'The Cult of Beauty' explores notions of beauty across time and cultures.
Around the world, beauty is constantly seen as an ideal worthy of going to great lengths to achieve. But what driving forces lead us to believe in a myth of universal beauty despite its evolving nature?
The Cult of Beauty features over 200 objects, including historical and modern artefacts, a new film and artworks featuring artists Juno Calypso, J.D. Okhai Ojeikere, Angélica Dass, Jennifer Ling Datchuk, Cyndia Harvey and Shirin Fathi, amongst others. It presents brand new commissions by Narcissister, Xcessive Aesthetics, Renaissance Goo & Baum and Leahy, Makeupbrutalism (Eszter Magyar) and The Unseen. Author, academic and broadcaster Emma Dabiri also co-produced a group display on Racialised Beauty.
It is centred around three overarching themes: The Ideals of Beauty, The Industry of Beauty and Subverting Beauty, and considers the influence of morality, status, health, age, race and gender on the evolution of ideas about beauty. We invite you to question established norms and reflect on more inclusive definitions of beauty.
The evolving journey of the exhibition aims to widen our understanding of beauty beyond the binaries of beautiful or ugly, natural or artificial, physical or digital. Beauty is a subject that holds great emotional resonance for everyone, and this exhibition is a space that aspires to have multiple perspectives and polarities in dialogue.