MA Curating

Mediations on the Sacred: Ritual and Contemporary Practice 

Panel discussion with Lotte Johnson, Jennifer Ellis and Natalia Valencia Arango

The exhibition Searching for Lost Rain (St Mary le Strand and Strand Aldwych: 27th May – 4th June) serves as a point of departure to explore the lives of cultural artefacts which have been removed from and presented outside of their original contexts. The display itself will encourage members of the public to engage with these ideas by interacting with Gala Porras-Kim’s artworks.

Focusing on spirituality, ritual practice and culture, leading scholars and curators will present and discuss emerging scholarship and their experiences surrounding presentations of the sacred within institutional and alternative cultural spaces. Drawing from their various practices in ecology, transcultural dialogue, and cultural histories, this panel will explore these complex intersections in light of an ethical engagement with these artefacts.

This panel will discuss how exhibitions and display practices can successfully exhibit these objects across various sites, while maintaining agency and sacredness. The discussion endeavours to advance scholarly debates on this urgent issue for contemporary curatorial practice.

This event is organised by the MA Curating: St Mary le Strand and Strand Aldwych Exhibition Team. The exhibition Searching for Lost Rain is on view at St Mary le Strand from the 27 May to 4 June.

1 Jun 2026

18:00 - 20:00

Free, booking essential

Vernon Square Campus, Lecture Theatre 2

This event takes place at our Vernon Square campus (WC1X 9EW).

Series: 

MA Curating

Speakers

Lotte Johnson is currently curator at the Barbican. Lotte’s recent projects include a retrospective of Beatriz González (2026), Unravel: The Power and Politics of Textiles in Art (2024, co-curated with Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam) and Carolee Schneemann: Body Politics (2022), as well as new commissions by artists including Citra Sasmita (2025), Toyin Ojih Odutola (2020), SERAFINE1369 (2019), Yto Barrada (2018) and Bedwyr Williams (2016). Working from a feminist perspective, Lotte’s work often focuses on interdisciplinary practices and transcultural dialogues. She previously worked at The Museum of Modern Art, New York.’

Jennifer Ellis is an acclaimed international curator. Jennifer’s curatorial practice investigates intersections of contemporary art, space and context, investigating themes of time, ecology, heritage and place through the lens of global artistic dialogue. Having curated over 100 projects globally, Jennifer worked with UNESCO in 2023 curating TERRA; a series of site-specific exhibitions across Burgundy. Jennifer founded Aspara Studios in 2024; facilitating artistic experimentation and exchange.

Natalia Valencia Arango is a Colombian curator based in London. Current projects include Gala Porras-Kim at Museo de Arte Moderno in Medellín (2026); Visión Nocturna by Pablo Vargas Lugo at Fundación Marso in Madrid (2026); El Hilo, a monograph of Jaime Gili published by This Side Up, Madrid (2026). She has served as Associate Curator for Estancia Femsa Casa Barragán in Mexico City and has curated projects at Sala de Arte Público Siqueiros in Mexico City, Palais de Tokyo in Paris, CAPC in Bordeaux, AIT in Tokyo, among others. She has worked as editor of Terremoto Magazine in Mexico City, South as A State of Mind in Athens, and as Fellow Researcher at Centre Pompidou in Paris. She was on the advisory committee for the 2022 Sydney Biennale and was nominated for ICI’s Curatorial Vision Award in New York. She holds an M.A. in Contemporary Art Theory from Goldsmiths, University of London.

Raw Copal to be used within the newest iteration of Gala Porras-Kim’s Precipitation for an Arid Landscape (2021-) within the Searching for the Rain exhibition, St Mary le Strand and Strand Aldwych, 27th of May to the 4th of June.

Image Credit: MA Curating, St Mary le Strand Team.

Citations