作为殖民地权力象征的azulejo:糖与艺术的解构

ARTis ON Pub Date : 2018-12-30 DOI:10.37935/aion.v0i8.220
Shelley L. Miller
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引用次数: 0

摘要

我创作的壁画看起来像阿祖莱霍斯,描绘了传统阿祖莱霍斯中出现的卡拉瓦和许多装饰特征,但我的壁画完全是用糖做的。我做糖瓦,用可食用的墨水手绘。我对azulejo很感兴趣,特别是船只的图像,作为殖民权力和民族自豪感(葡萄牙民族)的象征,但只是为了颠覆这种自豪感。我在巴西开始了这项工作,讲述了这个国家的殖民历史和支持葡萄牙糖帝国的奴隶贸易。我继续使用蓝色瓷砖作为参考,即使在巴西的背景之外,因为我想参考殖民和奴隶制的总体结构,展示压迫如何找到新的形式。我把我短暂的壁画安装在城墙上,在那里它们被冲刷、褪色、破碎和腐烂,激活了一个更现实的历史版本。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
THE AZULEJO AS COLONIAL SYMBOL OF POWER: A DECONSTRUCTION THROUGH SUGAR AND ART
I create murals that look like azulejos, depicting caravels and many decorative features seen in traditional azulejos, but my murals are made entirely of sugar. I make the sugar tiles and hand paint them with edible inks. I am interested in the azulejo, specifically with imagery of ships, as a symbol of colonial power and of national pride (the Nation of Portugal), but only for the means to subvert this pride. I developed this work in Brazil, addressing the country’s history of colonization and the slave trade that supported Portugal’s sugar empire. I continue to use the blue tile reference, even outside the context of Brazil, because I want to reference the general construct of colonization and slavery, showing how oppression has found new forms. I install my ephemeral murals on city walls, where they wash away, fade, crumble and decay, animating a more realistic version of history.
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