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Kaleidoscope magazine has done an “Africa” issue; it wants to walk a fine line between identity politics and universalism.
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Orlando Reade is a Ph.D. student in English at Princeton University.
Kaleidoscope magazine has done an “Africa” issue; it wants to walk a fine line between identity politics and universalism.
The London Olympics, the Africa Utopia symosium and London’s “Festival of the World with Mastercard.”
Caption (from Antoinette's 75 page): "love the way this girl was obviously begging her mom to let her swim a bit longer"
It is perhaps the 'obviousness' of these images, evocative of the various and numerous relationships exhibited by bodies at a swimming pool, which makes them so joyful. So here's the rest of the series, with Antoinette's description of how they came to be taken: I took these photographs at the Sea Point Pavilion, a popular public salt water pool in Sea Point. One of the oldest suburbs in Cape Town, Sea Point is situated on the foothills of Signal Hill and faces the sea. Not only does it have the pavilion, it has a promenade too: a long winding walkway with an equally long grassy patch next to it that stretches along the coast for the best walk your money can't buy because it's free. I'd say it's the best used public space in the city. I took the photographs in response to a competition I'd seen on a national news site here, sponsored by a big name camera brand offering camera equipment as the prize - needless to say I decided to enter as I only have an analogue camera. The brief was to capture a family on a typical South African holiday, and so I thought to go to the pools. As a child my mom would make sure to pack us all into the station wagon to go to the pools. At least one adult would be along to keep watch and play life-guard, man the picnic blanket. The rest were cousins and friends, and when I was 12 an almost-crush who, lucky for me, happened to be a neighbour that was invited along. If it wasn't the pools it was the beach or the water park in Table View where the slippery slide still stands (although I hope by now they've replaced it counting how many years have passed). It didn't cost a lot, it meant getting to be in the water all day and for me and my water-baby brother who'd throw himself in the pool without abandon it meant the world. I don't think it cost R4 back then and it's still really cheap by today's standards at R11 for an adult pass into the pools. Up until today there hasn't been a summer I can say I didn't make at least one trip to the pavilion... maybe I don't cut as lean a figure in my bather anymore but I still get lots of sunshine, salt water and the buzz off the pools and the people. It gets busy, make no mistake, but some afternoons are more relaxed than others. The day I took these photos is the first time I've ever been with my camera and I still managed a swim after. These were taken in Dec 2010 or Jan 2011, I forget which. I didn't win anything, wasn't shortlisted but I'm still really glad for that brief and the photos that came of it because I'll always have them as a prompt to some of the best memories I cherish of my own family. I'd say I negotiate for a living. I negotiate how to frame unguarded moments when I have a camera in my hand and otherwise access into people's lives when the phone's to my ear and I'm researching for the documentary series I work on. I take photographs because a part of me wants a part of life that is unmediated, which I didn't do anything to earn but be ready. * Antoinette Engel is currently researching for the documentary series I am Woman, and has directed two upcoming episodes, on Sandra Afrika and Marlene Le Roux, for the weekly show. Her documentary on meat production in South Africa will be broadcast on television in September.Mary Beth Meehan, an American photographer in the U.S. northeast photographs marginal people: immigrants and poor people, both black and white.
The particular sequence I’m interested in comes at the end of the film. Strickland, the main character, is already dead. His doctor, who speaks with a thick German accent, travels to Tahiti to visit the village where Strickland used to live. He meets with the local wife of the deceased painter and enters his cabin, which was the working place of the artist. Up to this point, the entire movie is in black and white. But when the doctor enters the space, the film jumps into bright colour.
