At once elegiac as it is urgent, Listening All Night To The Rain by John Akomfrah unfolds as a monumental, multi-screen filmic installation that weaves together questions of ecology, empire, and migration through a layered sonic lens. First commissioned for the British Pavilion at La Biennale di Venezia in 2024, the work is reimagined here in the Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza for TBA21 Thyssen-Bornemisza Art Contemporary.

We know ourselves as part and as a crowd, in an unknown that does not terrify. We cry our cry of poetry. Our boats are open, and we sail them for everyone.
"Poetics of relation" (1990), Édouard Glissant (1928-2011)
Venice Was All in Gold. Venecia era toda de oro, 1961

British artist John Akomfrah’s (b. 1957. Accra, Ghana) monumental commission, entitled Listening All Night To The Rain,was first commissioned for the British Pavilion at La Biennale di Venezia in 2024 and continues his abiding interest in post-colonialism, ecology and the politics of aesthetics with a renewed focus on the sonic. Drawing its title from Chinese writer and artist Su Dongpo’s (1037 – 1101) poetry that meditates upon the transitory nature of life during a period of political exile, the exhibition is seen as a manifesto that encourages the act of listening as a form of activism. In five overlapping multimedia and audio installations arranged into ‘cantos’ or movements and reimagined for Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza’s galleries, Akomfrah positions various theories of ‘acoustemology’: a portmanteau combining ‘acoustic’ and ‘epistemology’ coined by ethnomusicologist Steven Feld that denotes how the sonic experience mirrors and shapes our world.

The exhibition weaves together newly filmed material with found still images, video footage, audio clips and texts from hundreds of international archive collections and libraries. Akomfrah juxtaposes these documented geopolitical narratives with imagined tableaux – often surreal or dreamlike in nature – in order to reposition the role of art in its ability to write history in unexpected ways, forming critical and poetic connections between different geographies and time periods. Through methods of bricolage (the reuse of diverse materials in order to produce new meanings), non-linearity and repetition, the artist tells stories from the five continents through the ‘memories’ of multiple filmed characters who represent the migrant community in Britain. 

Evoking a sense of contemplation and reverie, Listening All Night To The Rain houses a series of sculptural installations with embedded screens that are inspired by the structure and form of altarpieces from religious architectures. Each gallery space layers a specific colour field influenced by the paintings of American artist Mark Rothko (1903 – 1970) in order to point to the ways in which abstraction can represent the fundamental nature of human drama. 

Canto I opens on the exterior of the museum’s building, framing voices and imagery from the Global South as a meditation on empire, migration and the sonic traces of climate colonialism. Inside, the exhibition opens with a presentation of historic artwork drawn from the Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza’s collection, tracing formal and conceptual threads that connect to Akomfrah’s practice. The selection reflects his sustained engagement with art history as both language and lineage - an archive through which he examines modernity and its role as a witness to history. Gestures of abstraction, rhythm and rupture that animate twentieth-century painting and sculpture find renewed resonance in Akomfrah’s cinematic grammar, where modernism’s aesthetic experiments are recast through postcolonial thought. For Akomfrah, art history is an active terrain - one he revisits to expose its omissions, expand its possibilities and imagine new genealogies of resistance and repair.

Tarini Malik, Curator of the exhibition.

John Akomfrah

John Akomfrah is a hugely respected artist and filmmaker, whose works are characterised by their investigations into memory, post-colonialism, temporality and aesthetics and often explore the experiences of migrant diasporas globally

Akomfrah was a founding member of the influential Black Audio Film Collective, which started in London in 1982 alongside artists David Lawson and Lina Gopaul, who he still collaborates with today alongside Ashitey Akomfrah as Smoking Dogs Films. Their first film, Handsworth Songs (1986) explored events surrounding the 1985 riots in Birmingham and London through a charged combination of archive footage, still photos, newly shot material and newsreel. The film won several international prizes and established a multi-layered visual style that has become a recognisable motif of Akomfrah’s practice. 

