
Instructions For A Body, 2019
In this piece, the body has experienced a certain dislocation. Casts made from plaster and bandage contribute to our associations with repair, fixing of fractures, while imitating skin flayed from its host. Domestic pipe and conduit components paraphrase the body, aptly named after body parts - elbow, coupling sleeve, male adapter and so on.
Various components have been organised into a familiar bodily arrangement, delicately placed inside a lined container, with others laid out on the ground in 'kit-form', or like remains from an archaeological dig, all indicating to the product of a bodily structure or system.
Installation view, in ‘another untitled show’, MAKE. North Docks, Liverpool. Wooden container, metal brackets, insulation fleece, carpet, plaster, domestic pipes, conduit fittings.

Instructions For A Body, 2019
Installation view. Wooden container, metal brackets, insulation fleece, carpet, plaster, domestic pipes, conduit fittings. Dimensions 210cm x 111cm x 26cm
Instructions For A Body, 2019
Installation detail view. Wooden container, metal brackets, insulation fleece, carpet, plaster, domestic pipes, conduit fittings. Dimensions variable

Instructions For A Body, 2019
Installation view. Wooden container, metal brackets, insulation fleece, carpet, plaster, domestic pipes, conduit fittings. Dimensions variable

Instructions For A Body, 2019
Detail view. Wooden container, insulation fleece, plaster, plastic pipes, conduit fittings. Dimensions variable
Instructions For A Body, 2019
Detail view. Wooden container, metal brackets, carpet, insulation fleece, plaster, plastic pipes, conduit fittings. Dimensions variable

Instructions For A Body, 2019
Detail view. Wooden container, metal brackets, carpet, insulation fleece, plaster, plastic pipes, conduit fittings. Dimensions variable

Instructions For A Body, 2019
Detail view. Plaster, plastic pipes and conduit fittings. Dimensions variable

Instructions For A Body, 2019
Detail view. Plaster, plastic pipes and conduit fittings. Dimensions variable

Instructions For A Body, 2019
Detail view. Plaster, plastic pipes and conduit fittings. Dimensions variable

Instructions For A Body, 2019
Detail view. Plaster, plastic pipes and conduit fittings. Dimensions variable
Instructions For A Body, 2019
Detail view. Plaster, plastic pipes and conduit fittings. Dimensions variable

To Disperse Is To Cause, 2020
In the first iteration for the exhibition vol.one.vol.two, Ahmet has started questioning ‘what it is to be a body now’ - directly quoting the artist Kira O’Reilly’s own practice and preoccupations concerning the body.
This piece replicates a former work — ‘Instructions For A Body’, similar in its aesthetic and construction, presented as a phantom impression of itself – made entirely from clear tape, it is as if it has shed its skin, leaving its remains scattered and discarded.
The presence of the box structures, like packaging from a modular framework are flung to one side, its contents laid out on the floor to make sense of its desired construction, pointing back to Ahmet’s preoccupation with the body serving as a system.
Installation (detail view). vol.one.vol.two. (first iteration), Exhibition Research Lab, Liverpool

To Disperse Is To Cause, 2020
Detail view, dimensions variable

To Disperse Is To Cause, 2020
Installation detail, dimensions variable

To Disperse Is To Cause, 2020
Detail view, dimensions variable

To Disperse Is To Cause, 2020
Detail view, dimensions variable

To Disperse Is To Cause, 2020
Detail view, dimensions variable

To Disperse Is To Cause, 2020
Detail view, dimensions variable

To Disperse Is To Cause, 2020
Detail view, dimensions variable

To Disperse Is To Cause, 2020
Installation detail

The Presence of Relics, 2020
In the second iteration of vol.one.vol.two, a bodily presence has been dismantled and re-packed ready for its next phase - the body and box becoming one, reilquarised like ‘philatory’, parading their saintly relics. In this ‘re-packed’ state, the skin-cases stand in as the body, containing its dismantled parts, concealed and obscured within these ‘other skins’.
With the body now disappearing, almost indistinct of shape or form, this new semblance of body exists, morphing into a type of mass. Where ‘To Disperse Is To Cause’ was clearly an unpacked body, with its containers discarded as obsolete, these new works are a reversed situation, that pack and send the body on its way.
Installation view, Relic I & II. vol.one.vol.two. (second iteration), Exhibition Research Lab, Liverpool

The Presence of Relics, 2020
Installation view, Relic I & II. Clear tape. Dimensions: 92cm x 64cm x 20 cm; 58cm x 43.5cm x 40cm

The Presence of Relics, 2020
Relic I (detail view). Clear tape. Dimensions: 92cm x 20cm x 12cm each / 92cm x 64cm x 20 cm

The Presence of Relics, 2020
Installation view, Relic I. Clear tape. Dimensions: 92cm x 20cm x 12cm each / 92cm x 64cm x 20 cm

The Presence of Relics, 2020
Detail view, Relic II. Clear tape. 58cm x 43.5cm x 40cm

The Presence of Relics, 2020
Detail view, Relic II

The Presence of Relics, 2020
Relic II (detail view). Dimensions variable

The Presence of Relics, 2020
Installation view, Relic III. Clear tape. Dimensions: 100cm x 64cm x 20cm
The Presence of Relics, 2020
Detail view, Relic III. Clear tape. Dimensions: 100cm x 64cm x 20cm

The Presence of Relics, 2020
Relic III (detail view)

