The Douglas Hyde is delighted to present the first solo exhibition in Ireland by Libyan artist Nour Jaouda Matters of Time, which continues her ongoing exploration of the fluidity of cultural identity.
Jaouda’s multi-layered textile works traverse the languages of painting, sculpture and installation to produce ‘landscapes of memory’. The forms, colours and motifs within her intricately textured surfaces gesture towards different encounters across time and space, drawing on the artist’s childhood in Libya and experiences of living between Cairo and London. Organic and geometric forms reveal themselves within her layered topographies, evoking images both real and imagined: spectral presences and absences within the shadows of memory.
Each work is intimately hand-crafted through a slow, meditative process. Jaouda begins by treating and dying her fabrics with earthy, saturated pigments, a process through which the physicality of her materials is altered and colours come to life. Then comes a process of décollage, or cutting out, which Jaouda describes as ‘a radical and poetic strategy that is as much destructive as it is constructive; where the act of undoing and unbuilding becomes an addition rather than negation to the work.’ Rebuilding layer upon layer, the fragments are reassembled into sculptural tapestries. For Jaouda, this process of material construction and deconstruction mirrors the rooting and uprooting of the self within her migratory existence. As she elaborates: ‘cultural identity is formed through a constant process of becoming.’
Matters of Time was commissioned by Spike Island, Bristol, where it was presented September 2025 – January 2026, and curated by Nicole Yip.