[Re:]Entanglements: Colonial Collections in Decolonial Times

[Re:]Entanglements: Colonial Collections in Decolonial Times

Veranstalter
Evi Olde Rikkert, Nicole Remus, and Vera-Simone Schulz (Planetary Patchwork: A Perpetual Seminar on Artistic Practices, Heritage, and Epistemologies)
Ausrichter
Planetary Patchwork: A Perpetual Seminar on Artistic Practices, Heritage, and Epistemologies
Veranstaltungsort
online
PLZ
Florence
Ort
50121
Land
Italy
Vom - Bis
10.05.2022 -
Von
Vera-Simone Schulz, Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz - Max-Planck-Institut

Paul Basu, Hertz Professor of Global Heritage, University of Bonn
Ozioma Onuzulike, Professor of Ceramic Art and Art History, University of Nigeria, Nsukka
Ikenna Onwuegbuna, Lecturer in Music, University of Nigeria, Nsukka

Tuesday, May 10, 2022, 6pm CET, online

Planetary Patchwork: A Perpetual Seminar on Artistic Practices, Heritage, and Epistemologies
Concept and organization: Evi Olde Rikkert, Nicole Remus, & Vera-Simone Schulz

[Re:]Entanglements: Colonial Collections in Decolonial Times

Tuesday, May 10, 2022
6pm CET
Online

Over the past few years the Museum Affordances / [Re:]Entanglements project has been re-engaging with colonial anthropological archives and collections to explore their ‘decolonial affordances’. The project has focused on the archival legacies of a series of surveys led by Britain’s first ‘Government Anthropologist’, Northcote Thomas, in Nigeria and Sierra Leone between 1909 and 1915. We have been retracing the anthropologist’s journeys, returning copies of photographs and sound recordings to the communities from whom they were obtained more than a century ago, and seeking to understand their value to these communities today. Another strategy has been to engage with artists, musicians and other creative practitioners in Nigeria and Sierra Leone to explore the contemporary significance of these archives. In this Planetary Patchwork seminar, three project participants bring their (inter)disciplinary perspectives and personal positionalities to bear on the collaboration. Project leader, Paul Basu, first introduces the [Re:]Entanglements project and its aspirations. Then ceramicist/artist/art historian Ozioma Onuzulike and ethnomusicologist/musician/composer Ikenna Onwuegbuna, both based at the University of Nigeria Nsukka, discuss their respective critical-creative engagements with archival photographs and sound recordings from Northcote Thomas’s 1910-11 survey of the Igbo-speaking peoples of what was then Awka District, Southern Nigeria. Further information about their creative re-engagements with the archives can be found at https://re-entanglements.net/onuzulike/ and https://re-entanglements.net/musical-returns/.

Free registration: https://planetarypatchwork.net/sessions/paul-basu-ozioma-onuzulike-ikenna-onwuegbuna

https://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJUoduqprj8tHtFyDJd6g0jZzGJlNWY1irXU

The online event is part of “Planetary Patchwork: A Perpetual Seminar on Artistic Practices, Heritage, and Epistemologies”, co-convened by Evi Olde Rikkert (Nijmegen/Florence), Nicole Remus (Jinja) and Vera-Simone Schulz (Florence).
www.planetarypatchwork.net

http://www.planetarypatchwork.net