Chapter four of Miwon Kwon’s text
‘One Place After Another’ brought up many questions for me regarding the
general basis of the movement ‘Culture in Action’. The art that was produced
out of this movement acted as a method the voices of minority communities to be
heard; some of Kwon’s initial examples being Suzanne Lacy’s sculptures that
honored women in the city of Chicago as well as a neighborhood parade to
reflect the lives of public house dwellers and the growing of hydroponic garden
for HIV positive patients etc. When reading this one of my questions became ‘in
this example, who would eligible to contribute to this conversation regarding
the civil rights of minorities?’ Would, for example, a man have the right to join
the female movement? Or white people act as an ally to a community of people of
color? And following this consideration how is it that we the people can create
art that could speak to all communities? How can we come together to create
something that can apply and aid every group whose voice and civil rights are
being silence?
For me it was fascinating to be
reading this particular reflection on this movement from the 1990’s during our
frightening current political state where our to-be leader of our country seems
to be moving towards the diminution of civil rights for minorities. Which
brings me to the question: what can we do to keep this conversation going? How
can we create activist art that will keep the conversation sustainable as these
problems are still very much occurring nearly 30 years after this movement?
How do we protest through art? It
is written that one of the main goals of ‘Culture in Action’ was to take ‘art
to the man on the street’, and to ‘shift the role of the viewer from passive spectator
to active art maker’. One of my more specific question is regarding what this
statement actually means and how can we create art that has the ability to
transform an individual in this way?
What so resonated with me when
reading this article is the fact that art has the power to reflect and resonate
within a person, I consider that perhaps the answer to my previous question
about this goal to shift the role of the viewer from ‘passive to active’
translates to art having the ability to stimulate another person so to the
point that they themselves become an activist.
I wonder if there is a way to make
a more permanent conversation of activism through art, Lacy’s sculpture project
for example, a continuous reminder of voices in society that need to be heard.
I want to know how, as an artist and as a woman I could contribute to the
conversation in order to keep it alive and consistently active. What can I do
as an individual to consistently speak out what needs to move forward in
society. One example of a conversation I would wish to enliven in our current
political state is that regarding female reproductive rights, how could I
create a piece of art or display that would be constantly speaking this
argument?
Kwon’s examples of the projects
that were produced out of ‘Culture in Action’ taught me that there really is no
limitation to the way in which we as artists can communicate and protest what
needs to be heard, through public sculpture, block parties, candy bars and
more. As artists we cannot limit ourselves, there are ways in which to speak
our protests I would not have thought of, particularly the example of writing
it out on a piece of confectionary as a continuous reminder regarding the
conversations that need to be had.
Amelia, thank you for your passionate analysis. It looks to me that your questions are already leading the way to a project!! Looking forward to our dialogue tomorrow.
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