The Heavy Water Collective make artworks that respond to archives and collections to deconstruct and reconfigure the human and more-than-human histories embedded in the British and global Landscapes. Their exhibition at GroundWork Gallery presents a body of work that brings together research developed primarily in response to the Sedgwick Museum of Earth Sciences in Cambridge.
Museum Director Liz Hide describes the Sedgwick museum “as an integral part of the Department of Earth Sciences, supporting university research and teaching as well as being an accredited public museum. The Museum is therefore a rich and porous interface between the academic and public spheres, where the public can interact not just with amazing objects, but with the research and researchers that work on them.” (2024)
The works developed by the Heavy Water Collective entangle the weight of geological temporalities with untold human histories, holding subjects such as folklore and the problematic legacies of empire in a scientific context to re-categorise the world through the wealth of artefacts held in the Sedgwick museum and archives.
As a way to evoke the complexity and richness of the materials they have researched, the Heavy Water Collective has created a body of work that encompasses a diverse array of media. In this exhibition you will find sculpture, painting, photographs and moving-image that reflect on moments of turbulence found in the collections. This multifaceted approach visually articulates and navigates the global uncertainties we all face.