哈莱姆的家:费斯-林戈尔德《苦巢》中的家庭政治

Debra Hanson
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摘要

苦巢》是费丝-林戈尔德(Faith Ringgold,美国人,1930 年生)于 1988 年创作的五幅大型故事拼布系列,探究了一个想象中的黑人中产阶级家庭的动态、他们在哈莱姆的家以及他们在其中建立的联系。绗缝系列最初是作为表演作品构思的,它同样扩展了关于家、家庭、母女关系和黑人女性创造力的主题。苦巢》汇集了艺术家家族、非裔美国人社区以及整个非洲移民社群中突出的讲故事和绗缝传统,将家的概念延伸到哈莱姆区本身,将其居民和邻里多代人联系在一起。费丝-林戈尔德被誉为视觉艺术家、作家、教育家和社会正义的终身倡导者,是她这一代人中最具影响力的文化人物之一。尽管展示其成就的大型展览最近产生了大量新的学术成果,但《苦巢》在有关这位艺术家的文献中仍然出人意料地被忽略。本文通过研究该系列作品对家政、住宅和家庭政治的表现,旨在弥补这一疏忽,同时扩大对这位美国重要艺术家作品的批评范围,并重新关注林戈尔德在该系列作品及其整个作品中对黑人住宅和家庭的有力再想象。这篇文章借鉴了艺术家对《苦巢》和相关主题的评论、被子的视觉证据以及 20 世纪晚期和近期的女权主义理论,为进一步研究《苦巢》及其对美国黑人妇女和家庭不断演变的故事的诸多贡献奠定了基础。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
At home in Harlem: The politics of domesticity in Faith Ringgold's The Bitter Nest
The Bitter Nest, a sequence of five large-scale story quilts created in 1988 by Faith Ringgold (American, b. 1930), probes the dynamics of an imagined Black middle-class family, their home in Harlem, and the connections they forge within it. Originally conceived as a performance piece, the quilted series likewise expands on its themes of home, family, mother-daughter relations, and Black female creativity. Bringing together storytelling and quilting traditions prominent in the artist's family, the African American community, and across the African diaspora, The Bitter Nest extends the concept of home to encompass Harlem itself, connecting its residents and neighbourhoods across multiple generations. Celebrated as a visual artist, author, educator, and lifelong advocate for social justice, Faith Ringgold, is among the most influential cultural figures of her generation. While major exhibitions showcasing the scope of her achievements have recently generated a welcome outpouring of new scholarship, The Bitter Nest remains surprisingly overlooked in literature on the artist. In examining the series' representation of the politics of domesticity, home, and family, this article aims to remedy this oversight as it expands the scope of critical discourse on the work of a major American artist, and directs renewed attention to Ringgold's powerful reimagining of the Black home and family in this series and throughout her oeuvre. Drawing on the artist's commentary on The Bitter Nest and related topics, the visual evidence of the quilts, and late twentieth-century and more recent feminist theory, this essay provides a foundation for further research into The Bitter Nest and its many contributions to the evolving story of Black women and families in America.
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