In Tuymans’s painting – Allo! – a man wearing a suit is seen walking past a large, generic painting of weirdly elegant women. The painting is of a photograph of a still image of the painting in the film taken by the artist from a computer screen. This confusing series of framing devices clearly attempts to deconstruct the image of the ‘exotic’ to the extent that it becomes merely an image of the artist himself: a head – reflected in the computer screen – is visible as an indistinct presence on the ‘surface’ of the painting. Tuyman's portraits of Patrice Lumumba practice a similar form of mediation, distorting the image through the accidents and subdued intentions of memory. The insistence that the framing device becomes a totalising subject of the painting – put more simply, how you look defines what you see – is a familiar one within academic discourses about travel literature. The decision not to paint an image based on a fictional text but a painting of a painting from a fictional film inspired by real paintings by Gauguin, inserts pastiche as a defense mechanism against accusations of exoticism. This seems sensible, except perhaps in light of Conrad’s own attempt to do the same. Though he had made a similar journey to the one his novel describes, Conrad decided to place the narrative in the mouth of Marlowe, who tells the story to an unknown narrator on board a ship at Gravesend, the last outpost of ‘civilization’ at the mouth of the Thames. Chinua Achebe’s famous attack on the novel describes this:It might be contended, of course, that the attitude to the African in Heart of Darkness is not Conrad’s but that of his fictional narrator, Marlow, and that far from endorsing it Conrad might indeed be holding it up to irony and criticism. Certainly Conrad appears to go to considerable pains to set up layers of insulation between himself and the moral universe of his story. He has, for example, a narrator behind a narrator. The primary narrator is Marlow, but his account is given to us through the filter of a second, shadowy person.
I don’t mean to suggest that Tuymans is making the same mistake: in his painting the artist’s own shadowy presence is no more socially determined than the blanched bodies of the women or the intermediate figure standing in the foreground. And, unlike Conrad, the painting is validating its obsession with an unknowable terrain through mediating figures. Tuymans’s painting is interested in the vague and distant exotic which is not known but created in paint; but, given that we in London still have relations with people in distant countries mediated by financial and erotic exploitation, such a deconstruction does not help to map out inter-continental violence. The most recent celebrity inhabitant was the Guardian’s art critic Adrian Searle whose good-humoured account of the day was published last month. The article opens with Searle standing naked at night in front of Tuymans’s painting. Searle describes his approach to the painting on the wall of his cabin: “I sit and drink with it; dance around the cabin in front of it and get undressed with it.” 'Apocalypse Now', Francis Ford Coppola’s film relocation of Conrad’s novel to 1970s Vietnam, famously opens with the protagonist dreaming from his Saigon hotel room of forests destroyed by napalm, then freaking out and smashing his mirror. Again and again, these works serve as a mirror in which the distortions of the white male body are seen. Achebe's essay claims that, for Europeans writing about Africa, 'the abandonment of unwholesome thoughts must be its own and only reward.' Tuymans' painting does not confront the persistent problem of understanding other cultures but distills the image of the exotic into a pure vision of 'unwholesome thoughts'. Freud believed all dreams of flight - whether aviation or self-exile to the colonies - are fantasies about erections, a phallocentric vision of the unconscious which goes unchallenged here. Searle remarks that the room ‘is beginning to get to me’ and starts to have fun: “I dance about the cabin, waving my arse first in the direction of the Houses of Parliament …” It’s a shame this fitting tribute to English democracy need be induced by such luxurious detachment; if he were to do the same on the street, the journalist's expression would be swiftly policed. Searle’s identification with the painting produces an excellent analysis: “Approaching his subject, Tuymans keeps a distance, like someone visiting the sick, hovering near the door in case they might catch something.” He spoke to Tuymans before entering the room, and tells us that the artist “said his painting is his joke on modernism, dealing with fake ideas of the new, the exotic and the colourful.” This mock-mock-Gauguin painting, whose subject has disappeared into the abyss of post-modern self-reference and cannibalising tradition, disputes the idea that art can know anything outside the artist himself. This is a conclusion Achebe identifies in Conrad also:[I]f his intention is to draw a cordon sanitaire between himself and the moral and psychological malaise of his narrator, his care seems to me totally wasted because he neglects to hint however subtly or tentatively at an alternative frame of reference by which we may judge the actions and opinions of his characters.
Conrad, writing from ‘literary’ London, was unable to imagine an African subject with language or culture not imposed by imperialism but natural and universal. Achebe says that this is why he cannot consider the novel to be art. And Tuymans’s painting? Searle's article concludes:Allo! is a weird thing to spend the night with. But then, so am I. The horror! The horror!
