可视化抗议:非洲(散居)艺术与当代地中海过境

IF 0.5 Q4 ETHNIC STUDIES Transition Pub Date : 2022-06-09 DOI:10.5070/t8101044134
Cheryl Finley, L. Raiford, Heike Raphael-Hernandez
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引用次数: 2

摘要

作者:Finley,Cheryl;Raiford,Leigh;Raphael Hernandez,Heike|摘要:为Bisi Silva(1962–2019)摘要本文调查了一些当代艺术品,这些艺术品讲述了非洲侨民艺术家最近向欧洲移民和危险的水上穿越。我们特别关注摄影、基于时间的媒体和装置的部署,认为像Isaac Julien、Alexis Peskine、Romuald Hazume等艺术家破坏了国际媒体流传的关于非洲移民——乘坐超载的小木筏和临时船只穿越地中海的难民的摄影新闻描绘。尽管联合国及其难民事务高级专员多年来一直试图呼吁国际社会关注利比亚难民营中这些移民难民的处境以及这些难民营对人权的灾难性侵犯,直到最近,公众的关注和讨论才开始将这些过境点视为一场“危机”,主要是因为越来越多的非洲移民——难民成功地通过西班牙或意大利抵达了欧洲堡垒。本文中考虑的非洲侨民艺术家试图通过对黑人移民-难民生活的耸人听闻和非人化描述提供反叙事来干预这些公开辩论。在关注这些反叙事的过程中,我们展示了艺术家如何将当代非洲国家的大规模移民与非洲侨民在水上被迫移民的长期历史联系起来。继保罗·吉尔罗伊(Paul Gilroy)之后,艺术家们不断回归“船的时间比喻”,并将这段漫长的记忆作为传达当代危机的一种手段,从而解决了那种方便地忽略任何先前纠缠的“殖民健忘症”。
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Visualizing Protest: African (Diasporic) Art and Contemporary Mediterranean Crossings
Author(s): Finley, Cheryl; Raiford, Leigh; Raphael-Hernandez, Heike | Abstract: For Bisi Silva (1962–2019) Abstract This essay surveys a number of contemporary artworks that address the recent migrations and perilous water crossings of African people to Europe, made by artists of the African diaspora. Paying specific attention to the deployment of photography, time-based media, and installation, we argue that artists like Isaac Julien, Alexis Peskine, Romuald Hazoume, and others disrupt the photojournalistic portrayals of African migrant–refugees crossing the Mediterranean in overloaded small rafts and makeshift boats circulated by the international media. While the UN and its High Commissioner for Refugees have tried for years to call international attention to the situation of these migrant–refugees in Libya’s camps and those camps’ catastrophic violations of human rights, it has been only recently that public attention and discourse have begun to recognize these crossings as a “crisis,” primarily because a growing number of African migrant–refugees have succeeded in reaching Fortress Europe via Spain or Italy. The artists of the African diaspora considered in this essay have attempted to intervene in these public debates by offering counternarratives to often sensational and dehumanizing depictions of specifically Black migrant–refugee lives. In focusing on these counternarratives, we demonstrate how artists connect this contemporary mass migration from African countries to a longer history of forced migrations over water in the African diaspora. Artists have returned continually to the “chronotrope of the ship,” following Paul Gilroy, and have drawn on this long memory as a means to convey the contemporary crisis, thus addressing the sorts of “colonial amnesia” that conveniently ignore any prior entanglements.
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Transition
Transition ETHNIC STUDIES-
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