Sensing The In-Between, 2020
Ahmet’s first choreographic object work is realised in ‘Sensing The In-Between’ - a collaboration with fellow artist Abbie Bradshaw. The work makes reference to and transpires from the piece ‘Plastisch’ (1969) by the artist Franz Erhard Walther. Ahmet’s rendition is made from clear tape, shaped into wearable shrouds that fit over bodies, attached via a walkway.
Gestures, movement, touch and space are explored as the bodies meet in the middle or the ‘in-between’, attached, yet separate in body or domain, where the sense of ‘self’ is put on hold. These enactments give the object a certain charge — possessing a life before and after the act, in a condition the artist expresses as a ‘pre-post-performance-prop’.
Live performance, Atrium Gallery, 2020. Performed by Abbie Bradshaw & Cos Ahmet. Footage courtesy: Imogen Stidworthy

Sensing The In-Between, 2020
Still. Live performance, Atrium Gallery. Performed by Abbie Bradshaw & Cos Ahmet. Footage: Imogen Stidworthy

Sensing The In-Between, 2020
Documentation from live performance, Atrium Gallery. Choreographic object (pre-performance), clear tape. 700cm x 175cm x 70cm

Sensing The In-Between, 2020
Documentation. Choreographic object, clear tape, performers. Collaboration with Abbie Bradshaw. Exhibition Research Lab

Sensing The In-Between, 2020
Documentation. Choreographic object, clear tape, performers

Sensing The In-Between, 2020
Documentation. Choreographic object, clear tape, performers

Sensing The In-Between, 2020
Documentation. Choreographic object, clear tape, performers

Sensing The In-Between, 2020
Documentation. Choreographic object, clear tape, performers

Sensing The In-Between, 2020
Documentation. Choreographic object, clear tape, performers

Sensing The In-Between, 2020
Documentation. Choreographic object (post-performance), clear tape, 700cm x 175cm x 70cm

Crushing Fractal Being, 2020
Crushing Fractal Being is an explorative performance piece, working with a new material. The feeling for, and getting a sense of a material in your hands and being part of that material, is something that Ahmet is very familiar with.
In the course of making this work, Ahmet had started reading the somatic poetry of CAConrad, inspiring the audio for this short video piece, his interpretation of a somatic poem, conveying what the material declared, resulting in this audio epigram:
‘celluloid. crushing fractal being, squeezing the depth. be every, fill something. are you now the music?’
Single channel performative film. Choreographic material, performer, somatic poem

Crushing Fractal Being, 2020
Video still

Crushing Fractal Being, 2020
Video still

Crushing Fractal Being, 2020
Video still

Crushing Fractal Being, 2020
Video still

Crushing Fractal Being, 2020
Video still

Curious Being (triptych), 2020
Created at the end of the first lockdown, ‘Curious Being’ realises this preoccupation that Ahmet has in concern with disappearing into his material objects, thus becoming the ‘operator’ of these objects.
Examining the erasure of the human subject, this work focuses on how the body could disappear, potentially becoming the mechanism for creating a new type of being, and follows his enquiries into body-material interventions, asking, ‘when does a body stop being (a body), and become the material’.
The object - choreographic in its nature, and made from survival blanket material, is loaded with its own connotations of protection, which drew Ahmet in fabricating something that would contain him, and all at once, change his entire being.
Single channel film. Performer, choreographic object. Performed by Cos Ahmet.

Curious Being, 2020
Installation view. Screening at Output Video Open, 2021, curated by Michael Lacey, Output Gallery, Liverpool

Curious Being, 2020
Installation view (video still)

Curious Being, 2020
Installation view (video still)

Transmitting, 2021
‘Transmitting’ is a culmination of three performances, in three locations, blending movement and the duality of bodies, shadows, sound and visuals, as these two protagonists travel through portals of space. The title refers to the various connections that transferred via the combined practices of artists, Cos Ahmet & Gary Finnegan’s first collaborative work.
Part choreographed, part improvised, bodies and shadows intermingle displaying a sense of appearing and disappearing, becoming part of the projection, taking on the nature of other bodies or entities. The sequence of movements and gestures within this triptych, transpired out of the specificity to the situations, locations and the artists responses to these times and spaces.
Single channel film & sound. Performed and filmed by Cos Ahmet & Gary Finnegan. Sound composed by Gary Finnegan. Film edited by Cos Ahmet

Transmitting, 2021
Video still (detail)

Transmitting, 2021
Video still (detail)

Transmitting, 2021
Video still (detail)

Transmitting, 2021
Installation view. Screening at Masters Graduate Showcase, Liverpool School of Art & Design.

Transmitting, 2021
Documentation from first live performance for ‘Transmitting’, MAKE. Liverpool.

A Meniscus (Between), 2021
‘A Meniscus (Between)’ consists of two live video performances, focusing on our haptic tendencies and instincts for touch - a meeting point of one skin and another, and how the limitation of an action makes us question how we behave through our own skin. With much of Ahmet’s repertoire consisting of materials that act as these secondary skins, and benefits here as a choreographic space, serving as a place where these everyday gestures, or ‘haptic nuances’, as Ahmet calls them, can exist.
Here, the use of ‘meniscus’ stands for a place that exists between the video performance’s split screen, but also, between the performers and the materiality of the choreographic object, allowing Ahmet to locate the viewer within the ‘in-between’ that occupies the work’s inside and outside interstices.
Two channel performance film, inverted audio. Performers: Abbie Bradshaw, Joshua Cook, Cos Ahmet. MA Fine Art Degree Show presentation, Atrium Gallery, Liverpool School of Art & Design.

