Join us for an evening with Nathaniel Télémaque to celebrate the lsunch of his zine, Black Geographies: Kings Hill Dominica, a practice-based body of audio-visual artwork, as well as geography research project, focused on exploring the ideas of home, heritage and belonging. Drawing together analogue photographs, recorded soundscapes, montage film footage, during his first ever visit to the island of his descent Waitukubuli/Dominica in April 2024, Nathaniel has created a short montage super 8 film and a visual arts newspaper.
Collaborating with Reference Point for a screening of his short film, a soundscape listening session, and a panel discussion session with curator and researcher Amouraé Alliyah and transdisciplinary artist Dionne Elizabeth we invite you to join us for an intimate night of sharing and disaporic dialogue.
Nathaniel Télémaque AKA St.Peso is a North West London-born and raised visual artist, writer and researcher who photographs, films, records and writes about ‘everyday things’ in various urban settings. Bearing witness to mad cities and maverick livelihoods inspires his audio-visual practices. His lenses focus on the experiences of young Black adults, creative peers and notions of urban change in cities.
He completed his Geography (practice-related) PhD at University College London in 2023 and is now a Lecturer in Geography and Social Justice at King’s College London University.
As a member of the Pesolife Art Collective, he also produces and curates various projects with Pesolife collaborators Secaina Hudson & Kalina Blaize - who are both multi-talented singers, songwriters and music producers. Frequently collaborating on distinct projects together, the Pesolife Art Collective is committed to substantively engaging with it’s audio/visual practices alongside collaborations with educational institutions, companies, community groups, and creative peers.