{"title":"大石油时代的艺术、本土主权和抵抗:考文·克莱尔蒙特的双头箭/焦油砂项目","authors":"Kate A. Kane","doi":"10.1353/AIQ.2021.0010","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract:This article analyzes an art installation performed and exhibited in 2018 by the Séliš u Ksanka/Salish and Kootenai artist Corwin Clairmont: Two-Headed Arrow/The Tar Sands Project. Clairmont is a printmaker and creator of inventive and playful installations that follow conceptualist principles, which designate ideas and action as inherently aesthetic, but he is also and primarily a traditionally oriented Séliš u Ksanka artist. Concerned with petromodernity in the North American Rocky Mountain West and Great Plains, Clairmont’s installation charts the material and ideological routes of the oil flow between the Flathead Indian Reservation (and Missoula, Montana) and the Fort McMurray tar sands site located adjacent to Abathasca Chipewyan and Mikisew Cree First Nations land in Alberta. The history of energy extraction in Indian Country is largely occluded in the newly emergent interdisciplinary field of “energy humanities” and similarly rendered opaque in most official and unofficial discourses of the “West.” Clairmont’s installation responds to this social silence around indigeneity and petroleum production in this “sacrifice zone” via a collage of artworks that includes, among other things, gummy bears (a key oil commodity), lava lamps, prints, and photographs. The installation creates new historical and affective insights in the unsettling juxtapositions of its materials. Plastic functions in place of hides in Clairmont’s new “winter counts” and the focus on gummy bears allows for the unveiling of the longstanding kinship between the animals and Indigenous people. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
摘要:本文分析了萨里什和库特奈艺术家考文·克莱尔蒙特(Corwin Clairmont)于2018年表演并展出的装置作品《双头箭/焦油砂项目》。Clairmont是一名版画家和创作者,他遵循概念主义原则,将想法和行动指定为固有的美学,但他也是一名传统导向的ssamliusu Ksanka艺术家。Clairmont关注北美落基山脉西部和大平原的石油现代性,他的装置描绘了Flathead印第安保留区(以及蒙大拿州的米苏拉)和Fort McMurray沥青砂遗址之间的石油流动的物质和思想路线,该遗址位于阿尔伯塔省Abathasca Chipewyan和Mikisew Cree First Nations土地附近。印度能源开采的历史在很大程度上被封闭在新兴的跨学科领域“能源人文”中,同样在“西方”的大多数官方和非官方话语中也变得不透明。Clairmont的装置作品通过拼贴艺术作品回应了这个“献祭区”围绕土著和石油生产的社会沉默,其中包括小熊软糖(一种重要的石油商品)、熔岩灯、版画和照片。该装置在令人不安的材料并置中创造了新的历史和情感见解。在克莱尔蒙特的新“冬季计数”中,塑料功能代替了兽皮,而对小熊软糖的关注则揭示了这种动物与土著人民之间长期存在的亲缘关系。该装置通过挑战国家形式的掠夺性定居者殖民主义,参与了强大且历史悠久的土著抵抗传统。
Art, Indigenous Sovereignty, and Resistance in the Age of Big Oil: Corwin Clairmont’s Two-Headed Arrow/The Tar Sands Project
Abstract:This article analyzes an art installation performed and exhibited in 2018 by the Séliš u Ksanka/Salish and Kootenai artist Corwin Clairmont: Two-Headed Arrow/The Tar Sands Project. Clairmont is a printmaker and creator of inventive and playful installations that follow conceptualist principles, which designate ideas and action as inherently aesthetic, but he is also and primarily a traditionally oriented Séliš u Ksanka artist. Concerned with petromodernity in the North American Rocky Mountain West and Great Plains, Clairmont’s installation charts the material and ideological routes of the oil flow between the Flathead Indian Reservation (and Missoula, Montana) and the Fort McMurray tar sands site located adjacent to Abathasca Chipewyan and Mikisew Cree First Nations land in Alberta. The history of energy extraction in Indian Country is largely occluded in the newly emergent interdisciplinary field of “energy humanities” and similarly rendered opaque in most official and unofficial discourses of the “West.” Clairmont’s installation responds to this social silence around indigeneity and petroleum production in this “sacrifice zone” via a collage of artworks that includes, among other things, gummy bears (a key oil commodity), lava lamps, prints, and photographs. The installation creates new historical and affective insights in the unsettling juxtapositions of its materials. Plastic functions in place of hides in Clairmont’s new “winter counts” and the focus on gummy bears allows for the unveiling of the longstanding kinship between the animals and Indigenous people. The installation participates in a powerful and historically long-standing tradition of Indigenous resistance, by challenging state forms of extractive settler colonialism.