The final declamatory sentences, quoting Conrad’s famous slogan, confirm our original suspicions: this boat is not a special lebensraum for intellectuals but a theme-park attraction profiting from the cultural histories of European colonialism. Amadou & Mariam played a gig there and on BBC Radio 4 Mariella Frostrup had a conversation with some novelists about ‘literary’ London, but there doesn’t seem to have been anyone reflecting on the legacy of Conrad and London’s imperialist past (or indeed its imperialist present). If there’s a problem with Searle’s account, it isn’t lurid enough, and the organisers seem to have failed to invite a more skeptical approach to their project. Tuymans’s bathers belong in a painting but Gauguin was painting women; the distance doesn’t affect the fact of the violence at the heart of the image. The truth is, of course, that you can’t see anything from the boat that isn’t visible on the streets of central London, or at any rate, from the administrated transcendence of the London 'Eye'. As Walter Ralegh - the godfather of English colonialism, who spent most of his adult life by the river, sitting in a prison cell in the Tower of London - realised, to his cost, that the golden city of our daydreams is always around the next bend in the river, a paradise Ralegh died after failing to reach. 'Apocalypse Now' cuts out the initial scenes in the capital which frames Conrad’s narrative. Narratives which remember (after Sartre) that Hell is trying to occupy someone else’s country must recognise that imperialism starts at home. The site of conflict between the individual in London or Belgium and imperialism is not just in the museum or the gallery, and certainly not in 'literary' projects, but in the streets, at home or in the workplace. Last December, the UK’s Congolese communities descended on central London to protest against the contested elections in the DRC. Protesters demanded that the international community realise its responsibilities in relation to this conflict. Thousands gathered, protesters caused one of London's most important underground stations to be closed, private property was damaged, other members of the public threatened and 139 people arrested in one day. How could this recent history be admitted into the space? Sammi Baloji’s work, for example, measures the extraction industries in the DRC against the human body, a form of thinking which starts to expose the violence of global industries towards individuals and communities. And which artists and writers have been documenting the network of relations which continue to exact imperialist violence? It will be interesting to see what Teju Cole, whose novel novel Open City made a precise constellation of life and post-colonial history in New York and Brussels, says in his 'London Address' from the ship in August. Inter-cultural encounters do not happen because of lust for adventure or self-knowledge but as inevitable accompaniments to commerce and colonialism. The computer screen which gave Tuymans his image may well have contained coltan, the mineral whose illegal trade by global corporations has helped to finance violent struggle in eastern Congo. Recently, corporations based in America and London have been accused of endangering the precarious political situation in order to exploit the country’s natural mineral resources. As Achebe reminds us, ‘poetry surely can only be on the side of man’s deliverance and not his enslavement’. The real work of art has new maps of material complicity to contend with. * Photo credit: peripathetic.It's great to hear Hugo is sufficiently attuned to the world that he suffers the lash of the academic tongue with such intensity. Such sensitivity towards criticism surely marks the potential of a great artist. What is odd about the statement above is, however, that Hugo fails to specify what exactly it is that upsets him. Look closely and you'll see that Hugo's argument jumps from disagreement ('troublesome', 'problematic') with the dark forces of political-correctness-mongers to the self-pitying complaint ('it really upset me'). It seems Hugo is not upset by the fact that people think his work is potentially damaging, but the reactionary idea that the phantasmic armies of 'political correctness' are being mobilised against the heroic defenders of Art and Freedom. It is understandably upsetting to be accused of political incorrectness, but Hugo seems to have come full-circle: first, claiming to have performed a necessary and painful self-scrutiny, then passing over any resultant doubt or anxiety, then returning to criticise his critics with this attack. He has already banished the idea that his work might reflect and sustain desires within himself which others find unappealing; so why should the art, or the artist himself, consider change? To quote from Theodor Adorno at this point seems provocatively 'academic', and so be it. In Minima Moralia, the German philosopher claims that, for writers "[w]hat is let pass as a minute doubt may indicate the objective worthlessness of the whole." This Promethean task Adorno demands of writers must be no less extensive for photographers making work as sophisticated as Hugo would no doubt like to be. In view of this, the alternative to Hugo's melancholy, is doubt. Those questions he calls 'troublesome', 'problematic', 'affecting' or 'upsetting', should not induce 'dishonesty', harmful introspection or vulnerability to making (or becoming) 'propaganda'. Hugo must have searched for what critics see in his work -- he surely wouldn't have been so upset if he hadn't -- his scrutiny must have been insufficient. Until this artist can locate within his work that which his fiercest critics see, the whole exercise may be worthless.I find that very troublesome, very problematic. It's taken me a long time to figure out why it affected me so deeply. It really upset me. It was never my intention in any way.
