Welcome to my short form Tumblr blog. My name is Flavia Tamara Dzodan, I am a business developer, writer, public speaker, ideas instigator, content creator, media facilitator and trend watcher living in Amsterdam.
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These women were totally awesome. Total girl crush!

19 posts tagged art
How post is this colonial gaze?
Yesterday I attended the book launches for Changing Perspectives & UNFIXED, two different projects that seek to interrogate art in a post colonial framework. The topics of the books themselves interest me less for this particular post than the round table/ debate that followed the presentations by the book editors. For this debate, they invited three rather important names in the Northern European arts scene: Leen Beijers, Coordinator of the Museum aan de Stroom (MAS) in Antwerp, Belgium; Jonathan Harris, Director of Research at Winchester School of Art in the UK and Els van der Plas, from the Dutch Platform for Design and Fashion and the first managing director (now no longer part of the organization) of the Prince Claus Fund, quite possibly, the most important Dutch non governmental institution to manage subsidies and grants for artists and institutions from around the world.
Mr. Harris gave a presentation about globalization in the art world where he treated us to all sorts of rhetorical pirouettes, including profuse mentions of the Cold War in the context of post colonialism, but he carefully avoided even mentioning both the Dutch and British colonial pasts. Which, you know, left some of us scratching our heads because how can you even start to address globalization and post colonial analysis if you won’t even mention the slave trade as one of the founding moments of globalized capitalism, with the transatlantic trade of African bodies as means of production?
Later on, Ms. van der Plas, in response to how can the Dutch art world move forward in the context of post colonial theory, said that, for her, “the world had always been post colonial because the Chinese had been invading other lands for millennia and other civilizations had also been colonizing neighboring territories so, she believed that we had been post colonial for ever”. Yes. Do not roll your eyes as they might come out of their sockets.
So, since we were in a museum, a Dutch institution that is in charge of what I usually refer to as “the administration of knowledge” (both as an institution that produces knowledge in the form of symposia, books, seminars, etc and in the sense that the curating process is an administration of knowledge by itself), I took a look around in the room where all these debates about the post colonial gaze were taking place. Currently, the museum is hosting an exhibition by three Dutch artists: Bart Groenendaal, Stefan Ruitenbeek and Quinsy Gario. The room had been stripped of all the exhibition items to make space for the chairs and the stage where the debate was taking place. In doing so, the organizers arranged the platform so that the event could be filmed and, to do so, they removed the name of one of the artists who was part of the exhibition, Quinsy Gario’s. Now, because we are in a museum and because this administration of knowledge is neither innocent, nor ideology free, I should point to the most telling and substantial aspect in this name erasing exercise: of the three artists, the only name that was covered and erased was Gario’s. Also, of all the three artists, the only one of Color, a Dutch Black man who interrogates the Dutch self perception as a sexually open and tolerant nation. In the context of these debates about the post colonial gaze, about the role of “the subaltern” in art production, the symbolic value of this single name erasure does not escape me.
I read this Guardian review of his latest exhibition in London and all I have is a visual recreation of my reaction:

This is AMAZING. I am still recovering from an awful cold and got a coughing fit from laughter at “a perfect storm of banality”.
Thanks to crashbangtrollop for the link.
“A security official at Radboud University in Nijmegen has thrown away a 12-metre long drawing which had been hung on the wall of a lecture theatre complex because he did not recognise it as art”
DutchNews.nl - Security guard throws out 12-metre long art work
This made me laugh. Not at the security guard with whom I empathize (they usually receive very strict instructions about clearing up spaces and keeping things tidy) but because I can only imagine the glee experienced by Geert Wilders about this. Last year he made news when he said that “art is a leftist hobby”.
On the other hand, I have attended numerous art exhibitions (including some prestigious ones like Venice, Sharjah, Berlin, Dubai, etc.) and I can totally see how someone would have troubles distinguishing an expensive art work from a doodle. Though I would have enjoyed it more if it had been some pretentious Damien Hirst piece.