Other works include the three-screen installation The Unfinished Conversation (2012), a moving portrait of the cultural theorist Stuart Hall’s life and work; Peripeteia (2012), an imagined drama visualising the lives of individuals included in two 16th century portraits by Albrecht Dürer and Mnemosyne (2010) which exposes experiences of migrants in the UK, questioning the notion of Britain as a promised land by revealing the realities of economic hardship and casual racism. 

In 2015, Akomfrah premiered his three-screen film installation Vertigo Sea (2015), which explores what Ralph Waldo Emerson calls ‘the sublime seas’. Fusing archival material, readings from classical sources and newly shot footage, Vertigo Seahighlights the cruelty of the whaling industry and juxtaposes it with scenes of many generations of migrants making epic crossings of the ocean for a better life. In 2017, Akomfrah presented Purple (2017), which addresses climate change, human communities and wilderness; and Precarity (2017), following the life of forgotten New Orleans jazz trumpeter Charles ‘Buddy’ Bolden.

John Akomfrah outside the British Pavilion 2024. Image by Jack Hems.
Even in the vast and mysterious reaches of the sea we are brought back to the fundamental truth that nothing lives to itself.
"Silent Spring" (1962), Rachel Carson (1907-64)

Tarini Malik

Tarini Malik outside the British Pavilion. "Listening All Night To The Rain", by John Akomfrah, British Pavilion 2024. Image by Jack Hems.

Tarini Malik is currently Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at the Royal Academy of Arts. She was the Shane Ackroyd Associate Curator of the British Pavilion at the 2024 edition of Venice Biennale working with artist John Akomfrah. 

Previously, she was a curator at the Whitechapel Gallery where she was responsible for the planning of artistic programmes, and at the Hayward Gallery where she organised a series of landmark group exhibitions, as well as the first solo presentations in the UK of several international artists whose practices deal with themes of post-colonialism and identity politics

From 2013-2017, Malik was Head of Exhibitions for artist Isaac Julien and Research Curator with Mark Nash on several major touring international exhibitions

In 2015, she was Research Curator for the main exhibition at the Venice Biennale curated by Okwui Enwezor, entitled “All The Worlds Futures”. Malik has also held curatorial posts at Fiorucci Art Trust, Frieze Projects and Serpentine Galleries. She has published her writing in various magazines and journals and lectured widely on cultural studies and curating.

Cantos

In five overlapping multimedia and audio installations arranged into ‘cantos’ or movements and reimagined for Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza’s galleries, Akomfrah positions various theories of ‘acoustemology’: a portmanteau combining ‘acoustic’ and ‘epistemology’ coined by ethnomusicologist Steven Feld that denotes how the sonic experience mirrors and shapes our world.

Canto I opens British-Ghanaian artist John Akomfrah’s Listening All Night to the Rain, first presented at the British Pavilion at La Biennale di Venezia in 2024. This series of interlocking video and sound installations explores the structural forces behind climate colonialism and forced migration, and how they register sonically. Framed as an intervention with the museum’s neoclassical architecture, Canto I foregrounds imagery and voices from the Global South, honouring those marginalised by the legacies of imperialism

Akomfrah’s signature filmic style of montage combines newly filmed material with archival photographs, footage, sound and text. Appearing as mist, rain, floods and open seas, water is a central motif of the artwork and forms the connective tissue that holds the many visual and sonic narratives together. Like sound, it moves in waves, echoing the dispersal of diaspora communities across geographies, and the fluctuations of time. Canto I introduces the exhibition’s key themes, interweaving images of empire, protest, migration and racial injustice into a layered meditation on memory and resistance.

John Akomfrah. Listening All Night To The Rain, 2024 (still)
John Akomfrah. Listening All Night To The Rain.  CANTO IV.  Installation View: Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, 2025.  © Image by Maru Serrano.

