Open a larger version of the following image in a popup:
Prophetic Map I:Toju Ba Farabale, The Strand, 2019. Photograph by Jack Hems, 2019.

Open a larger version of the following image in a popup:
Prophetic Map I:Toju Ba Farabale, The Strand, 2019. Photograph by Jack Hems, 2019.

Open a larger version of the following image in a popup:
Prophetic Map I:Toju Ba Farabale, The Strand, 2019. Photograph by Jack Hems, 2019.

Prophetic Map I: Toju Ba Farabale, 2019
Installation
Copyright The Artist
Further images
Here, a gold-coated steel Merkaba, studded with orgonite, offers a space for the visitor to rest,reflect and transcend. Ifekoya references the transformative potential of water – areference to the lost...
Here, a gold-coated steel Merkaba, studded with orgonite, offers a space for the visitor to rest,reflect and transcend. Ifekoya references the transformative potential of water – areference to the lost holy wells that lie beneath the streets around 180. Held by Ifekoya’s voiceand lulled by layered Yoruba vocals, we are centred within this palimpsest of belief sytems.
Taken from a Yoruba proverb, Prophetic Map I:Toju Ba Farabale. translates loosely as, “look beyond the butterfly that’s on your nose”, a reminder that patience and calm help you to see things moreclearly, especially what is right in front of your face. Ifekoya’s temple and healing pod speak tothe human need for spaces of connection, communion and reflection.
Taken from a Yoruba proverb, Prophetic Map I:Toju Ba Farabale. translates loosely as, “look beyond the butterfly that’s on your nose”, a reminder that patience and calm help you to see things moreclearly, especially what is right in front of your face. Ifekoya’s temple and healing pod speak tothe human need for spaces of connection, communion and reflection.