Broken Ecologies

Exhibition

Broken Ecologies

15 March 2026 - 19 April 2026

Castlefield Gallery

An exhibition about power, protest, memory and survival by Alana Lake and Deeqa Ismail 

 

This exhibition was co-selected from proposals made by Castlefield Gallery Associates, by Castlefield Gallery’s Head of Programmes, Matthew Pendergast, and guest selector, Curator, Cultural Producer, Art Consultant & Writer Cindy Sissokho. Sissokho is the Associate Program Director (Africa & Europe) at KADIST, she was the co-Curator of the French Pavilion at the Venice Biennale (2024) and recently worked as a Curator at the Wellcome Collection, London. 

Through large-scale print works, film and sculpture, this exhibition reflects on power, protest, memory, and survival. Exhibiting together for the first time, Deeqa Ismail and Alana Lake’s works weave together narratives that are at once personal, political and historical. Their work is as vibrant as it is fragile, with layers of texture and imagery inviting us to consider how histories of erasure and survival continue to shape the present – especially in a moment marked by war, censorship, and the criminalisation of protest.

“Against a backdrop of climate crisis, social inequality, political unrest, and the erosion of human rights, the proposed exhibition asks: what is the role of the artist in times of crisis?”
Alana Lake & Deeqa Ismail

Printmaking frequently acts as the starting point in Ismail’s work, which explores speculative ecology, memory, and the repetition of erased or hidden histories. Drawing on family archives and on her investigation into what she describes as Somali culture’s ‘stuck-ness,’ Ismail reflects on the feeling of living within recurring histories and carrying them across generations. For this exhibition, Ismail is producing a new series of large-scale woodblock prints, layering imagery, wood grain patterns and cosmic textures, treating the carved surface as an astral plane. Figures emerge moving through multiple worlds at once, forming a threshold between the living, the lost, and those preserved in remembrance.

Lake’s works combine glass, marble, waste materials, metal, concrete and wax to explore themes of compulsion and risk, whilst exposing the fragile architectures that shape contemporary life. Her work with glass invokes themes of instability and precarity. In places, flecks of green uranium glass melt into pools of deep red and copper hues that resemble blood or bodily fluids. The colour palette evokes environmental degradation, war, contamination, and the depletion of natural resources. Shaped by a working-class, post-industrial upbringing, she gravitates toward materials that carry social and emotional density: fractured car parts, cast wax, hand-blown glass, and waste fragments that bear the marks of labour and use. Through sculpture, she investigates how objects are ritualised, fetishised, and invested with symbolic weight, tracing the connections between personal experience and broader contemporary conditions. Lake’s piece, With Force (2025), a cast glass police truncheon, reflects on the shifting boundaries of state power, public voice, and the right to assemble and protest. While her marble baseball bat aligns contemporary violence with the material language of classical sculpture.

Ismail and Lake have curated a dynamic public programme to accompany the exhibition. The exhibition has been devised alongside being a site for a public programme of events. This programme will transform the artworks into something collective, activating the gallery as a space of refusal, care, and shared experience.

Guided by this ethos, the exhibition is taking shape as an evolving dialogue expressed through materials, gestures, and forms, between the artists, their works, and the audiences who move among them.

 

Public Programme of Events

 

A screening of films by LOkesh Ghai, an artist and researcher working with marginalised heritage craft communities in India, and Mohammad Ali Sheida, an award-winning Afghan filmmaker and photographer living in exile in Manchester, UK. Founder of Rowzana Production, a company dedicated to Afghan culture and women’s rights, he is known for works such as Four Seasons of Bamyan and Right to Ride.

A performance and screening by xhi Ndubisi, a visual artist, writer, and curator, whose work explores storytelling, oral tradition, and the Black female body through performance, installation, and socially engaged practice.

A performance by mandla, a Zimbabwean-born, Manchester-based queer writer, performer, and curator known for their powerful, autobiographical work exploring race, trauma, migration, and LGBTQ+ identity.

Please see Castlefield Gallery’s website in the coming months for a full schedule and bookings.

Castlefield Gallery is generously funded by

 

 

Broken Ecologies is supported with funding from The Fenton Arts Trust and The Haworth Trust.

Images

Banner
  • Alana Lake, Fallout, 2025. Image courtesy of the artist

From left to right, top to bottom:

  • Alana Lake, Fallout, 2025. Image courtesy of the artist
  • Deeqa Ismail, Tempo, 2025. Image courtesy of the artist
  • Deeqa Ismail, Aqal Hijab, 2025. Image courtesy of the artist
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