A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Video still (detail)

A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Video still (detail)

A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Documentation. Clear tape, choreographic object, performers. Photo courtesy Mary Hennessy Jones

A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Documentation. Clear tape, choreographic object, performers. Photo courtesy Karen Halewood

A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Installation view. Two channel video projection, audio, choreographic object, clear tape, inverted audio. MA Fine Art Degree Show presentation, Atrium Gallery, Liverpool School of Art & Design.
A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Installation view. Two channel video projection, audio, choreographic object, clear tape.
A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Installation (detail view)
A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Installation (detail view)
A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Installation view. Choreographic object, clear tape

A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Installation view. Choreographic object, clear tape

A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Installation detail view. Choreographic object, clear tape

Your Normal Surface Is Not Available, 2021
Ahmet’s interest in disappearing or rather, merging into his work via his body-material interventions, and with skin; both human and non-human, a constituent part in recent solo and collaborative works, is also a theme in this work.
Part inspired by a live performance lecture given by the artist Donna Kukama - where the physical body is removed, existing in-between presence and invisibility, Ahmet’s performance video sees him being covered in small shards of survival blanket material, turning this reflective matter into a form of visual masking, in an attempt to replace his own skin with that of another.
Slowly he merges, practically disappearing into his surroundings, where this juncture of human and non-human skin homogenise.
Single channel film. Performer, material, audio

Your Normal Surface Is Not Available, 2021
Video still (detail)

Your Normal Surface Is Not Available, 2021
Video still (detail)
Your Normal Surface Is Not Available, 2021
Installation view. Video, audio, vision dome. X Gallery, Liverpool
Your Normal Surface Is Not Available, 2021
Installation (detail view)
Your Normal Surface Is Not Available, 2021
Installation (detail view)

EH-pih-DER-mis, 2021
The publication Enzyme 2: Life Systems (2021) is the collaborative project by artists Jorgge Menna Barreto & Joélson Buggilla, as a periodical, that also functions as a durational artwork. Enzyme 1: page, table & earth (2020) launched at the Jan van Eyck Academie, in The Netherlands.
Thinking of the periodical as part of an intellectual set of works of digestion, the artists proposed a second issue as their project for the Liverpool Biennial 2021: The Stomach & The Port, inviting curator, Sarah Kristin Happersberger, to join them as co-editor.
The artists, Cos Ahmet, Abbie Bradshaw, Bonnie Ora Sherk, Linda Jane James & Newton Harrison worked in collaboration on creating their own biome to this publication.
Skin Biome (detail) Printed image on translucent paper vellum. Collaboration with Jorgge Menna Barreto and Joélson Buggilla. Enzyme x Liverpool Biennial 2021

EH-pih-DER-mis, 2021
Skin Biome (page detail). Printed image on translucent paper vellum

EH-pih-DER-mis, 2021
Skin Biome (page detail). Printed image on translucent paper vellum

EH-pih-DER-mis, 2021
Skin Biome (page detail). Printed image on translucent paper vellum

EH-pih-DER-mis, 2021
Skin Biome (page detail). Printed image on translucent paper vellum

500, 1000, 1000, unknown, n.a, 3000, 4000, unlimited, 500, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, 2022
Appropriating Brian Eno & Peter Schmidt’s ‘Oblique Strategies’ as a site of departure for this video sculpture, for each of the 10 iterations, cards were picked at random and used to produce a moving image of any length or content from the dilemma presented on the card. The title of the piece, alludes to and makes a direct reference to publication history attached to the Oblique Strategies series, compiled from its first publication date in 1975 right up to the present day. The spontaneous nature of this deck of cards and the work produced for this project is echoed in the construction of this video sculpture.
Installation view. Single channel film & sound installation. In collaboration with Gary Finnegan. Presented as part of the group show, ‘This Is Not A Test’ Master Graduate Residency Award, Static Complex, Liverpool.

500, 1000, 1000, unknown, n.a, 3000, 4000, unlimited, 500, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, 2022
Installation view (detail)

500, 1000, 1000, unknown, n.a, 3000, 4000, unlimited, 500, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, 2022
Installation view (detail)

500, 1000, 1000, unknown, n.a, 3000, 4000, unlimited, 500, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, 2022
Video still (detail)

500, 1000, 1000, unknown, n.a, 3000, 4000, unlimited, 500, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, 2022
Video still (detail from Collapsed Lung, by Cos Ahmet)

500, 1000, 1000, unknown, n.a, 3000, 4000, unlimited, 500, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, 2022
Video still (detail from Collapsed Lung, by Cos Ahmet)

500, 1000, 1000, unknown, n.a, 3000, 4000, unlimited, 500, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, 2022
Video still (detail)

500, 1000, 1000, unknown, n.a, 3000, 4000, unlimited, 500, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, 2022
Video still (detail from Peripheral (double vision), by Cos Ahmet)

500, 1000, 1000, unknown, n.a, 3000, 4000, unlimited, 500, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, 2022
Video still (detail from Peripheral (double vision), by Cos Ahmet)

500, 1000, 1000, unknown, n.a, 3000, 4000, unlimited, 500, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, 2022
Video still (detail)

500, 1000, 1000, unknown, n.a, 3000, 4000, unlimited, 500, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, 2022
Video still (detail from :erase / ::remove_, by Cos Ahmet)

500, 1000, 1000, unknown, n.a, 3000, 4000, unlimited, 500, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, 2022
Video still (detail from :erase / ::remove_, by Cos Ahmet)

Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
As part of the exhibition ‘CLEARANCE’, staged in the former Liverpool department store ‘Lewis’s’, the artists Cos Ahmet & Gary Finnegan (both LSAD Alumni), worked in collaboration to create a film and sound installation, shown alongside other graduates & Alumni of the MA Fine Art programme, at John Moores, Liverpool School of Art & Design.
Incorporating various newspaper article pages that cover the windows of this former department store, the space is submerged in a half-light, that simultaneously illuminates the panels like stained glass in a pseudo-catherdral setting. The moving images that occupy the space are mirrored in the reflections from its metal floors, making this a fully immersive film and sound experience.
Video documentation. Three channel film & sound installation. In collaboration with Gary Finnegan. Part of the LSAD Alumni group exhibition ‘CLEARANCE’, The Lewis’s Building (a former dept. store), Liverpool.
Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)

Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)

Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)

Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)

Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)

Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation view

Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)

Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation view
Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)

Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)
Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation view

Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)
Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)
Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)

Proposition (a duet), 2022
The exhibition DOCUMENTS, examines video works and photography that document an action performed for the camera rather than to a live audience or gallery setting. Proposition (a duet), is a work that fits into this narrative, and subsequently featured in the exhibition. This performance consists of a choreographic object conspiring with the body to enact sculptural gestures.
Ahmet’s performances to camera often occur in a studio setting, and are spontaneous, ephemeral and improvised in nature. The artist will sometimes omit the presence of his own body from playing out these gestures, instead appointing another to stand in for him. Crucially, documentation of this nature exists as the residual evidence of art that is ‘caught in the act’, with the potential for public display, yet troubles the balance between document and art object.
Single channel performative film. Installation detail view. Screened in DOCUMENTS, curated by Jon Carritt, Gallery DODO, Brighton, 2023
Proposition (a duet), 2022
Installation detail view

Proposition (a duet), 2022
Installation detail view

Proposition (a duet), 2022
Video still. Single channel performative film

Proposition (a duet), 2022
Single channel performative film

A Light Pinkish Brown, 2023
In his ongoing studies of body and material, with skin playing the lead role in particular, this performance video sees Ahmet exposing his own body surface, placing it within the familiar backdrop of non-human materials that appear in his practice, featured here as peripheral membranes, posing as integuments.
Captured within a set of mirrors, both the human and the non-human facades manifest the choreographic space; they are reflected back as a blend of veneers in this juncture.
The title itself, is procured of miscellaneous attempts to describe the colour and tone of both flesh and skin, evocative of hexadecimal colour coding systems, that cautiously endeavour to bear the modest likeness to human skin.
Single channel performative film. Performer, clear tape, mirrors, sound. Performed, filmed and edited by the artist

A Light Pinkish Brown, 2023
Video still

A Light Pinkish Brown, 2023
Video still

A Light Pinkish Brown, 2023
Video still

A Light Pinkish Brown, 2023
Video still

A Light Pinkish Brown, 2023
Video still

A Light Pinkish Brown, 2023
Video still

Post Factum, 2023
As part of the Biennial ‘23 programme, coinciding with Liverpool Biennial 2023, The Royal Standard presents ‘Post Factum’, a show that revisits and re-imagines recent body’s of work of two artists, playing with the notion of a retrospective. Sculpture appears here as artefact, bolstering the film and sound arrangements.
The work ‘A History of Practice’, presented in the form of a light box, encases a facsimile of a hand written list, serving as an inventory - alluding to other works created, and exists as a votive offering, supports the other works, operating as ‘reminiscences’ or artefact - ‘post-factum’ in nature.
Installation view. Post Factum: An exhibition by Cos Ahmet & Gary Finnegan, part of Biennial 23, The Royal Standard, Liverpool.
Post Factum, 2023
Installation detail view. Lightbox, objects, film, sound, sculptural perspex screens, drapes, scaffold sheeting. Dimensions variable
Post Factum, 2023
Installation detail of ‘Transmitting’. Film and sound sculpture, sculptural perspex screens, drapes. Dimensions variable

Post Factum, 2023
Installation detail of ‘A Meniscus (Between). Film and sound, sculptural perspex screens, drapes. Dimensions variable

Post Factum, 2023
Detail view of ‘Linear’. Dimensions 70cm approx, with the film ‘A Meniscus (Between)’.

Post Factum, 2023
Detail view of ‘A History of Practice’ 30cm x 42cm x 10cm; with ‘Linear’, 70cm approx

Post Factum, 2023
Detail view of ‘A History of Practice’. Light box, printed facsimile of a hand-written list on paper, serving as an inventory. 30cm x 42cm x 10cm
Post Factum, 2023
Detail view of ‘A History of Practice’. Light box, printed facsimile of a hand-written list on paper, serving as an inventory

Post Factum, 2023
Detail view, of ‘A History of Practice’, ‘Linear’ and ‘Relic (diptych)’. Dimensions variable

Post Factum, 2023
Detail view of ‘Relic (diptych)’. Clear tape. Dimensions: 40cm x 40cm x 11.5cm and 40cm x 40cm x 13cm
Post Factum, 2023
Detail view of ‘Relic (diptych)’
Post Factum, 2023
Detail view of ‘Relic (diptych)’
C changed to S (Instruments), 2023
The title, alludes to the origins of a material that Ahmet has returned to to time and time again - clear tape. Originally manufactured in 1937 by Kinninmonth and Gray, the name was derived from cellophane, at that time a trademarked name in its own right, before the "C" changed to "S" so that the new name could be trademarked, to the generic named product that is synonymous to our everyday life.
Ahmet’s interpretation to this fact was ‘instrumental’ to its existence, and began to construct a sculptural piece, parts appropriated from other works - either existing, discarded or not used. Passive in its display, these limb-like instruments are not unlike diagrams that convey the molecular structure of ‘acrylates’ - making reference to polymers such as acrylic acid, used to generate the distinctive adhesive nature of clear tape.
Installation view. Clear tape and film, acrylic case. Dimensions, case: 120cm x 45cm x 30cm approx; space: 200cm x 200 cm x 200cm, approx
C changed to S (Instruments), 2023
Detail view, dimensions variable
C changed to S (Instruments), 2023
Detail view, dimensions variable
C changed to S (Instruments), 2023
Detail view, dimensions variable
C changed to S (Instruments), 2023
Detail view, dimensions variable
C changed to S (Instruments), 2023
Detail view, dimensions variable
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Installation of a work-in-progress (in a studio setting). Domestic pipes, conduit fittings and components, casts in plaster, silver and gold foil fragments, clear tape
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view













































































































