Open Menu

Items

Sort:
  • Theme contains "Colonialism"
Congo Dialogues.jpg

'When harmony goes to hell'. Congo Dialogues: Alice Seeley Harris and Sammy Baloji, Rivington Place, London (16 January - 7 March 2014)

Autograph ABP presents a rarely seen archive dating from 1904, created by English missionary Alice Seeley Harris in the Congo Free State. These pioneering photographs publicly exposed the violent consequences of human rights abuses at the turn of the century, and are exhibited alongside newly commissioned work from acclaimed contemporary Congolese artist Sammy Baloji.

In the early 1900s, the missionary Alice Seeley Harris produced what was probably the first photographic campaign in support of human rights. She exposed the atrocities that underpinned King Leopold II’s regime in the Congo Free State, bringing to public attention the plight of the Congolese people under a violent and oppressive regime.

These photographs fundamentally shifted public awareness of the deep-rooted hypocrisy of King Leopold II’s promise of colonial benevolence, and caused an outcry at the time of their publication in Europe and America.

Over 100 years later, these issues remain of primary concern to Congolese citizen and artist Sammy Baloji. Like Harris, Baloji uses photography as a medium to interrogate current political concerns with reference to the past. Acclaimed for his photomontage works that juxtapose desolate post-industrial landscapes with ethnographic archival imagery, Baloji explores the cultural and architectural ‘traces’ of a country forever haunted by the spectres of its colonial past; in particular, the southeastern Katanga province and its capital, the city of Lubumbashi.

In this new body of work-in-progress, commissioned by Autograph ABP, Baloji continues to investigate the colonial legacies and fractured histories that haunt contemporary Congolese society. Notions of African utopias, post-colonial disillusionment, and a quest for authenticity amidst ‘the ruins of modernity’ define Baloji’s multi-layered practice: the impact of Western imperialism, Maoist communism, urban segregation and colonial sanitation politics as well as the unending mineral exploitation of the Congo’s natural resources, and with it the tragedies and traumas of state-controlled violence and ongoing human rights abuses.

Congo Dialogues marks the 175th anniversary of Anti-Slavery International and the invention of photography. The first major solo showcase of Sammy Baloji’s work in the UK, this exhibition presents a unique opportunity to see both historical and contemporary works interrogating the Congo and its colonial legacies. The Alice Seeley Harris archive was last shown to the public 110 years ago.

http://files.www.antislavery.nottingham.ac.uk/bkb0007.jpg

"Servicaes", graveyard on cocoa roço. San Thomé

53 Echoes of Zaire.png

53 echoes of Zaire: Popular Painting from Lubumbashi Democratic Republic of Congo, Sulger-Buel Lovell Gallery, London (27 May – 30 June 2015)

Popular Painting is a genre traceable to the 1920s, which chronicles contemporary social and political realities in Congo (then Zaïre). This art movement remains very little known outside the continent. Scholars have dedicated their research activities to Popular Painting. They often knew the main actors of the movement in the early 1970s, and shared this knowledge by publishing articles, books and exhibition catalogues. “ During a brief period between the late sixties and the late seventies, popular genre painting bloomed in the urban and industrial Katanga region of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Artists, most of them self-educated, produced paintings (acrylics or oils on canvas reclaimed from flour sacking) for local use. Through a limited number of recurrent topics, they articulated a system of shared memories.

http://files.www.antislavery.nottingham.ac.uk/bjl0031.jpg

A baobab tree with pigeon cotes on trunk. Fruit of the tree eaten by Mohammedans

http://files.www.antislavery.nottingham.ac.uk/bjz0027.jpg

A Baringa paddler – famous for his boat songs

http://files.www.antislavery.nottingham.ac.uk/bjl0019.jpg

A bowl of white water-lilies, Maringa

http://files.www.antislavery.nottingham.ac.uk/bjl0015.jpg

A bunch of young bananas with edible purple seed lobe

http://files.www.antislavery.nottingham.ac.uk/bjz0019.jpg

A chief on the Ikelemba, who entertained Mr. and Mrs. Harris in his compound

http://files.www.antislavery.nottingham.ac.uk/bjn0015.jpg

A Cocoa Roca, San Tomè.

oulis2016-bjs-0033-0.jpg

A Congo chief with a few of his reputed 1000 wives

http://files.www.antislavery.nottingham.ac.uk/bjl0013.jpg

A Congo forest fruit, considered by the natives to resemble the imported pineapple, to which they give the same name

http://files.www.antislavery.nottingham.ac.uk/bkb0026.jpg

A cool spring of clearest water at Ikau, upper Congo

http://files.www.antislavery.nottingham.ac.uk/bjv0001.jpg

A dam in construction across the Catumbella River

http://files.www.antislavery.nottingham.ac.uk/bjx0019.jpg

A difficult tramp through the Ikelemba – Juapa watershed

http://files.www.antislavery.nottingham.ac.uk/bjl0012.jpg

A field of white water-lilies, Maringa River

http://files.www.antislavery.nottingham.ac.uk/bjz0024.jpg

A group of Congo women

A Group of Consuls and Explorers.jpg

A Group of Consuls and Explorers

A group of consuls and explorers in East Africa. This photograph (Neg. 143) formed part of the Harris Lantern Slide Collection. Under King Leopold II the Congo Free State used mass forced labour to extract rubber from the jungle for the European market. As consumer demand grew King Leopold II's private army - the Force Publique - used violent means to coerce the population into meeting quotas, including murder, mutilation, rape, village burning, starvation and hostage taking. Alice Seeley Harris and her husband Reverend John H. Harris were missionaries in the Congo Free State from the late 1890s. Alice produced a collection of images documenting the horrific abuses of the African rubber labourers. Her photographs are considered to be an important development in the history of humanitarian campaigning. The images were used in a number of publications. The Harrises also used the photographs to develop the Congo Atrocity Lantern Lecture which toured Britain and the the USA raising awareness of the issue of colonial abuses under King Leopold II's regime. Source: Antislavery International and Panos Pictures.

http://files.www.antislavery.nottingham.ac.uk/bkb0012.jpg

A loop of a giant vine, Ikelemba forest

http://files.www.antislavery.nottingham.ac.uk/bjt0014.jpg

A maize field on the Kasai

http://files.www.antislavery.nottingham.ac.uk/bjl0020.jpg

A mango tree with fruit Leopoldville