The Principles of Certainties, teaser trailer
Quinsy Gario, who many know as the man behind the Zwarte Piet (Black Pete) is Racism Campaign and as the activist that was arrested last year and subjected to police brutality which was captured on video is also an award winning theater maker, author and spoken word artist. And I love him so you should watch this teaser video for his new play which won the MC Award for best play of 2011. For those in Amsterdam (or just visiting), you can see him live from March 13th to 17 at MC Toko.
Workers putting up a poster with the words ‘el arte es un bien de todos’ (art is a common wealth that belongs to everyone) in Resistencia, Chaco, Argentina. (via Documenta).
From the link:
A breathless story in the online Art Newspaper reported heated claims that the previously unknown cache was fake. The charges were made by a dozen American and Mexican art dealers, critics and historians, all of whom share a vested interest in Kahlo’s robust market and the publishing business around it.[…]
In August 2009, the complainants issued a letter to the media and to Mexican culture officials declaring that “all of the documents and works in [the collection] are fakes.”[…]
What the Art Newspaper did not report was that none of those objecting had actually laid eyes on the Kahlo material they were disputing. The protests seemed like they may have been designed to muddy the waters, tainting the collection before it went public.
“
When New York artist Andres Serrano plunged a plastic crucifix into a glass of his own urine and photographed it in 1987 under the title Piss Christ, he said he was making a statement on the misuse of religion.
Controversy has followed the work ever since, but reached an unprecedented peak on Palm Sunday when it was attacked with hammers and destroyed after an “anti-blasphemy” campaign by French Catholic fundamentalists in the southern city of Avignon.
”Andres Serrano’s Piss Christ destroyed by Christian protesters - The Guardian
But of course, France would have us believe that the real danger is Muslim women who cover their heads.
More from the article:
Civitas, a lobby group that says it aims to re-Christianize France, launched an online petition and mobilised other fundamentalist groups. The staunchly conservative archbishop of Vaucluse, Jean-Pierre Cattenoz, called Piss Christ “odious” and said he wanted this “trash” taken off the gallery walls. Last week the gallery complained of “extremist harassment” by fundamentalist Christian groups who wanted the work banned in France.
Lambert, one of France’s best known art dealers, complained he was being “persecuted” by extremists who had sent him tens of thousands of complaint emails and bombarded the museum with spam. He likened the atmosphere to “a return to the middle ages”.
On Saturday, around 1,000 Christian protesters marched through Avignon to the gallery. The protest group included a regional councillor for the extreme-right Front National, which recently scored well in the Vaucluse area in local elections. The gallery immediately stepped up security, putting plexiglass in front of the photograph and assigning two gallery guards to stand in front of it.
But on Palm Sunday morning, four people in sunglasses aged between 18 and 25 entered the exhibition just after it opened at 11am. One took a hammer out of his sock and threatened the guards with it. A guard grabbed another man around the waist but within seconds the group managed to take a hammer to the plexiglass screen and slash the photograph with another sharp object, thought to be a screwdriver or ice-pick. They also smashed another work, which showed the hands of a meditating nun.
Small consolation: the guy who hammered the photograph had to end up covered in piss, right?