Instructions For A Body, 2019
In this piece, the body has experienced a certain dislocation. Casts made from plaster and bandage contribute to our associations with repair, fixing of fractures, while imitating skin flayed from its host. Domestic pipe and conduit components paraphrase the body, aptly named after body parts - elbow, coupling sleeve, male adapter and so on.
Various components have been organised into a familiar bodily arrangement, delicately placed inside a lined container, with others laid out on the ground in 'kit-form', or like remains from an archaeological dig, all indicating to the product of a bodily structure or system.
Installation view, in ‘another untitled show’, MAKE. North Docks, Liverpool. Wooden container, metal brackets, insulation fleece, carpet, plaster, domestic pipes, conduit fittings.
Instructions For A Body, 2019
Installation view. Wooden container, metal brackets, insulation fleece, carpet, plaster, domestic pipes, conduit fittings. Dimensions 210cm x 111cm x 26cm
Instructions For A Body, 2019
Installation detail view. Wooden container, metal brackets, insulation fleece, carpet, plaster, domestic pipes, conduit fittings. Dimensions variable
Instructions For A Body, 2019
Installation view. Wooden container, metal brackets, insulation fleece, carpet, plaster, domestic pipes, conduit fittings. Dimensions variable
Instructions For A Body, 2019
Detail view. Wooden container, insulation fleece, plaster, plastic pipes, conduit fittings. Dimensions variable
Instructions For A Body, 2019
Detail view. Wooden container, metal brackets, carpet, insulation fleece, plaster, plastic pipes, conduit fittings. Dimensions variable
Instructions For A Body, 2019
Detail view. Wooden container, metal brackets, carpet, insulation fleece, plaster, plastic pipes, conduit fittings. Dimensions variable
Instructions For A Body, 2019
Detail view. Plaster, plastic pipes and conduit fittings. Dimensions variable
Instructions For A Body, 2019
Detail view. Plaster, plastic pipes and conduit fittings. Dimensions variable
Instructions For A Body, 2019
Detail view. Plaster, plastic pipes and conduit fittings. Dimensions variable
Instructions For A Body, 2019
Detail view. Plaster, plastic pipes and conduit fittings. Dimensions variable
Instructions For A Body, 2019
Detail view. Plaster, plastic pipes and conduit fittings. Dimensions variable
To Disperse Is To Cause, 2020
In the first iteration for the exhibition vol.one.vol.two, Ahmet has started questioning ‘what it is to be a body now’ - directly quoting the artist Kira O’Reilly’s own practice and preoccupations concerning the body.
This piece replicates a former work — ‘Instructions For A Body’, similar in its aesthetic and construction, presented as a phantom impression of itself – made entirely from clear tape, it is as if it has shed its skin, leaving its remains scattered and discarded.
The presence of the box structures, like packaging from a modular framework are flung to one side, its contents laid out on the floor to make sense of its desired construction, pointing back to Ahmet’s preoccupation with the body serving as a system.
Installation (detail view). vol.one.vol.two. (first iteration), Exhibition Research Lab, Liverpool
To Disperse Is To Cause, 2020
Detail view, dimensions variable
To Disperse Is To Cause, 2020
Installation detail, dimensions variable
To Disperse Is To Cause, 2020
Detail view, dimensions variable
To Disperse Is To Cause, 2020
Detail view, dimensions variable
To Disperse Is To Cause, 2020
Detail view, dimensions variable
To Disperse Is To Cause, 2020
Detail view, dimensions variable
To Disperse Is To Cause, 2020
Detail view, dimensions variable
To Disperse Is To Cause, 2020
Installation detail
The Presence of Relics, 2020
In the second iteration of vol.one.vol.two, a bodily presence has been dismantled and re-packed ready for its next phase - the body and box becoming one, reilquarised like ‘philatory’, parading their saintly relics. In this ‘re-packed’ state, the skin-cases stand in as the body, containing its dismantled parts, concealed and obscured within these ‘other skins’.
With the body now disappearing, almost indistinct of shape or form, this new semblance of body exists, morphing into a type of mass. Where ‘To Disperse Is To Cause’ was clearly an unpacked body, with its containers discarded as obsolete, these new works are a reversed situation, that pack and send the body on its way.
Installation view, Relic I & II. vol.one.vol.two. (second iteration), Exhibition Research Lab, Liverpool
The Presence of Relics, 2020
Installation view, Relic I & II. Clear tape. Dimensions: 92cm x 64cm x 20 cm; 58cm x 43.5cm x 40cm
The Presence of Relics, 2020
Relic I (detail view). Clear tape. Dimensions: 92cm x 20cm x 12cm each / 92cm x 64cm x 20 cm
The Presence of Relics, 2020
Installation view, Relic I. Clear tape. Dimensions: 92cm x 20cm x 12cm each / 92cm x 64cm x 20 cm
The Presence of Relics, 2020
Detail view, Relic II. Clear tape. 58cm x 43.5cm x 40cm
The Presence of Relics, 2020
Detail view, Relic II
The Presence of Relics, 2020
Relic II (detail view). Dimensions variable
The Presence of Relics, 2020
Installation view, Relic III. Clear tape. Dimensions: 100cm x 64cm x 20cm
The Presence of Relics, 2020
Detail view, Relic III. Clear tape. Dimensions: 100cm x 64cm x 20cm
The Presence of Relics, 2020
Relic III (detail view)
Sensing The In-Between, 2020
Ahmet’s first choreographic object work is realised in ‘Sensing The In-Between’ - a collaboration with fellow artist Abbie Bradshaw. The work makes reference to and transpires from the piece ‘Plastisch’ (1969) by the artist Franz Erhard Walther. Ahmet’s rendition is made from clear tape, shaped into wearable shrouds that fit over bodies, attached via a walkway.
Gestures, movement, touch and space are explored as the bodies meet in the middle or the ‘in-between’, attached, yet separate in body or domain, where the sense of ‘self’ is put on hold. These enactments give the object a certain charge — possessing a life before and after the act, in a condition the artist expresses as a ‘pre-post-performance-prop’.
Live performance, Atrium Gallery, 2020. Performed by Abbie Bradshaw & Cos Ahmet. Footage courtesy: Imogen Stidworthy
Sensing The In-Between, 2020
