biennial 20 Jul 2024
Biennial 2024
Overview 20 JUL – 18 AUG: A new and groundbreaking exhibition with 14 artists revealing South Yorkshire's hidden racial history across Sheffield City Centre
Description

There has not been anything like this done in South Yorkshire before, not at this scale. The Biennial is more than an arts exhibition, it is a reclamation. An act of memory recovery and a rennarration of the region’s racial history. Dig Where You Stand is an archival justice movement that has partnered with Sheffield City Archives, The Centre for Equity & Inclusion and Peter & Paul to bring you this powerful and necessary intervention.

A photograph of the DWYS exhibition with a large vibrant blue wallpaper hanging in the middle of the frame

Chinua Achebe wrote that until the lions have their own historians, the history of the hunt will always glorify the hunter. Who gets to tell their own stories? Who gets to be the lion or the hunter? Dig Where You Stand is not only about telling our own stories but retelling them, inserting them into the fabric of the city, and locating where we were to show where we are now.

Désirée Reynolds, Creative Director DWYS

We are very excited to have commissioned 14 artists to take part in the DWYS Biennial 2024 [20th Jul - 18th Aug].

Over a period of six months, these artists have been exploring local archives and developing creative responses to the documents, pictures, fragments and silences contained within them. Particular emphasis has been placed on finding stories about working class people of colour living in South Yorkshire before 1945. We have been here for centuries.

Through their creative practice, artists provide rare insight into this history and breathe life into people often reduced to bare facts and figures. They dispel the myth of a pure white past glorified in mainstream historical accounts and demonstrate the deep connection people of colour have to the region.

I grew up Black in Sheffield without a sense of history connected to the contemporary culture that surrounded me. Dig Where You Stand is an innovative, creative and soulful corrective to the reductive version of Sheffield we so often see in mainstream media

Johny Pitts, Artist & Advisor to DWYS

Just as histories are written across a city, this multi venue exhibition will display artworks across a range of highly visible public spaces. Make your way around Sheffield city centre and be moved by a stirring mixture of painting, poetry, puppetry, soundscapes, film, textiles and live performances.

For more information on opening times, directions and accessibility for individual venues, please click on the links below.

All venues are free to enter, have disabled access and are familiar sites centrally located. We are committed to making art and heritage accessible to all groups and communities, particularly those who have been historically marginalised by major institutions. These public spaces are part of the fabric of everyday life in Sheffield's city centre. By exhibiting in them we aim to amplify the untold, connect with a range of communities, and a generate a conversation about whose heritage is celebrated in the city and wider region, and whose is hidden away and kept out of reach.

More information about our programme of events and commissioned artists can be found below.

This exhibition is made possible by The National Lottery Heritage Fund. With thanks to National Lottery Players.

event 17 Aug 2024

Ancestral Futures - Street Procession & Performance by Eelyn Lee & Collaborators

a photograph of a street performer in colourful costume and make up staring at the camera a photograph of a street performer in colourful costume and make up staring at the camera

A live procession through Sheffield City Centre to honour the first recorded Chinese people in Sheffield and numerous other ancestors from East and South-East Asian communities who passed through or settled in South Yorkshire.

a photograph of a street performer in colourful costume and make up staring at the camera a photograph of a street performer in colourful costume and make up staring at the camera
event 08 Aug 2024

DWYS Presents "We Gather" with Sheffield City Archives

A photograph of four women of colour and one white woman sat on chairs laughing with one another A photograph of four women of colour and one white woman sat on chairs laughing with one another

A fascinating discussion about the hidden history of South Yorkshire and how the visual arts can bring it to life. Featuring commissioned artists Kedisha Coakley, Seiko Kinoshita and Patricia Bugembe with Senior Archivist Cheryl Bailey.

A photograph of four women of colour and one white woman sat on chairs laughing with one another A photograph of four women of colour and one white woman sat on chairs laughing with one another
event 27 Jul 2024

Open Studio

a photograph of several members of the public looking around the open studio a photograph of several members of the public looking around the open studio

For one day only Dig Where You Stand hosted an open studio so members of the public could watch how three of our artists made their work through shadowpuppets, textiles and poetry.

a photograph of several members of the public looking around the open studio a photograph of several members of the public looking around the open studio
event 22 Jul 2024

DWYS Presents "We Gather" with Sheffield Cathedral

A photograph of a Black woman speaker standing surrounded by watching audience members and with stained glass windows as the backdrop A photograph of a Black woman speaker standing surrounded by watching audience members and with stained glass windows as the backdrop

A special evening of live performances to celebrate Dig Where You Stand's new and groundbreaking summer exhibition. Featuring DWYS Creative Director, Désirée Reynolds, and commissioned artists Otis Mensah, CJ Simon and Rosa Cisneros.

A photograph of a Black woman speaker standing surrounded by watching audience members and with stained glass windows as the backdrop A photograph of a Black woman speaker standing surrounded by watching audience members and with stained glass windows as the backdrop
exhibition 19 Jul 2024

Persistence Works

a photograph of the main Dig Where You Stand exhibition space with a vibrant blue wallpaper prominently displayed in the middle a photograph of the main Dig Where You Stand exhibition space with a vibrant blue wallpaper prominently displayed in the middle

We are delighted that Persistence Works is one of the five major venues for the Dig Where You Stand 2024 exhibition. This is a purpose built, award winning studio complex that comprises 53 studios, around 80 artists & makers, across 6 floors.

a photograph of the main Dig Where You Stand exhibition space with a vibrant blue wallpaper prominently displayed in the middle a photograph of the main Dig Where You Stand exhibition space with a vibrant blue wallpaper prominently displayed in the middle
exhibition 19 Jul 2024

Moor Market

A photograph of four exhibition doors in a circle in Moor Market A photograph of four exhibition doors in a circle in Moor Market

Back where it all started. The site of our first exhibition in 2021, Moor Market is a bustling hub of activity with over 90 independent businesses including many international stalls. It is a major part of the city's life flow, with people passing through to buy their fruit n veg, get their hair done, and enjoy food from around the world.