Just got an invitation for this in my inbox, Alfredo Jaar’s The Marx Lounge:
For The Marx Lounge by Alfredo Jaar, Stedelijk Museum Bureau Amsterdam has been transformed into a reading room with comfortable sofas, reading lamps and a large reading table. This table offers a myriad of publications with topics spanning Marxist theory, capitalism, neo-liberalism, post-colonialism, globalization, cultural theory, politics and philosophy. The exhibition is an invitation to the viewer to sit back and become immersed in this wealth of knowledge.[…]
Jaar said: “I believe an intellectual revolution has been going on for the past 20 or 30 years, but I also see an extraordinary gap between this intellectual revolution and the real world… Is this gap a symptom of the difficulty of apprehending this new knowledge, or is it in the interests of the status quo to keep it the way it is? Besides hundreds of books by and about Marx, you will find political theorists and philosophers like Zizek, Hall, Rancière, Butler, Laclau, Mouffe, Jameson, Bourdieu, Fanon etc. For me these writings offer us models of thinking the world. And that is what I try do as an artist—I create models of thinking. I view The Marx Lounge as a space of resistance, or as David Harvey would call it, a space of hope.”[…]
The Marx Lounge will also contain a substantial amount of literature by Dutch thinkers, including Bosma, Buruma, Heijne, Hirsi Ali, Leerssen, Scheffer and Schinkel. Their work maps the local and political repercussions of global changes; changes that also ultimately impact upon the visual arts and critical art theory and prompt a re-evaluation of the role of art and art institutions in a post-colonial society.
Teehee, “Marxist Artist”. I am the Mutley who laughs at your use of big words like “post colonial society” and then proceeds to list a litany of “thinkers” who are all white, the vast majority male and the only non white exception is a very polarizing former Muslim woman who White dudes happen to love for reasons totally related to “non post colonial” ways of relating to the “Other”. But carry on, “Marxist Artist”, I am sure your exhibition will get accolades from other White dudes who love to pat themselves in the back at how “tolerant” and liberal they are.
ETA: As it’s been pointed in the replies, Fanon and Hall are non White, but my commentary was more inspired by the Dutch names I saw in the list and mostly, by placing Hirsi Ali as representative of the kind of Dutch intellectual spaces that the lounge wishes to illustrate.
A gallery of 60 completely unusable stock photos.
The other 59 at the link. Although they made me wonder what the photographers were thinking when they created their “art”. Check the one for Hitler in a red dress peeling potatoes. I just cannot decide which of the ones available is worse.
The Kiss
Vietnamese born artist Dinh Truong Giang creates the most amazing Origami art and paper sculptures. At the link more photos of his work.
!WOMEN ART REVOLUTION
Premiere at MOMA, with introduction by Gloria Steinem on March 3rd, !Women Art Revolution (!W.A.R.) charts the evolution of the Feminist Art Movement in America from the 1960s to the present. I just love the poster.
Last Suppers: James Reynolds’ Photographs of Death Row Inmates Final Meals
To create these photographs, Reynolds bought prison trays—replicas of the ones they actually use in maximum security prisons—off the internet and began staging these “Last Suppers.” In the interview that presents the slideshow, Reynolds said:
I saw a small list of what a few death row prisoners had chosen for their last meals before their deaths and I wondered what they would look like as a visual image. After all, these meals would be one of the last things these prisoners see before they die. At first I just wanted to see what these meals looked like on the iconic prison tray. I wanted to get the viewer to think, or have an opinion. I’d like to think that the photographs make them think, what thought that is, I am not sure, as I myself had more thoughts the more I looked at them. What would my last meal be? What kind of people were these prisoners? Why did they choose that particular meal? What crime did they commit?
More photos and complete interview at the link above.
Photographer Rafaella Persson traveled to Afghanistan to photograph women and children drug addicts
Drug addiction is an often-told story in Afghanistan, though female and child victims are rarely highlighted. Many of the women that I photograph tell me that they see it as the only way to comfort themselves and their children at times when they have no food or they cannot keep warm. Their journey to rehabilitate themselves has them on the perilous border between addiction and sobriety, a story of many failures and few successes.[…]
I realized I continued to visit them not only to photograph their addiction but because they had become friends.
The photo essay and the piece written by Ms. Persson, at the link above are stunning, sad, touching and both shed light on a side of Afghan life that we rarely see. While it would be easy, tempting even, to objectify these people, the photographer presents them in brilliant moments of humanity.
The Other White Meat
Photographer Mariel Clayton creates gory art with Barbies. Her dolls carry heavy weapons, knives and are set on causing mayhem. Her photos are detailed and evoke an atmosphere that is both creepy and cheerful at the same time. Check her work at the link.
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