Glasgow International Festival of Contemporary Art

Liquid Land

Dates and Opening times

Fri 5 Jun - Sun 6 Sep

Mon - Thu and Sat, 10am - 5pm

Fri and Sun, 11am - 5pm

Venue

Gallery One, GoMA, 111 Queen Street, Royal Exchange Square, G1 3AH

Participants
Jasmine Togo-Brisby
Presented by

Glasgow International and the Gallery of Modern Art

Supported by

Glasgow International through support from core funders and Henry Moore Foundation, with presentation support from Glasgow Museums. This exhibition is additionally supported by the Glasgow 2026 Festival designed to complement the Glasgow 2026 Commonwealth Games, activating the city through culture and sport and inviting everyone to get involved as part of the wider public celebrations.

Accessiblity

Level Access, Step Free: The venue has ramped or level access and/or lifts to upper floors

 

Toilets: The venue has toilets available for visitors

 

Accessible Toilets: The venue has a wheelchair accessible toilet

Gender Neutral Toilets: The venue has toilets not separated by gender or sex

 

Hearing Loop: The venue has a hearing loop available

 

Baby Change: The venue has baby changing facilities

 

Refreshments: There is a cafe or somewhere you can purchase refreshments

 

Parking: Accessible Parking

Liquid Land marks the debut European solo exhibition by Australian South Sea Islander artist Jasmine Togo-Brisby. Created in response to the architectural history of Glasgow’s Gallery of Modern Art, Liquid Land presents new site-specific installations and sculptural works. Exploring histories of enslavement and domestic labour whilst tracing relationships across the Pacific, Australia, and wider dialogues about the transatlantic slave trade, these works illuminate the global scope of industries and exploitation.

Spanning sculpture, photography, installation, and video, Jasmine’s multidisciplinary practice is a profound exploration of “blackbirding”, the nineteenth century practice of deceiving or kidnapping Pacific Islanders for forced labour on Australian sugar plantations. Through the optical deception of mirrors, where flashes of light were perceived as signs from the spirit world or communication from ancestors, slave recruiters compelled people out into the water to investigate.

In Liquid Land, Jasmine lures with beauty and intrigue, intentionally mimicking the trickery that once weaponised Pacific Islanders’ cultural and spiritual beliefs and curiosity. At the exhibition’s heart is a full-scale recreation of Jasmine’s ancestral home in Australia, originally built by her Ni-Vanuatu ancestors. The thatched hut, modelled after an archival family photograph, houses an oceanic, crow-feathered installation. Throughout Liquid Land, Jasmine addresses notions of home, belonging, and retreat within the contradictions of confinement and violence.