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HIDE

Svart television
BY
Salad Hilowle

Black Television can be described as a tribute to Öppna Kanalen [The Open Channel] an open citizens’ television channel, popular in the 1980s and 1990s. Two young black women comment on an array of moving images. They are brash and make fun of stereotypes in the visual culture of Sweden, presenting the perspective of a number of Afro-Swedes. In Black Television, Swedish blackness is represented as a candy-showerwith clips from sports, arts, comedy and other fields.

Aspect ratio 1.78:1 (16:9)
Prod. format
Duration 00:30:30
Language Swedish
Color Color
Year 2021
Latest screening Apr 27, 2024
Apr 10, 2024
Nov 25, 2023
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About the artist

Salad Hilowle

Salad Hilowle is an artist and filmmaker based in Stockholm. He was born in Mogadishu in 1986 and moved to Gävle eight years later. His work revolves around identity, memory and place, making people of African origin visible in various Swedish contexts, now and in the past.

Using a wide array of artistic means, especially video, photography and installations, Hilowle questions the precarious border between acceptance and rejection. At the same time he is exploring how his background can be reintroduced into cultural narratives as part of a struggle to proclaim identities, which have been present for a long time but have been erased or concealed. People of African origin have been living and working in Sweden for many centuries, contributing to culture and society at large. And yet they are largely absent in the public discourse, including the arts, with the exception of criminal contexts.

Hilowle is a maker of poetic images, offering a black gaze on cultural artifacts that construct, limit, and attribute meaning around issues of who belongs and who does not — an act of claiming and longing for a space that can become “at home”. Through his research-based and yet intuitive projects, dealing with experiences of being born in one country and growing up in another, Hilowle gives greater depth and expression to the Afro- Swedish diaspora and to life as an Afro-Swede today. This is emphasized by his inclusion of, and collaboration with, friends, family and relatives in the work.

The artist is not only seeking out and noticing anomalies in cultural narratives, but he is also examining the familiar as if for the very first time. By switching contexts and by changing the scale, color and material of objects, Hilowle makes them impractical and weird, and yet visible. Full of melancholy and elegance, his works attempt to test the resilience of images, objects and bodies in today’s world.

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