A moment of darkness at noon
- Dates and Opening times
Fri 22 May – Sat 18 July
Thu – Sat, 12pm – 5pm and by appointment
During GI Fri 5 Jun - Thu 18 JunMon – Sun, 12pm – 5pm
The exhibition will be closed 19 – 21 Jun inclusive.
- Venue
- The Common Guild, 5 Florence Street, G5 0YX
- Participants
- Joanna Piotrowska
- Presented by
The Common Guild
- Supported by
The Common Guild is supported by Creative Scotland
- Accessiblity
- Level Access, Step Free: The venue has ramped or level access and/or lifts to upper floorsAccessible Toilets: The venue has a wheelchair accessible toiletGender Neutral Toilets: The venue has toilets not separated by gender or sexBaby Change: The venue has baby changing facilitiesBike Rack: There is cycle parking at the venueRefreshments: There is a café or somewhere you can purchase refreshments
Joanna Piotrowska experiments with photography’s expanded field through collage, textile, and the sculptural possibilities of image-making. A moment of darkness at noon is the artist’s first showing of her work in Scotland. It includes a series of newly commissioned photographic and collage works.
The exhibition continues Joanna’s exploration of the unconscious through Jungian psychoanalysis, with a focus on intuitive and pre-verbal forms of expression. Layered photographic collages, including images from the artist’s family archive, draw inspiration from dream states and fragmentary memories. Ambiguous images, including rock forms, animals, human faces, and disembodied heads play with scale and resist a narrative whole. Together, these elements create a dialogue between memory, dream, and the unconscious.
In Jungian psychology, this process resonates with “individuation”: a confrontation between the conscious self and deeper layers of the psyche. The collages function as constellations of images emerging from the personal unconscious, where past experiences and emotional residues coexist without hierarchy. These fragments are activated through the intensity of midlife transition, a moment of psychic reorientation that prompts reflections on identity, personal history, and what has been forgotten or repressed.