Dominique White
Residence Time
a cura di Valentina Buzzi
Dominique White, To the Hunted, May You Continue To Be Their Worst Nightmare II, III, V, 2022. Cast iron, forged iron, sisal, kaolin clay, nul sails, raffia, dimensions variable
Courtesy VEDA and the artist. Ph Tom Carter
"In this project, I draw upon a continued interest of ex-votos and the abstraction of the ship as an object loaded with memory, history and community care.
This project is a love letter to those who do not return to land."
Inspired by the tradition of maritime ex-votos, Dominique White’s research commences in Sori and the surrounding villages, intertwining with a broader seafaring culture shared across France, Italy, and Greece. Through archival research, encounters with local figures and direct visits to the ex-votos preserved in the Sanctuary of Nostra Signora delle Grazie, the work reinterprets forms linked to individual experiences, translating them into a contemporary language suspended between memory and transformation.
The sculpture takes shape as a symbolic ex-voto dedicated to those who remain indefinitely at sea, evoking a collective and timeless dimension that spans past, present, and future. It thus presents itself as an open gesture toward the sea and toward the lives that have crossed it. In this sense, the work also connects to a reflection on the life cycle of the sea, understood as a space of transformation and memory, where loss intertwines with a possible form of immortality.
Thanks to: the Municipality of Sori, Regione Liguria, Pro Loco of Sori, the Olcese-Ricci company, Aldo Pezzana, Prior of the Oratory of Sant’Erasmo and curator of the Quaderni di storia di Sori, Don Nicola Improda, Patrizia Rebora, Paolo Stagno, the Association Amici del Mare, and the volunteers of the Maritime Museum of Camogli. Their contribution and collaboration have been essential to the success of the initiative. We would also like to thank Architect Alessandro Giaconia and the blacksmiths Giorgio and Luca Pellizzaro for their help in the creation of the work and its design.

Dominique White (UK, 1993) intertwines theories related to Black subjectivity, Afro-pessimism, and grassroots hydrarchy (a concept related to the dismantling or subversion of individuals' ability to conquer new lands by sea), alongside nautical myths particularly relevant to the Black Diaspora. White redefines the term “shipwreck(ed)” as a reflexive verb and a state of being, embodying its abolition through her work. Her sculptures, or beacons evoke marine worlds that prophesy the emergence of stateless individuals in contemporary society: "a [Black] future that, while not yet materialized, must arrive." (Campt 2017 in Yussof 2018). She graduated from Goldsmiths, University of London. Major solo and two-person exhibitions include All Great Powers Collapse from the Centre at Kunsthalle Basel (Basel, CH, 2026), Deadweight at Whitechapel Gallery (London, UK, 2024), and Dominique White and Alberta Whittle: Sargasso Sea at ICA Philadelphia (Philadelphia, USA, 2024).

Valentina Buzzi is a curator, writer, and researcher working between Europe and Asia. Her practice explores cross-disciplinary approaches to contemporary art, with a focus on science, cultural heritage, and cultural policy. She was Artistic Director of the first Italian Pavilion at the Gwangju Biennale (2023) and curated Lee Bae’s official collateral exhibition at the 60th Venice Biennale. She currently co-curates the contemporary art programming at the Korean Cultural Center of Paris for the 140th anniversary of France–Korea relations. She is a Curatorial Researcher at the Park Seo-Bo Foundation, an independent editor for SKIRA, and a contributor to Art Asia Pacific.
Sori is a seaside village in the Golfo Paradiso, east of Genoa. Its territory stretches from the sea up to Mount Becco, offering a remarkable variety of natural environments.
The earliest documented records date back to 1143, attesting to its foundation in that period. In the following centuries, Sori developed thanks to trade and its maritime tradition, although, like many coastal towns, it suffered looting and attacks by pirates.
In the local sanctuary, numerous ex-votos from the 17th to the 19th century are preserved, together with the Madonna delle Grazie, known as the Black Madonna, to whom tradition attributes several miracles, including protection from corsair raids.
The name of the village derives from “luogo solatio,” meaning a sunny, light-filled place—a definition that still reflects its mild climate and bright atmosphere today. It is especially in summer that Sori comes alive, when the rhythm of the town intertwines with life by the sea.

