Countering colonial nostalgia and heroic masculinity in the age of accelerated climate change: The Arctic artworks of Katja Aglert and Isaac Julien

Lisa E. Bloom
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This article explores two screen-based artworks: Katja Aglert’s Winter Event – Antifreeze (2009–18) and Isaac Julien’s True North (2004) respectively, that exemplify diverse viewpoints contesting the essentialized identities of the Arctic past. These artworks recover the histories of women, the Inuit and African American men’s involvement in polar exploration, reimagining heroic narratives from historically excluded or ignored perspectives. By employing irony and humour, these artworks expand our understanding of how media-based art can respond to the ironies of a warming planet and challenge colonial nostalgia for White male heroism. The artworks traverse not just the human imperialism of the colonial era but also the newer imperialism in the age of the Anthropocene and the Capitalocene, decentring the mythic and exotic qualities of expedition narratives. Ultimately, the irreverent artwork encourages us to rethink an aesthetics of the distanced sublime from Romantic aesthetics and its roots in European Universalism, promoting a more inclusive and intersectional approach to the Arctic and its representation.
在气候变化加速的时代对抗殖民怀旧和英雄气概:Katja Aglert和Isaac Julien的北极艺术作品
本文探讨了两件基于屏幕的艺术作品:分别是Katja Aglert的《冬季事件-防冻》(2009-18)和Isaac Julien的《真北》(2004),它们体现了不同观点对北极过去本质特征的争论。这些艺术品还原了女性、因纽特人和非裔美国男性参与极地探险的历史,从历史上被排除或忽视的角度重新想象英雄故事。通过运用讽刺和幽默,这些艺术作品扩展了我们对媒体艺术如何回应地球变暖的讽刺和挑战白人男性英雄主义的殖民怀旧的理解。这些作品不仅跨越了殖民时代的人类帝国主义,也跨越了人类世和资本世时代的新帝国主义,分散了探险叙事的神话和异国情调。最终,这些不敬的艺术作品鼓励我们重新思考一种远离浪漫主义美学的崇高美学,以及它在欧洲普遍主义中的根源,促进对北极及其代表的更具包容性和交叉性的方法。
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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来源期刊
Moving Image Review and Art Journal
Moving Image Review and Art Journal Arts and Humanities-Visual Arts and Performing Arts
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