13.01.20 - 28.06.20
GENDERS: SHAPING AND BREAKING THE BINARY
GENDERS presented a playful and kaleidoscopic view of genders and its relationship with science, as well as factors like class, culture, race, age and sexuality. The season aimed to open conversation through personal perspectives on and beyond the female and male ‘binaries’. Drawing on the latest research from King’s College London, the season examined ideas of gender in contemporary society.
The exhibition featured artworks, scientific research and collaborative projects, and invited audiences to interact with and speculate upon the factors that shape our behaviour and our understanding of genders. Science Gallery London aims to offer a safe space to discuss, debate and connect with others on this most personal of subjects.
Cibelle Cavalli Bastos’ new installation emerges from a community of non-binary artists and developers who build and share filters on Instagram.
In role-playing games, players pursue goals in a fictional setting whilst interacting with each other in character…
Binding is a method of flattening the chest practiced by some trans people in order to better align their body with their sense of self.
Work Out is an ongoing research project exploring consent, masculinity and male privilege led by artist Phoebe Davies and sex educator Gareth Esson.
UNBORN0X9 is an art installation and performance questioning the development of foetuses in artificial wombs outside of the body (ectogenesis) and the cyborg future of parenting.
Sahhar's drawings tell the story of a straight couple working in the corporate world…
Cosmic Ass celebrates twerking, a danceform that originates in the black ‘bounce’ scene of 1980s New Orleans.
This artwork questions society's tendency to use the figure of the child to represent “the future” and the problems of this for those who choose not to reproduce or cannot reproduce.
In the 1970s, archaeologists discovered a set of fossilised bone fragments comprising 40% of the skeleton of a 3.2 million year-old primate
In this new video work, the artist and drag kings King Frankie Sinatra, Sigi Moonlight and HP Loveshaft perform a translation of American sociologist Susan Leigh Star’s (1954-2010) contribution to a feminist understanding of science and technology.
In Skin Flick (Invasive Species) we see bodies absorbing and interacting with chemicals such as beauty products, drugs, supplements and organic matter.
In 2019 artist Mary Maggic spent time with a community on the banks of the Kali Code river in Yogyakarta, Indonesia…
In this new series of films, Sadé Mica poses in peaceful landscapes in the North of England.
These six works by Rotimi Fani-Kayode provide a reference point for how understandings of gender change across time and cultures.
Science Gallery London’s Young Leaders have chosen a selection of words that can express our relationships to gender.