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首页> 外文期刊>Postcolonial Studies >Re-framing the colonial Caribbean: Joscelyn Gardner's White Skin, Black Kin: A Creole Conversation Piece
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Re-framing the colonial Caribbean: Joscelyn Gardner's White Skin, Black Kin: A Creole Conversation Piece

机译:重塑加勒比海殖民地风格:乔斯琳·加德纳(Joscelyn Gardner)的《白皮肤,黑皮肤》:克里奥尔人的对话片

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摘要

The article discusses the role that the visual arts and museums—through the way their framing and selection choices shape viewers’ perception—play in the construction and deconstruction of post/colonial Caribbean identities. The locus of the analysis is a multimedia installation titled White Skin, Black Kin: A Creole Conversation Piece, which was mounted at the Barbados Museum by Barbadian Canadian visual artist Joscelyn Gardner in 2004. The artist's aim in the installation was to expose the telling gaps, silences, and omissions in regard to black and white kinship and inter-racial relations in artistic productions of the colonial period. One such production was the sub-genre of portraiture known as the conversation piece, which was fashionable among an emerging middle class that included colonial landowners and merchants eager to use that visual medium to simultaneously document the wealth their colonial connections brought them and disavow their use and abuse of black bodies to create that wealth. In challenging the conventions of the conversation piece, Gardner recovers unspoken and suppressed stories from the colonial Caribbean past in order to re-present black and white Creole females identities; and in her use of the installation to ‘intervene’ into items displayed in permanent exhibits, she demonstrates how the Museum can become a site of active contestation of received knowledge.View full textDownload full textRelated var addthis_config = { ui_cobrand: "Taylor & Francis Online", services_compact: "citeulike,netvibes,twitter,technorati,delicious,linkedin,facebook,stumbleupon,digg,google,more", pubid: "ra-4dff56cd6bb1830b" }; Add to shortlist Link Permalink http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13688790.2012.658747
机译:本文讨论了视觉艺术和博物馆的作用,即它们的取景和选择选择会影响观众的感知,从而在后殖民殖民地加勒比海身份的建构和解构中发挥作用。分析的地点是一个名为“白皮肤,黑皮肤:克里奥尔语对话片段”的多媒体装置,该装置由加拿大巴巴多斯视觉艺术家乔斯琳·加德纳(Joscelyn Gardner)于2004年安装在巴巴多斯博物馆。该艺术家的目的是揭露明显的空白。殖民时期艺术作品中关于黑白血统和种族间关系的沉默,沉默和遗漏。这样的作品之一就是肖像画的子流派,被称为对话片,在新兴的中产阶级中很流行,其中包括殖民地主和商人,他们渴望使用这种视觉媒介来同时记录他们的殖民联系带给他们的财富,并拒绝使用它们。滥用黑体来创造财富。在挑战对话中的惯例时,加德纳(Gardner)从加勒比海殖民地的历史中找回了未被说和被压制的故事,以再现黑人和白人克里奥尔语的女性身份。并通过使用该装置“干预”永久展览中陈列的物品,她展示了博物馆如何成为活跃的接受知识竞赛场所。查看全文下载全文相关的var addthis_config = {ui_cobrand:“泰勒&Francis Online”,services_compact:“ citeulike,netvibes,twitter,technorati,delicious,linkedin,facebook,stumbleupon,digg,google,更多”,发布号:“ ra-4dff56cd6bb1830b”};添加到候选列表链接永久链接http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13688790.2012.658747

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