What Happened to the Motley Crew?

L. Harris
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

In this chapter I examine James’s and Oiticica’s “discovery” of what I conceive of to be the active remains of the motley crew in the aesthetic sociality of blackness. I explore the claim they each make on it, on its modes of composition, arrangement and assembly, and the claim it makes on them, by way of some of their early experiments—James’s Minty Alley, the novel he wrote in Trinidad as an “exercise,” and Oiticica’s Parangolé, the banners, tents and capes whose activation would constitute what he would come to describe, through a phrase he adopts from Brazilian art critic Mário Pedrosa, as an “experimental exercise of freedom.” Both claim the aesthetic sociality of blackness by “appropriating” elements of the creative practices they encountered, the spectacular performance of cricket and samba and the more quotidian performances connected to them, the forms of assembly that James observed in conversations in the barrack-yards and that Oiticica observed in the architecture of the favelas. I look at the ways their claims take shape in these early works and the way the counterclaim of that sociality opens up those shapes, using it as a vehicle for its own expression, one that can’t quite be contained by the works themselves or the gesture of appropriation.
混血儿们怎么了?
在本章中,我考察了詹姆斯和奥伊蒂西卡的“发现”,我认为这是黑人审美社会性中形形色色的活跃残余。我探究了他们各自对自由的主张,对其构成、安排和集合模式的主张,以及对他们的主张,通过他们早期的一些实验——詹姆斯的《明蒂巷》(Minty Alley),他在特立尼达写的小说,作为一种“练习”,以及Oiticica的parangol,这些横幅、帐篷和斗篷的活动将构成他后来描述的东西,通过他从巴西艺术评论家Mário佩德罗萨那里引用的一个短语,作为“自由的实验练习”。他们都通过“占有”他们所遇到的创造性实践的元素来主张黑人的审美社会性,板球和桑巴舞的壮观表演以及与之相关的更日常的表演,詹姆斯在军营院子里的谈话中观察到的集会形式,以及Oiticica在贫民窟建筑中观察到的集会形式。我观察了他们在这些早期作品中主张的形成方式以及社会的反主张如何打开这些形态,将其作为自己表达的工具,这种表达不能被作品本身或挪用的姿态所包含。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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