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Save the date – Stuart Hall Library Research Network meeting, Thursday 30 January 2014, 6.30-8.00

Thursday January 30th : our first Research Network meeting of 2014.

Performance poet, life model, writer and photographer Ursula Troche will present

 

Dialogues on Otherness in Research and practice

 

Ursula Troche

Ursula Troche performing at the Notting Hill Arts Festival, August 2013

‘In my own (performance poetry based) research, I am ‘dealing with myself’ as an othered person of a kind that still needs explanation – hence another kind of otherness. In my case, this means explaining what it means to be ‘neither Black nor British’, why this is relevant, and how this is part of the postcolonial debate even if I do not originate from a colonised country. I do not, therefore speak from the margins or the centre (e.g. hooks 1984), even though this framework is important for my location; I speak from the ‘boundary’ – as yet another kind of ‘Other’. This also leads me to an investigation of the psychological aspect of this debate, which shares with postcolonial studies an analysis of ‘otherness’, if from a different angle (i.e. Lacan). This then, is another investigation of and on otherness, which build on Stuart Hall’s investigations of around this theme, specifically his notion of ‘new ethnicities’. Lastly, I want to come back to the question of dialogue: how can (this) research contribute to open up the wider need to continue to break silences around ‘otherness’ and ‘race’ and critiques of dominant discourses.’

Also, artist, teacher and writer Jenny Jones will present

 

 

 

 

 

 

Re-imagining Old Chestnuts

 

Gatekeepers by Jenny Jones 2012

Gatekeepers (2012) © Jenny Jones

‘In this talk I present questions arising from paintings I made as part of the group show “Lodgistics” made in response to College Lodge in Dulwich Park, South London. The renovated Lodge, now a ‘multicultural’ arts centre run by the charity Whippersnappers, stands opposite the Dulwich Picture Gallery, the oldest public art gallery in Britain. The paintings depict ‘Black’ cherubs together with conkers, the seeds of the horse chestnut tree.

My artwork has always arisen from lived experience and the perceived ‘trouble’ with this research is threefold. Firstly: is there or isn’t there a sense of taboo in a ‘White’ (working class) woman picturing ‘Black’ figures, from her own imagination? (eg: the perception of appropriating ‘Black’ art?). Secondly, the histories I researched in the making of the work: Kemet, the Bible, the Formorians and Rudolf Steiner’s writings are all marginalised knowledge, discounted as mythological, unscientific or transcendent. Thirdly, the models for ‘White’ picturing ‘Black’ in visual representation have often been heavily criticised. One example being how Parisian avant garde artists’ ‘Negrophilia’ in the 1920’s was seen to be associating ‘Black’ people with the ‘primitive’. I will be using this painting to open up discussions around ‘transgressive texts’ (Toni Morrison), aesthetics and self-racialization. Finally I want to raise the question: How do ‘White’ artists work to indicate their allegiance with anti-racism and critique ‘White’ privilege without being ‘happy’ or ‘proud’ (Sarah Ahmed).’

Listen to a recording of the event via the link below