Ghostly murals: Tracing the politics of public art in Vancouver’s Hogan’s Alley

IF 2.4 2区 社会学 Q3 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Environment and Planning C-Politics and Space Pub Date : 2023-05-10 DOI:10.1177/23996544231172122
Friederike Landau-Donnelly
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The article unpacks the multiple political implications of commissioned murals in contested urban space. It examines public artwork in Hogan’s Alley, a historically Black neighborhood in Vancouver, BC, situated on the unceded Indigenous territories of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh Coast Salish Nations. Drawing from ethnographic field research and semi-structured interviews with local artists, policymakers and community activists, I read the mural Remember Hogan’s Alleny (2019), covering the sidewall of a subsidized housing project, as a contested public space. In this conflictual space, multiple pasts appear, disappear and reappear, oscillating between the celebration of Black culture, food and entertainment and the systematic displacement of Black residents and businesses. By contrasting diverging rationales, expectations and dreams regarding murals’ contributions to memory-making and cultural reconciliation, I trace where and how conflicts about public art inscribe themselves into the urban cultural fabric. The article intervenes into the predominantly ‘positive’ discussion of sanctioned public art to develop a more conflict-attuned understanding of artworks placed in the public realm. It deploys a framework of hauntology to discuss the appearance of ghosts invited into the public realm via official art commissions. These ghosts, becoming visible on urban walls via acts of placemaking, conjure memories of spatial displacement and racial discrimination, as well as stories of community care and healing. In sum, the article argues that the analytic of ghosts assists to foster an understanding of public art as always-already conflictual, thus inviting to stay with conflicts of belonging and memory, rather than to suppress them or shy away. By reflecting on what public art does politically – unpacking diverse narratives of the past that continue to mark present racial inequalities – the article contributes to sketching a conflict-oriented understanding of public space that is needed in cities wounded by racism and displacement.
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幽灵壁画:追踪温哥华霍根巷公共艺术的政治
这篇文章揭示了在有争议的城市空间中委托壁画的多重政治含义。它考察了霍根巷的公共艺术品,霍根巷是不列颠哥伦比亚省温哥华一个历史悠久的黑人社区,位于Musqueam, Squamish和Tsleil-Waututh海岸萨利希国家的未被割让的土著领土上。根据民族志实地研究和对当地艺术家、政策制定者和社区活动家的半结构化采访,我阅读了壁画《记住霍根的小巷》(2019年),它覆盖了一个补贴住房项目的侧壁,作为一个有争议的公共空间。在这个充满冲突的空间里,多重的过去出现、消失和重现,在对黑人文化、食物和娱乐的庆祝与黑人居民和企业的系统性流离失所之间摇摆不定。通过对比壁画对记忆和文化和解的贡献的不同原理、期望和梦想,我追踪了公共艺术的冲突在哪里以及如何融入城市文化结构。本文介入了对被认可的公共艺术的主要“积极”讨论,以发展对放置在公共领域的艺术作品的更冲突的理解。它部署了一个鬼怪学的框架来讨论通过官方艺术委员会邀请进入公共领域的鬼魂的出现。这些鬼魂通过营造场所的行为出现在城市的墙壁上,唤起人们对空间迁移和种族歧视的记忆,以及社区关怀和治疗的故事。总之,这篇文章认为,对鬼魂的分析有助于培养对公共艺术的理解,因为它一直都是冲突的,因此邀请人们留在归属感和记忆的冲突中,而不是压抑它们或回避它们。通过反思公共艺术在政治上的作用——揭开过去的各种叙事,继续标志着当前的种族不平等——这篇文章有助于勾勒出一种以冲突为导向的公共空间理解,这是受种族主义和流离失所伤害的城市所需要的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
7.40%
发文量
78
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