Art and Migration: Revisioning the Borders of Community
Art and Migration: Revisioning the Borders of Community
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Abstract
Art and migration: revisioning the borders of community is a collective response to current and historic constructs of migration as disruptive of national heritage. This interplay of academic essays and art professionals’ interviews investigates how the visual arts – especially by or about migrants – create points of encounter between individuals, places, and objects. Migration has increasingly taken centre stage in contemporary art, as artists claim migration as a paradigm of artistic creation. The myriad trajectories of transnational artworks and artists’ careers outlined in the volume are reflected in the density and dynamism of fairs and biennales, itinerant museum exhibitions and shifting art centres. It analyses the vested political interests of migration terminology such as the synonymous use of ‘refugees’ and ‘asylum seekers’ or the politically constructed use of ‘diaspora’. Political and cultural narratives frame globalisation as a recent shift that reverses centuries of cultural homogeneity. Art historians and migration scholars are engaged in revisioning these narratives, with terms and methodologies shared by both fields. Both disciplines are elaborating an histoire croisée of the circulation of art that denounces the structural power of constructed borders and cultural gatekeeping, and this volume reappraises the historic formation of national identities and aesthetics heritage as constructed under transnational visual influences. This resonates with migrant artists’ own demands for self-determination in a display space that too often favours canonicity over hybridity. Centring migration – often silenced by normative archives or by nationalist attribution practices – is part of the workload of revisioning art history and decolonising museums.
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Front Matter
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1
Revisioning art and migration
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Part I Art, migration, and borders
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2
Empathy, migration, and art: an interview with Dieter Roelstraete
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3
Silenced migrants: an interview with David Antonio Cruz
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4
Memorable mobilities: an interview with Axel Karlsson Rixon
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5
Ambiguous attachments: creations of diasporic aesthetics and migratory imagery in Chinese Australian art
Birgit Mersmann
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6
Retracing colonial choreographies in contemporary Native American art
Christopher T. Green
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7
Race, migration, and visual culture: the activist artist challenging the ever-present colonial imagination
Claudia Tazreiter
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8
Precarious temporalities: gender, migration, and refugee arts
Rachel A. Lewis
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2
Empathy, migration, and art: an interview with Dieter Roelstraete
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Part II Migrants’ paths in the arts
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9
Global and translocal: an interview with Marina Galvani
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10
Portrait of the artist as migrant: an interview with Robyn Asleson
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11
Stories of Global Displacement: an interview with Massimiliano Gioni
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12
A publication of one's own: identity and community among migrant Latin American artists in New York c. 1970
Aimé Iglesias Lukin
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13
‘Nobody's darlings? Edith May Fry and Australian expatriate art in the 1920s
Victoria Souliman
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14
Agostina Segatori and the immigrant Italian models of Paris
Susan Waller
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15
Gardens, migrations, and memories: aesthetic and intercultural learning and the (re)construction of identity
David Bell
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9
Global and translocal: an interview with Marina Galvani
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Part III Mapping the researcher's identity
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End Matter
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