Still. Live performance, Atrium Gallery. Performed by Abbie Bradshaw & Cos Ahmet. Footage: Imogen Stidworthy
Sensing The In-Between, 2020
Documentation from live performance, Atrium Gallery. Choreographic object (pre-performance), clear tape. 700cm x 175cm x 70cm
Sensing The In-Between, 2020
Documentation. Choreographic object, clear tape, performers. Collaboration with Abbie Bradshaw. Exhibition Research Lab
Sensing The In-Between, 2020
Documentation. Choreographic object, clear tape, performers
Sensing The In-Between, 2020
Documentation. Choreographic object, clear tape, performers
Sensing The In-Between, 2020
Documentation. Choreographic object, clear tape, performers
Sensing The In-Between, 2020
Documentation. Choreographic object, clear tape, performers
Sensing The In-Between, 2020
Documentation. Choreographic object, clear tape, performers
Sensing The In-Between, 2020
Documentation. Choreographic object (post-performance), clear tape, 700cm x 175cm x 70cm
Crushing Fractal Being, 2020
Crushing Fractal Being is an explorative performance piece, working with a new material. The feeling for, and getting a sense of a material in your hands and being part of that material, is something that Ahmet is very familiar with.
In the course of making this work, Ahmet had started reading the somatic poetry of CAConrad, inspiring the audio for this short video piece, his interpretation of a somatic poem, conveying what the material declared, resulting in this audio epigram:
‘celluloid. crushing fractal being, squeezing the depth. be every, fill something. are you now the music?’
Single channel performative film. Choreographic material, performer, somatic poem
Crushing Fractal Being, 2020
Video still
Crushing Fractal Being, 2020
Video still
Crushing Fractal Being, 2020
Video still
Crushing Fractal Being, 2020
Video still
Crushing Fractal Being, 2020
Video still
Curious Being (triptych), 2020
Created at the end of the first lockdown, ‘Curious Being’ realises this preoccupation that Ahmet has in concern with disappearing into his material objects, thus becoming the ‘operator’ of these objects.
Examining the erasure of the human subject, this work focuses on how the body could disappear, potentially becoming the mechanism for creating a new type of being, and follows his enquiries into body-material interventions, asking, ‘when does a body stop being (a body), and become the material’.
The object - choreographic in its nature, and made from survival blanket material, is loaded with its own connotations of protection, which drew Ahmet in fabricating something that would contain him, and all at once, change his entire being.
Single channel film. Performer, choreographic object. Performed by Cos Ahmet.
Curious Being, 2020
Installation view. Screening at Output Video Open, 2021, curated by Michael Lacey, Output Gallery, Liverpool
Curious Being, 2020
Installation view (video still)
Curious Being, 2020
Installation view (video still)
Transmitting, 2021
‘Transmitting’ is a culmination of three performances, in three locations, blending movement and the duality of bodies, shadows, sound and visuals, as these two protagonists travel through portals of space. The title refers to the various connections that transferred via the combined practices of artists, Cos Ahmet & Gary Finnegan’s first collaborative work.
Part choreographed, part improvised, bodies and shadows intermingle displaying a sense of appearing and disappearing, becoming part of the projection, taking on the nature of other bodies or entities. The sequence of movements and gestures within this triptych, transpired out of the specificity to the situations, locations and the artists responses to these times and spaces.
Single channel film & sound. Performed and filmed by Cos Ahmet & Gary Finnegan. Sound composed by Gary Finnegan. Film edited by Cos Ahmet
Transmitting, 2021
Video still (detail)
Transmitting, 2021
Video still (detail)
Transmitting, 2021
Video still (detail)
Transmitting, 2021
Installation view. Screening at Masters Graduate Showcase, Liverpool School of Art & Design.
Transmitting, 2021
Documentation from first live performance for ‘Transmitting’, MAKE. Liverpool.
A Meniscus (Between), 2021
‘A Meniscus (Between)’ consists of two live video performances, focusing on our haptic tendencies and instincts for touch - a meeting point of one skin and another, and how the limitation of an action makes us question how we behave through our own skin. With much of Ahmet’s repertoire consisting of materials that act as these secondary skins, and benefits here as a choreographic space, serving as a place where these everyday gestures, or ‘haptic nuances’, as Ahmet calls them, can exist.
Here, the use of ‘meniscus’ stands for a place that exists between the video performance’s split screen, but also, between the performers and the materiality of the choreographic object, allowing Ahmet to locate the viewer within the ‘in-between’ that occupies the work’s inside and outside interstices.
Two channel performance film, inverted audio. Performers: Abbie Bradshaw, Joshua Cook, Cos Ahmet. MA Fine Art Degree Show presentation, Atrium Gallery, Liverpool School of Art & Design.
A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Video still (detail)
A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Video still (detail)
A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Documentation. Clear tape, choreographic object, performers. Photo courtesy Mary Hennessy Jones
A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Documentation. Clear tape, choreographic object, performers. Photo courtesy Karen Halewood
A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Installation view. Two channel video projection, audio, choreographic object, clear tape, inverted audio. MA Fine Art Degree Show presentation, Atrium Gallery, Liverpool School of Art & Design.
A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Installation view. Two channel video projection, audio, choreographic object, clear tape.
A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Installation (detail view)
A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Installation (detail view)
A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Installation view. Choreographic object, clear tape
