With time...

Movie by

C. Yacoub

30 Thousand...

Movie by

C. Yacoub

Tresor island

Movie by

Polibio Diaz

JOSCELYN GARDNER

Born in BARBADOS in 1961


Drawing on a family history in Barbados that dates from the 17th century, I use a postcolonial feminist methodology to probe colonial material culture found in Caribbean archives in order to explore my (white) Creole identity. Specifically, I aim to articulate the intertwined historical relationship shared by black and white women in the Caribbean by recognizing that under patriarchy and colonialism the lives of all Caribbean women have been shaped by “mastership”. My project also aims to address the repression and dissociation that operate in relation to the subject of slavery and white culpability.


Working with printmaking (stone lithography) and multi-media installation (video and sound), my work ruptures patriarchal or colonial versions of history by re-inserting the voices/ images/ traces of the women omitted from this history. I attempt to “speak the unspeakable” by retrieving atrocities that lie buried in our collective memory in order to reconcile the past with the present and move toward a metaphorical healing of historical wounds. By focusing on women’s lives, I identify geographical/ historical/ cultural/ racial/ class differences that have united/ separated women in the wider postcolonial world.


Creole Portraits II (2007) commemorates the women of Egypt Estate in Jamaica through a series of framed « portrait heads », text panels, and wall drawings that replicate an 18th century « gallery » of prints. This series of inverted portraits shows the tools of torture used during slavery (iron collars, bridles, shackles, and a « man-trap ») entwined within intricately braided hairstyles in order to symbolically reclaim identity for the many women lost to anonymity on Caribbean plantations.

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Contact: aica-sc@orange.fr

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