SUBMERGE
9 - 18 October 2025
FIVE YEARS (London, UK)
Programmed by regiment
London, 16 September 2025 – Five Years is pleased to present Submerge, a solo exhibition by Elise Guillaume. Running from 9 to 19 October, the exhibition brings together sound, sculpture, and photography to insist on submersion as a mode of becoming-with: a confrontation with interdependence, accountability, and the precarious negotiations of coexistence with marine life.
What lies beneath the surface of liquid?
Beyond habitual ways of mapping, measuring, and controlling waterscapes, Submerge asks us to attend to what slips, what resists containment, what moves between scales of being and imagining. To submerge is first physical: the sensation of water holding you, the body dissolving, porous, exchanging fluids. Submersion can be pleasure, surrender, awe. Yet waters that hold can also take: for some, water is fear; for many, submersion is not chosen. As temperatures rise, glaciers collapse, seas advance. Coastal populations are displaced, not by choice but by force. The water engulfs, the sea swallows. Submergence becomes dispossession, violence, grief: an emergency driven by extraction, colonisation, negligence sustained for profit. Higher walls, stronger borders, tighter policies – illusions of control. None can contain what the planet demands. We are called to submerge, but how?
Guillaume’s exhibition does not resolve these contradictions but lingers within them. Immersion, here, is intimacy and threat, pleasure and dispossession. The works invite us to submerge otherwise: to listen, to transform, to surrender.
To listen, bodily
Waves of Resonance gathers underwater recordings from the North Sea and the Arctic: waves crashing, ice fracturing, shells dragged by tides, whales calling, dolphins straining to be heard above the violence of ships, of metallic impacts, of pile-driving. Sound becomes a field where human and more-than-human collide, overlap, reverberate.
Listening here is neither passive nor merely auditory. It is a demand to quiet down, retune, and learn to register the world differently. To listen with the body (not only with ears) is to become porous – like antennae immersed in a sea of vibrations, resonating beyond the thin skin, attuned to intersubjective currents. We are reminded: we are not separate.
Yet listening also reveals asymmetries. If we hear the ocean, how does the ocean hear us? Marine creatures live with and against anthropogenic infrastructures, forced to adapt to human-made violences. To listen is therefore an act of accountability: attending to what our presence disrupts, a willingness to respond, to alter, to be changed.
This is not merely speculative. Developed in collaboration with environmental psychologist Marine Severin and acoustic ecologist Clea Parcerisas, the piece draws from research workshops across the UK, Belgium, and France, where participants experienced marine sound as affective, embodied sensation rather than abstract data. Emerging from a broader initiative connecting art and ocean science, the work carries traces of those exchanges – the memory of collective listening. Waves of Resonance does not offer sound as aesthetic background, but as relation: inhabiting a world that listens back, that demands response, that refuses detachment.
To transform, viscerally
Regenerate (12.09.2025) is a sculptural portal of steel and seaweed, opening into the womb of the ocean. Made with Fucus vesiculosus (seaweed bladderwrack) foraged from the North Sea, its thick fronds are boiled, melted, solidified, hand-sewn. These gestures enact a submersion into the species’ metabolic cycles: an immersion not symbolic but material, attuned to the life, death, and regeneration of bladderwrack. What has been extracted or abandoned cannot return; loss is intrinsic, matter reconfigured into new constellations of relation. The work refuses fantasies of an untouched past, staging transformation as precarious, incomplete, contingent: a negotiation of coexistence across species and temporalities. Submersion here acknowledges that life persists not through permanence but through ongoing dissolution and re-formation.
First shown at La Chapelle Jeanne d’Arc, Contemporary Art Centre in France, Regenerate (12.09.2025) belongs to a wider sculptural series of portals, tombs, and windows evolving over time. Across this body of work, repetition is not redundancy but method. The act of boiling, melting, reassembling each piece produces situated knowledge: human and seaweed co-constitute form through constraint, resistance, and collaboration. Labour is exposed not as a mastery but as a gesture of care, exhaustion; the recognition of the human limits of control.
To surrender
Part of the series Bodies of Water, a black-and-white photograph shows a body stretching, curling, dissolving. Skin flows like waves, like sand shifting on the oceanbed. Boundaries blur. There is no beginning, no end – only movement. Submersion becomes surrender: a letting-go of human singularity, an opening to more-than-human forces. The body destabilises, loses autonomy, becomes porous, entangled, responsive.
This ethic is embedded not only in representation but in process. Bodies of Water is developed using seaweed instead of chemical agents. The material resists, redirects, and intervenes; the image is not captured but co-produced, entangled with algal life, carrying its own agency and temporality. The work enacts what Astrida Neimanis calls hydro-logics: ways of knowing-with water that disrupt linear authorship and insist on reciprocity.
To submerge, here, is to let waters, bodies, and ice move through us – to unmake as much as to make, to dwell in interconnection as a condition for new forms of being-with.
Text by curator and researcher Chiara Famengo
This exhibition was made possible with the support of the Wallonia-Brussels Federation, and features works by Elise Guillaume developed during the European Marine Board’s EMBracing the Ocean residency programme, as part of the United Nations Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development.
More info on Bodies of Water (series), Waves of Resonance, and Regenerate.