A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Installation view. Choreographic object, clear tape
A Meniscus (Between), 2021
Installation detail view. Choreographic object, clear tape
Your Normal Surface Is Not Available, 2021
Ahmet’s interest in disappearing or rather, merging into his work via his body-material interventions, and with skin; both human and non-human, a constituent part in recent solo and collaborative works, is also a theme in this work.
Part inspired by a live performance lecture given by the artist Donna Kukama - where the physical body is removed, existing in-between presence and invisibility, Ahmet’s performance video sees him being covered in small shards of survival blanket material, turning this reflective matter into a form of visual masking, in an attempt to replace his own skin with that of another.
Slowly he merges, practically disappearing into his surroundings, where this juncture of human and non-human skin homogenise.
Single channel film. Performer, material, audio
Your Normal Surface Is Not Available, 2021
Video still (detail)
Your Normal Surface Is Not Available, 2021
Video still (detail)
Your Normal Surface Is Not Available, 2021
Installation view. Video, audio, vision dome. X Gallery, Liverpool
Your Normal Surface Is Not Available, 2021
Installation (detail view)
Your Normal Surface Is Not Available, 2021
Installation (detail view)
EH-pih-DER-mis, 2021
The publication Enzyme 2: Life Systems (2021) is the collaborative project by artists Jorgge Menna Barreto & Joélson Buggilla, as a periodical, that also functions as a durational artwork. Enzyme 1: page, table & earth (2020) launched at the Jan van Eyck Academie, in The Netherlands.
Thinking of the periodical as part of an intellectual set of works of digestion, the artists proposed a second issue as their project for the Liverpool Biennial 2021: The Stomach & The Port, inviting curator, Sarah Kristin Happersberger, to join them as co-editor.
The artists, Cos Ahmet, Abbie Bradshaw, Bonnie Ora Sherk, Linda Jane James & Newton Harrison worked in collaboration on creating their own biome to this publication.
Skin Biome (detail) Printed image on translucent paper vellum. Collaboration with Jorgge Menna Barreto and Joélson Buggilla. Enzyme x Liverpool Biennial 2021
EH-pih-DER-mis, 2021
Skin Biome (page detail). Printed image on translucent paper vellum
EH-pih-DER-mis, 2021
Skin Biome (page detail). Printed image on translucent paper vellum
EH-pih-DER-mis, 2021
Skin Biome (page detail). Printed image on translucent paper vellum
EH-pih-DER-mis, 2021
Skin Biome (page detail). Printed image on translucent paper vellum
500, 1000, 1000, unknown, n.a, 3000, 4000, unlimited, 500, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, n.a, 2022
Appropriating Brian Eno & Peter Schmidt’s ‘Oblique Strategies’ as a site of departure for this video sculpture, for each of the 10 iterations, cards were picked at random and used to produce a moving image of any length or content from the dilemma presented on the card. The title of the piece, alludes to and makes a direct reference to publication history attached to the Oblique Strategies series, compiled from its first publication date in 1975 right up to the present day. The spontaneous nature of this deck of cards and the work produced for this project is echoed in the construction of this video sculpture.
Installation view. Single channel film & sound installation. In collaboration with Gary Finnegan. Presented as part of the group show, ‘This Is Not A Test’ Master Graduate Residency Award, Static Complex, Liverpool.
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Installation view (detail)
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Installation view (detail)
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Video still (detail)
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Video still (detail from Collapsed Lung, by Cos Ahmet)
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Video still (detail from Collapsed Lung, by Cos Ahmet)
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Video still (detail)
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Video still (detail from Peripheral (double vision), by Cos Ahmet)
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Video still (detail from Peripheral (double vision), by Cos Ahmet)
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Video still (detail)
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Video still (detail from :erase / ::remove_, by Cos Ahmet)
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Video still (detail from :erase / ::remove_, by Cos Ahmet)
Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
As part of the exhibition ‘CLEARANCE’, staged in the former Liverpool department store ‘Lewis’s’, the artists Cos Ahmet & Gary Finnegan (both LSAD Alumni), worked in collaboration to create a film and sound installation, shown alongside other graduates & Alumni of the MA Fine Art programme, at John Moores, Liverpool School of Art & Design.
Incorporating various newspaper article pages that cover the windows of this former department store, the space is submerged in a half-light, that simultaneously illuminates the panels like stained glass in a pseudo-catherdral setting. The moving images that occupy the space are mirrored in the reflections from its metal floors, making this a fully immersive film and sound experience.
Video documentation. Three channel film & sound installation. In collaboration with Gary Finnegan. Part of the LSAD Alumni group exhibition ‘CLEARANCE’, The Lewis’s Building (a former dept. store), Liverpool.
Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)
Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)
Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)
Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)
Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)
Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation view
Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)
Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation view
Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)
Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)
Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation view
Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)
Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)
Neither Parallel Nor At Right Angles, 2022
Installation (detail view)
Proposition (a duet), 2022
The exhibition DOCUMENTS, examines video works and photography that document an action performed for the camera rather than to a live audience or gallery setting. Proposition (a duet), is a work that fits into this narrative, and subsequently featured in the exhibition. This performance consists of a choreographic object conspiring with the body to enact sculptural gestures.
Ahmet’s performances to camera often occur in a studio setting, and are spontaneous, ephemeral and improvised in nature. The artist will sometimes omit the presence of his own body from playing out these gestures, instead appointing another to stand in for him. Crucially, documentation of this nature exists as the residual evidence of art that is ‘caught in the act’, with the potential for public display, yet troubles the balance between document and art object.
Single channel performative film. Installation detail view. Screened in DOCUMENTS, curated by Jon Carritt, Gallery DODO, Brighton, 2023
Proposition (a duet), 2022
Installation detail view
Proposition (a duet), 2022
Installation detail view
Proposition (a duet), 2022
Video still. Single channel performative film
Proposition (a duet), 2022
Single channel performative film
A Light Pinkish Brown, 2023
In his ongoing studies of body and material, with skin playing the lead role in particular, this performance video sees Ahmet exposing his own body surface, placing it within the familiar backdrop of non-human materials that appear in his practice, featured here as peripheral membranes, posing as integuments.
Captured within a set of mirrors, both the human and the non-human facades manifest the choreographic space; they are reflected back as a blend of veneers in this juncture.
The title itself, is procured of miscellaneous attempts to describe the colour and tone of both flesh and skin, evocative of hexadecimal colour coding systems, that cautiously endeavour to bear the modest likeness to human skin.
Single channel performative film. Performer, clear tape, mirrors, sound. Performed, filmed and edited by the artist
A Light Pinkish Brown, 2023
Video still
A Light Pinkish Brown, 2023
Video still
A Light Pinkish Brown, 2023
Video still
A Light Pinkish Brown, 2023
Video still
A Light Pinkish Brown, 2023
Video still
A Light Pinkish Brown, 2023
Video still
Post Factum, 2023
As part of the Biennial ‘23 programme, coinciding with Liverpool Biennial 2023, The Royal Standard presents ‘Post Factum’, a show that revisits and re-imagines recent body’s of work of two artists, playing with the notion of a retrospective. Sculpture appears here as artefact, bolstering the film and sound arrangements.
The work ‘A History of Practice’, presented in the form of a light box, encases a facsimile of a hand written list, serving as an inventory - alluding to other works created, and exists as a votive offering, supports the other works, operating as ‘reminiscences’ or artefact - ‘post-factum’ in nature.
Installation view. Post Factum: An exhibition by Cos Ahmet & Gary Finnegan, part of Biennial 23, The Royal Standard, Liverpool.
Post Factum, 2023
Installation detail view. Lightbox, objects, film, sound, sculptural perspex screens, drapes, scaffold sheeting. Dimensions variable
Post Factum, 2023
Installation detail of ‘Transmitting’. Film and sound sculpture, sculptural perspex screens, drapes. Dimensions variable
Post Factum, 2023
Installation detail of ‘A Meniscus (Between). Film and sound, sculptural perspex screens, drapes. Dimensions variable
Post Factum, 2023
Detail view of ‘Linear’. Dimensions 70cm approx, with the film ‘A Meniscus (Between)’.
Post Factum, 2023
Detail view of ‘A History of Practice’ 30cm x 42cm x 10cm; with ‘Linear’, 70cm approx
Post Factum, 2023
Detail view of ‘A History of Practice’. Light box, printed facsimile of a hand-written list on paper, serving as an inventory. 30cm x 42cm x 10cm
Post Factum, 2023
Detail view of ‘A History of Practice’. Light box, printed facsimile of a hand-written list on paper, serving as an inventory
Post Factum, 2023
Detail view, of ‘A History of Practice’, ‘Linear’ and ‘Relic (diptych)’. Dimensions variable
Post Factum, 2023
Detail view of ‘Relic (diptych)’. Clear tape. Dimensions: 40cm x 40cm x 11.5cm and 40cm x 40cm x 13cm
Post Factum, 2023
Detail view of ‘Relic (diptych)’
Post Factum, 2023
Detail view of ‘Relic (diptych)’
C changed to S (Instruments), 2023
The title, alludes to the origins of a material that Ahmet has returned to to time and time again - clear tape. Originally manufactured in 1937 by Kinninmonth and Gray, the name was derived from cellophane, at that time a trademarked name in its own right, before the "C" changed to "S" so that the new name could be trademarked, to the generic named product that is synonymous to our everyday life.
Ahmet’s interpretation to this fact was ‘instrumental’ to its existence, and began to construct a sculptural piece, parts appropriated from other works - either existing, discarded or not used. Passive in its display, these limb-like instruments are not unlike diagrams that convey the molecular structure of ‘acrylates’ - making reference to polymers such as acrylic acid, used to generate the distinctive adhesive nature of clear tape.
Installation view. Clear tape and film, acrylic case. Dimensions, case: 120cm x 45cm x 30cm approx; space: 200cm x 200 cm x 200cm, approx
C changed to S (Instruments), 2023
Detail view, dimensions variable
C changed to S (Instruments), 2023
Detail view, dimensions variable
C changed to S (Instruments), 2023
Detail view, dimensions variable
C changed to S (Instruments), 2023
Detail view, dimensions variable
C changed to S (Instruments), 2023
Detail view, dimensions variable
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Installation of a work-in-progress (in a studio setting). Domestic pipes, conduit fittings and components, casts in plaster, silver and gold foil fragments, clear tape
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view
A Dislocation Occurring, 2024
Detail view