Unearthing. In Conversation - Belinda Kazeem-Kamiński
Unearthing. In Conversation
Belinda Kazeem-Kamiński (Austria, 2017)
The film shows a performance. But the seats in the theatre are still empty when the performer – the artist – enters the frame. She speaks about a colonial flashback, a seemingly important encounter, addressing someone or a group as "you."
We learn that she is haunted by a series of historic photographs taken by or of the Austrian ethnographer Paul Schebesta, in the 1930s, in the Belgian colony of the Congo. The film´s "you" does not address the colonizer, but the colonized, especially those with whom Schebesta chose to be depicted on a photo. The "you", at the same time, seems to address me, the viewer, who now also becomes part of the encounter. But who exactly is the "you" addressed by this film, am I the film´s preferred audience? The position of the viewer becomes unsettled: a white viewer, a citizen of a country with a colonial legacy, can no longer assume to be the ideal audience, unmarked and universal.
While the performer starts to unpack boxes with images, the viewer catches a view of the historic photographs from over her shoulder. The performer-artist has already taken responsibility for what is left in the archive, and transformed it, a process that scholar Christina Sharpe calls "black redaction and black annotation," a way of seeing Blackness otherwise, and "toward seeing something in excess of what is caught in the frame." "How does one oppose by looking?" asks the performer, intensely staring at me, the viewer.
In a poetic and sharp language the performer-artist describes and shows ways of taking care of the photographs, but there is never a "right" way. Covering a depicted person might preserve this body from the gaze but it also takes part, by rendering the body opaque, in the process of erasure. The encounter asks for a double bind which the film performs: Being fierce in opposing, but still allowing for insecurity, curiousness, and vulnerability, is the requirement for resistance under the condition of the colonial. (Renate Lorenz)
Distribution: sixpackfilm
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14.03.2022
Christopher Kirubi
Hi, Hope this finds you well. This film was incredible! It doesn't seem to be appearing on the website anymore and I'd love to watch it again. Is there anywhere else I might be able to find it?
Christopher
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