In Canto IV, various figures appear on a coastal shoreline, surrounded by the remnants of past lives: fruits, vegetables, butterfly specimens, rubber ducks and defunct listening devices. Beneath the water, shoals of fish scatter amidst the sound of sea shanties and shipbuilding, evoking histories of exploration, labour and displacement. Archival images of ancestors are interspersed with contemporary characters: a young Inuit woman contemplates her place in a disenfranchised world, while a dockworker surveys a coastline transformed by industry, overfishing and the long shadow of empire. Exploring listening as a way of knowing and connecting across human and non-human worlds, Akomfrah’s work collapses fixed notions of time and place by layering visual and sonic histories from diverse origins and styles.

Canto VII reflects Akomfrah’s commitment to addressing pivotal moments in British history through a critical lens. Reframing narratives of mass migration, archival imagery revisits the Windrush generation; named for those who arrived from the Caribbean on the HMT Empire Windrush in 1948. Depicting the everyday lives of women and children, the work also highlights the racism and hardship migrants faced during Britain’s post-industrial decline from the late 1960s onward. Filmed across Yorkshire and Scotland, these landscapes become imagined homelands for characters whose memories unfold on screen. The Canto concludes with fragments from speeches by Martin Luther King Jr, Malcolm X, Angela Davis and others, connecting the black British experience to global movements for justice.

John Akomfrah. Listening All Night To The Rain. CANTO VII. Installation View: Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, 2025. Image by Maru Serrano. 
John Akomfrah. Listening All Night To The Rain. CANTO VI. Installation View: Museo Nacional 

Canto VI traces pivotal moments in the histories of colonised nations, focusing on the independence movements and uprisings that swept Africa and Asia from the 1940s to the 1970s. Archival footage reflects on the Mau Mau rebellion in Kenya (1952–1960) and the brutality of Britain’s counter-insurgency campaign. In the Congo, it follows the struggle for independence from Belgian colonialism, highlighting Patrice Lumumba and the challenges of post-colonial nation-building. Nigeria’s path to independence and the 1970 civil war reveals the tragic consequences of colonial amalgamation, while the Partition of India in 1947 is seen through emblematic figures such as Jawaharlal Nehru. Akomfrah frames these histories through the diasporic experience in Britain, connecting personal memory to the wider, enduring legacies of colonialism.

Our struggle is also a struggle of memory against forgetting.
"Choosing the margin as a space of radical openness" (1989), Bell Hooks (1952-2021)

Underscoring the interconnectedness between military conflicts and ecological devastation - from ecocide to ecoterrorism – in Canto VIII, the artist reveals inalterable? impacts on the environment. In the context of the Korean War (1950-53), Akomfrah highlights the devastating impact of the conflict, particularly the extensive bombing campaigns by the US that led to widespread destruction through pesticides like dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) in mass quantities. Footage from the Vietnam War (1955-75) emphasises how the war not only caused severe damage to human life, but also to the land. Surreal and dreamlike tableaux also recur throughout: a camera tracks over horizontal bodies in states of rest or death, framed by eclectic displays of anachronistic objects and a soundscape of echoes and reverberations, including recordings of environmentalists warning of ecological devastation.

John Akomfrah. Listening All Night To The Rain. CANTO VIII. Installation View: Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, 2025. Image by Maru Serrano. 
I’m like a little boat sensing an expanse of endless water here under groves of trees face to face in the bedroom listening all night to the rain.
"Poem 83", Su Dongpo (1037-1101)

Timeline

The following timeline is indicative of some of the multiple geopolitical narratives that inform Listening All Night To The Rain through the layering of a vast assemblage of archival material, as well as to the global socio-political and cultural shifts that have shaped John Akomfrah’s artistic practice more broadly. 

They indicate various markers in time that point to patterns and cadences in history and the ways in which narratives from the Global South have influenced one another. The lives and work of cultural and political figures are woven through stories of wars, migrations and seismic moments in the preservation of our natural world, acting as ghosts or spectres of the past that materialise in our present.