ (1956) and Adrian Piperโs โFunk Lessonsโ (1983)โgroundbreaking works by artists who have centered Black cultureโBoyceโs โSilent Discoโ (2025) revels in the dancersโ unguarded gestures, flickering emotions and ephemeral exchanges. Using montage and repetition, among other techniques, the film takes these lively impressions โfor a walk,โ as Boyce would say, quoting Paul Kleeโs adage (โDrawing is like taking a line for a walkโ). As the film begins, only ambient noises are audible to the viewer: we hear the soft shuffle of feet, train cars passing outside the venue, murmurs that erupt into sudden bursts of song. Gradually, the music builds, coaxing the dancers into collective movement, though their headsets are tuned to two separate channels. Harmony arises, improbably, from dissonance.
A key subject in Boyceโs recent work, the silent disco is not a party, but rather a framework for close listening, improvisation and collective performance. This sense of openness and play continues in the exhibition space itself. Boyce has taken still images from โSilent Discoโ and arranged them into repeating, kaleidoscopic patterns to create wallpaper installations within the gallery, blurring distinctions between the artwork and its means of production and display. Boyceโs installation immerses us in subtle cues from the original performanceโthe lights, the uncanny silence, the dancersโ whirling bodiesโsuggesting that at any moment, the disco could begin again.
In โCarmenโ (2025), Boyce delves into the life and career of trailblazing Guyanese British actress Carmen Munroe, who reshaped perceptions of Caribbean migrants in the UK through her performances in such West End plays as Lorraine Hansberryโs โA Raisin in the Sun,โ and her roles on popular British television programs including โDoctor Who: The Enemy of the Worldโ (1967 โ 1968), โThe Persuadersโ (1971 โ 1972) and โDesmondโsโ (1989 โ 1994). Part portrait, part historical document, Boyceโs film traces Munroeโs impact as an artist and activist.
โCarmenโ was first conceived in 2022 as part of a landmark commission by King Charles III marking the 75th anniversary of the arrival of HMT Empire Windrush on Britainโs eastern shore. The royal commission brought together leading contemporary artists to create portraits honoring 10 pioneering members of the Windrush GenerationโCaribbean migrants who, like Carmen Munroe, arrived in Britain between 1948 and 1971. Despite facing widespread political, economic and social discrimination, these brave individuals played a pivotal role in the reconstruction of postwar Britain.
During Boyceโs portrait session with Munroe, she amassed such a wealth of material that she was compelled to develop a more expansive project. The result, shown here for the first time, is a powerful two-channel film: one screen lingers on Munroe as she watches a montage of her own performances, while the other screen displays significant dates and milestones in her career. The two feeds interweave fact and sentiment, history and personal anecdote, illuminating Munroeโs ambition, tenacity and prowess in her craft, while emphasizing her own voice and perspective.
โCarmenโ (2025) was made with support from Wandsworth Council as part of the Mayor of Londonโs London Borough of Culture initiative.