Tag: Brett Bailey
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“Collectif CONTRE-Exhibit B”: The campaign against Brett Bailey’s ‘Human Zoo’ installation gains pace in Paris…
How timely to be currently on a research trip in Paris just as the campaign against the presentation of Brett Bailey’s ‘Exhibit B’ (Human Zoo) installation is taking shape and gaining momentum in the French capital. Over the past few days I have been inspired by the passion and commitment of the Parisian campaign organisers “Collectif CONTRE-Exhibit…
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Debates about “The War on Black Bodies” (Part 3) – some concluding thoughts on the arts in London
Following an extremely hard-fought and impassioned anti-racism campaign led by journalist and rights activist Sara Myers, the senior management team of the Barbican arts centre issued a formal statement on Tuesday 23rd September to confirm their cancellation of the controversial installation ‘Exhibit B – Third World Bunfight’ by South African ‘artist’ Brett Bailey, which was scheduled…
Carol Ann Dixon
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Debates about the “The War on Black Bodies,” situated in contrasting cultural spaces in New York and London
“How can we transform the ways in which identity is conceived so that identities do not emerge and function only through the oppression and subordination of other social identities?” – Elizabeth Grosz (2011). Source: Becoming Undone: Darwinian Reflections on Life, Politics, and Art (Grosz, 2011: 89) “The War on Black Bodies” (Part 1) – the…
Carol Ann Dixon
‘Human Zoo’, Activism, Black Cultural Archives, Brett Bailey, Claudia De La Cruz, Corporeality, Curating Difficult Knowledge, Darnell Moore, Elizabeth Grosz, Exhibit B, Ferguson, Identity, Khalil Muhammad, New York, Nitro, Performance, Representation, Schomburg, Stereotyping, The Black Body, War on Black Bodies -
“BOYCOTT THE HUMAN ZOO!” – A public demonstration opposing the Barbican Centre’s endorsement of Brett Bailey’s ‘Exhibit B’ in London
I was pleased to show solidarity with a small but vociferous group of anti-racist arts activists who turned out in central London to call for a boycott of Brett Bailey’s ‘Exhibit B – Human Zoo’ installation project today. Followers of this blog who’ve already read my earlier post about the Barbican Centre’s endorsement of this controversial…
Carol Ann Dixon
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‘Exhibit B’ : A poignant performance art piece, or just the latest incarnation of a racist ‘human zoo’?
Anyone who saw the Guardian’s recent Edinburgh Festival review of Brett Bailey’s controversial installation ‘Exhibit B’ – featuring African men and women sitting inside cages, with labels stating “The blacks have been fed”, and others chained to chairs and beds in equally dehumanizing poses (seemingly to challenge audiences to reflect on the brutalities of European racism…
Carol Ann Dixon