More than ever, a deep engagement with Egypt's heritage will allow them to engage in the important and political role of questioning the totalising narratives that the Egyptian state has long attempted to impose.
The rejection of these totalising narratives appears to have been a consistent characteristic of the ongoing Egyptian revolution, in which state imposition appears increasingly legible, and undermined by individual acts of protest, graffiti, art. The imposition of a totalising dialectic which Said sketches out in Orientalism has receded in this mass of new images from North Africa. Shortly before his death in 2003, Said reasserted that the “orient”, in the context of George Bush’s Middle Eastern adventures, was still a potent political force: the “orient”, he argued, ‘that semi-mythical construct which since Napoleon’s invasion of Egypt in the late 18th century has been made and remade countless times.’ More recently, however, Hamid Dabashi has theorised the end of orientalism – and postcolonialism – in two books: The Arab Spring: The end of Postcolonialism (2011) and Postorientalism: Knowledge and Power in a Time of Terror (2008). You can watch a video of Dabashi discussing the Egyptian revolutions with David Harvey and Anthony Alessandrini, here, in which he claims that: “this is a book that comes out of a deep sense of belonging with this revolutionary moment … and contrary to what metropolitans call the participant-observer, I am not an observer in the Arab revolutions, I’m a participant …” This Thursday (one day after the first round of Egyptian presidential elections), Ahdaf Soueif – Egyptian émigré novelist and founder of Palfest, now based in London – will give the Edward Said lecture at the British Museum. Her title is “Mina’s Banner: Edward Said and the Egyptian Revolution”, which takes its name from “Mina Danial, the young Coptic activist killed by the military in Cairo on October 9, 2011, in the Maspero massacre.” Maspero, the building in downtown Cairo which houses the state television and radio station (and named after French Egyptologist Gaston Maspero) was where Soueif had her first job. In February, Yasmin El-Rashidi wrote about encountering the novelist in Tahrir Square:I approached her myself when I too, realised who she was; she spoke first of women and their extraordinary role in the revolt, and then looked me in the eye and said that she had dreamt of this. “I had a vision of revolution. It happens in Tahrir – Liberation Square.” (Guardian)
Soueif’s book Cairo: My City, Our Revolution begins:Many years ago I signed a contract to write a book about Cairo; my Cairo. But the years passed, and I could not write it. When I tried it read like an elegy; and I would not write an elegy for my city.
If it was Soueif’s presence in Cairo which enabled this departure from the elegiac vision of Cairo towards an conception of the city in the revolutionary present, it will be interesting to see how far she agrees with Dabashi’s theoretical sense that the conditions of ‘orientalism’ have vanished from contemporary political cartographies. * Soueif’s lecture, with contributions from Omar Al-Qattan and Jacqueline Rose, is on Thursday at the British Museum (more details here).There has been an explosion of interest in modern and contemporary art from Africa, and Bonhams 'Africa Now' auction remains at the forefront of the market as the only sale of its kind globally.
By this, of course, they mean Sub-Saharan Africa; Bonhams, as most institutions in the art world, seem unconvinced that artists north of the Sahara have any relation to their southern colleagues. Almost half the lots (by my count, 79 of 215) are works by Nigerian artists. Not only this, but looking at the artists listed, you realise there is a distinct emphasis on the modern, and shockingly little idea about what the contemporary might look like in Africa. Heavy-looking sculptures and figurative paintings of women predominate. The ubiquitous El Anatsui features, as do several paintings by Ben Osaghae (‘Flesh Menu’, above, and ‘Oil Barons’), look particularly interesting. Bonhams is, of course, only involved in the secondary market for works whose value is established, and as such, their programme is entirely driven by an aversion to risk and a preference for conservative objects, but this auction does nothing to reflect the abundance of contemporary artists working on the continent. “Whatever it is,” someone remarked at the opening of the new exhibition at the Jack Bell Gallery, “it’s not Africa now.” * The auction is on Wednesday; if you're in London, perhaps see Sokari Douglas-Camp talk about "What Picasso knew" (details here).Science fiction as genre offers the opportunity to African artists to consider Western cartographies of the future as fictions in their own right.
Britain’s secret service, MI5, passed on sensitive information to their Libyan colleagues to torture dissidents.
One of the striking facts of Nabil Ayouch’s film is that Israelis love the land and the Palestinians love it too.