An art project articulated around the issue of migration and diasporas from the Global South that sees the Mediterranean transformed into a place of waiting, suspension, and passing away, a solid space of embodying absence.
Waves, reflections, liquids flow through this book following a stream of texts and images that lead us across Mediterranean narratives and into the depths of this sea. Published on the occasion of the realisation of the project and the exhibition of the same name at Museo Man in Nuoro, Sardinia, The Last Lamentation consists of a research, performance and video, conceived by Valentina Medda and curated by Maria Paola Zedda.
"The sea is the subject of The Last Lamentation the sea as living body, the sea and its lives, its own and those that converge on it, the sea and its grief. Valentina Medals crossings evoke a practice, widespread throughout the Mediterranean basin, that of ritual mourning. Already researched in 1958 by Italian anthropologist Ernesto De Martino and now practically extinct in Italy, it is however still practised on the southern and eastern Mediterranean coasts, from Lebanon to Morocco.
The publications charts a Cours that unfolded along distinct temporal and conceptual lines, in turn intersecting, overlapping, and winding around each other like in the undertow. Currents meet. There's the visual current, a horizontal flow which characterises the book reflecting the wave movement of this liquid space and then the critical texts by curators authors, professors, researchers who have looked at the work and the artisti project's transitions from different angles."
A crossroads of present-day diasporas, the sea is here conceived as a place of reception and deposit of bodies and also as a body in itself that weaves and documents ancient and contemporary funeral mournings through the choral reconstruction of a ritual performed with the involvement of local and migrant women.
Curated by Maria Paola Zedda, the work, conceived as both a video and a live performance, is structured through a collection of materials and research related to women's knowledge of the collectivization of mourning and grief. The working phase is mainly articulated in Sardinia, the artist's homeland, where some of the mentioned traditional forms still survive, although at a stage close to extinction. The island, at the center of the Mediterranean, conceptually becomes a junction between the North and South of the world, reverberating the connective power of a choral action and song that reaches out like an echo chamber to the entire Mediterranean basin. The Last Lamentation reconstructs a ritual action in which twenty women dressed in black address the sea, as if in an act of prayer, performing a repetitive and hypnotic sound and choreographic score that reworks ritual codes into contemporary and abstract forms. Simple gestures and sounds connect the Sardinian lament with that of the countries bordering the Mediterranean, resulting in a shared weeping that through the body recounts the tragedies of the sea. The images follow the movement of bodies that, like shadows and dark presences, punctuate the landscape, building a calligraphic mark that recalls the flight of a flock. The score of gestures uses the codes of dance hybridized with signs from archaeological and ethnographic heritage, according to a path of repetition and crescendo that, in a loop that is never identical, aims to find a moment of climax and cure.
Valentina Medda is an interdisciplinary artist from Sardinia based in Bologna. Her artistic practice unfolds between image, performance and site-specific interventions, inquiring the relationship between public and private, body and architecture, city and social belonging.