Yuki Kihara's Paradise Camp as a potential Fa’afafine museum: Fabulous cohabitation in a shared world

IF 0.9 3区 社会学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Journal of Material Culture Pub Date : 2023-11-05 DOI:10.1177/13591835231210440
Liang-Kai Yu, Eliza Steinbock
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Abstract

This article examines critical ethnographic and archival elements of Paradise Camp, Yuki Kihara's highly celebrated Aotearoa New Zealand national pavilion at the Venice Biennial in 2022. Through its scenography that in Kihara's words is “fa’afabulous,” consisting of archival collages drawn from museum collections and staged photography made after Gauguin's paintings in collaboration with queer Sāmoan communities, we argue that Kihara's heavily annotated version of a so-called paradise assembled within Paradise Camp offers a ‘potential museum’ that reconnects the missing links between colonial registrations of the past with today's queer Sāmoan lives. This queer Indigenous reconfiguration of a fabulous paradise, which refuses imperial understandings of Pacific people and geographies, seems central to Paradise Camp's queer ‘camp’ effects, much like an eye roll that dethrones authority. Therefore, we propose that such an artist-fabulated museum lays claims to an Oceanic sovereignty, and broadly fosters a shared world for Fa’afafine and queer Pasifika peoples.
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木原由纪(Yuki Kihara)的《天堂营地》(Paradise Camp)有望成为法阿芬博物馆:共享世界中的美妙同居
本文考察了天堂营地的关键人种学和档案元素,这是木原由纪在2022年威尼斯双年展上备受赞誉的新西兰奥特罗阿国家馆。用木原的话说,它的场景设计是“fa’afulous”,包括从博物馆收藏中收集的档案拼贴画和高更与酷儿Sāmoan社区合作的绘画后拍摄的舞台摄影,我们认为木原对所谓的天堂营地进行了大量注释的版本提供了一个“潜在的博物馆”,重新连接了过去殖民登记与今天酷儿Sāmoan生活之间缺失的联系。这个酷儿土著对神话般的天堂的重新配置,拒绝了对太平洋人民和地理的帝国式理解,似乎是天堂营地酷儿“营地”效应的核心,就像推翻权威的翻白眼一样。因此,我们建议这样一个由艺术家虚构的博物馆主张海洋主权,并广泛地为法阿菲纳和酷儿帕西菲卡人建立一个共享的世界。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
30
期刊介绍: The Journal of Material Culture is an interdisciplinary journal designed to cater for the increasing interest in material culture studies. It is concerned with the relationship between artefacts and social relations irrespective of time and place and aims to systematically explore the linkage between the construction of social identities and the production and use of culture. The Journal of Material Culture transcends traditional disciplinary and cultural boundaries drawing on a wide range of disciplines including anthropology, archaeology, design studies, history, human geography, museology and ethnography.
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