Exposiciones
27 marzo 2025 - 17 mayo 2025
Tern Gallery / Nassau, Bahamas
Kachelle Knowles, Westside, Fo Sho!, 2025, mixed media. Courtesy: Tern Gallery. Foto: Blair Meadows.
To Scatter Seeds is an upcoming group exhibition featuring works by Bahamian artists Cydne Jasmin Coleby, Kachelle Knowles, and Jodi Minnis at Tern Gallery. It is the culmination of works considering themes of generational differences and traits, lineage, family, spirituality, and the diaspora.
Cydne Jasmin Coleby’s works will continue the exploration of the subject matter of family. Interpreting “seeds” in this context as children reflected through childhood images, this time, Coleby fuses elements of the home, such as colonial iconography, overgrown plants, and old family portraits, in her new works. As self-reflection is an intrinsic aspect of Coleby’s practice, her graphic collages examine the personal and collective/ancestral relationships to trauma and conditioning, an essential component of the exhibition.
Kachelle Knowles’ works explore culture and intergenerational fashion as an interpretation of scattering seeds, where she cross-examines the fashion culture of Millennial and Generation Z schoolboys. Dedicated to the intentional and delicate portrayal of Black men and boys that create room for the fluidity of masculine and feminine coexisting, Knowles’ virtuoso graphite works suggest the scattering of seeds as an expansion of one generation determining what fashion can be and the next generation building upon it or “bringing it back.”
Jodi Minnis focuses on the implications of the word “scatter” in her new body of works for the exhibition. In initial conversations with her exhibition mates Coleby and Knowles, Minnis recognized the term “scatter” as diaspora, which means “to scatter about,” and “seed” as children and heritage. Continuing her work with the Bahama Mama salt shakers, Minnis intentionally grouped and scattered the shakers in her studio, causing them to break into pieces. These pieces were then salvaged and rearranged as small islands, continents, and worlds. Considering this, and the violence and anxiety induced from the act of scattering itself, Minnis continues to scrutinize the traditional representations and tropes around Black, specifically Bahamian women, contributing to the exhibition’s overarching theme.
Coleby, Knowles, and Minnis create a conversation for all to participate in reckoning with the act of scattering as either violence or continuance, whether by choice or unknowingly.
TERN Gallery Mahogany Hill, Western Road Nassau, The Bahamas info@terngallery.com / +1 242 698 6300 ext 450 Website