A photograph of four exhibition doors in a circle in Moor Market A photograph of four exhibition doors in a circle in Moor Market
exhibition 19 Jul 2024

Sheffield Central Library

a photograph of three exhibition doors in Sheffield Central Library a photograph of three exhibition doors in Sheffield Central Library

Sheffield Central Library is a much loved public space in the city centre. It is the single largest general lending and reference collection in the city's library service, and puts on a range of children and family activities throughout the year. It is also home to the Graves Art Galley, which displays a dazzling array of historic and contemporary visual art.

a photograph of three exhibition doors in Sheffield Central Library a photograph of three exhibition doors in Sheffield Central Library
exhibition 19 Jul 2024

Winter Garden

a photograph of three exhibition doors in the Winter Gardens a photograph of three exhibition doors in the Winter Gardens

Sheffield's impressive multi award-winning Winter Garden is one of the largest temperate glasshouses to be built in the UK during the last hundred years and is the largest urban glasshouse anywhere in Europe, home to more than 2500 plants from all around the world. It is a much loved space in Sheffield, often in perpetual motion as friends and families pass through to visit the various retail units and exhibition spaces inside and nearby.

a photograph of three exhibition doors in the Winter Gardens a photograph of three exhibition doors in the Winter Gardens
exhibition 19 Jul 2024

Sheffield Cathedral

A photograph of an audience member inspecting an exhibition door in Sheffield Cathedral A photograph of an audience member inspecting an exhibition door in Sheffield Cathedral

It brings us great pleasure that Sheffield Cathedral will be one of five venues to host the DWYS exhibition. Several of our commissioned artworks will be on show in the Cathedral's Shrewsbury Chapel. Through a dynamic combination of physical display and audio installation, we bring together pieces that spark critical conversations on the connection between faith, power and memorialisation.

A photograph of an audience member inspecting an exhibition door in Sheffield Cathedral A photograph of an audience member inspecting an exhibition door in Sheffield Cathedral
story 18 Jul 2024

Sheffield’s Africa

‘Sheffield’s Africa’ responds to the attitude of 20th Century Britain towards the African diaspora. Photography.

story 18 Jul 2024

Whispers Of History

One of the first Somali women in Sheffield arrives in 1956. A fictional audio recording captures her working life.

story 18 Jul 2024

Ancestral Futures

A Chinese baby is born and dies in Sheffield in 1855. At just 5 weeks old he’s buried at St Paul’s, now the site of the Peace Gardens. A processional street performance honours him and other ancestors from South and South-East Asian communities.

story 18 Jul 2024

Nigeria Says No

'Nigeria Says No' is inspired by a 1909 article lamenting the fact that colonial Britain couldn't get Ibadan in Nigeria to drink enough article, unlike it states it can in Barnsley. Photography.

story 18 Jul 2024

Hunter 77

Joe Philips is a steel worker in Sheffield who, in 1971, builds a boat that he hopes will take him back to Jamaica. Shadow puppets and film.

story 18 Jul 2024

A Train Running over the Sea

A train commissioned by the Japanese Government was built by Yorkshire Engine Co., Meadow Hall Works in 1871. Multimedia artist Seiko Kinoshita has created and installed six banners to capture this unlikely connection between Japan and Sheffield.

story 18 Jul 2024

Tears In A Cup

Lucretia Smith and Mathilde Boswell were buried at St Mary’s Churchyard in Beighton, 1844. A screendance and poem memorialises their lives.

story 18 Jul 2024

Edgar Jessop Smith - Dreaming

Edgar Jessop Smith, the troubled son of a famous African American tragedian, struggles to settle in Sheffield. A visual poem explores this psychodrama.

story 18 Jul 2024

When Our Souls Have Lean’d the Heat to Bear

Inspired by the known and unknown Black servants of Wentworth Woodhouse, Rotherham, during the Georgian era. Print plate materials: braided synthetic hair, pineapple leaves, hessian string, cardboard.

story 18 Jul 2024

The Shadow that Life Becomes

An old Jamaican man contemplates his life in Britain. A short story read by its author.

story 18 Jul 2024

The Sense of Us

A Sikh woman, who lived down Sheldon Road, Sheffield, is discovered and obscured in the 1939 census. A poem and audio recording captures her haunting.

story 18 Jul 2024

Lost Voices Hidden Names

The journey from Nigeria to Sheffield and all the colours in between. A tapestry of silk dupion, organza, silk threads and soluble fabric.

story 18 Jul 2024

The African Instruction

In 1820 a Sheffield born quaker purchases the freedom of two African men, Sandanee and Mahmadee. An epic narrative poem reimagines their story.

story 18 Jul 2024

Romulus & Remus

Two French horn playing footmen, Romulus and Remus, were ‘gifted’ when they were around 16 to Lady Rockingham (who had a stately home in Rotherham) in 1776. This is a mixed media charcoal portrait adorned with a collage of lokta textures. 45cm x 55cm.

story 18 Jul 2024

Eileen Biney

‘Exposure’ is a reimagining of Eileen Binney, sister to boxing legend Albert Binney, living in Sheffield from the 1920s onwards. Photography.

story 02 Jul 2024

Point of Continuum

A Sikh woman, who lived down Sheldon Road, Sheffield, is discovered and obscured in the 1939 census. A poem captures her haunting.