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HOME/LAND

EXCAVATION: A SITE OF MEMORY SYLVIA D. HAMILTON


18 October to 1 December 2013
DALHOUSIE ART GALLERY 1

CURATORIAL INTRODUCTION
By Peter Dykhuis Director/Curator Dalhousie Art Gallery

IN JUNE OF 2012 , a consortium of winery owners and winemakers in Nova Scotia launched Tidal Bay, a brand name for a crisp and slightly dry white wine produced by ten provincial wineries following strict criteria rooted in the historic European system of appellationsthat is, a series of protected names under which wines are produced and sold using approved grapes cultivated in specic geographic regions. The website of the Winery Association of Nova Scotia further describes this rst appellation in the province: In Nova Scotia, our wines have consistently been known for their fresh, crisp and bright style. A wine with unique character, Tidal Bay brilliantly reects the terroir, coastal breezes and cooler climate of its birthplace. Rooted in the French word terre (land) the term terroir is used in the wine industry to describe special characteristics and attributes within a geographic

and geologic territory in relationship to local climatic conditions and other organic features such as the acidity of the soil and the presence of wild and ambient yeasts. Terroir also takes into account the human decision-making process about which varieties of grapes to grow on specic lands and whether to capture wild yeast as the kick-starter in the fermentation process or to apply cultured yeast all facets of production that will aect the outcome of the nal wine. Indeed, the use of oak barrels in the fermentation process will positively enhance the subtle eects of the geographic terroir present in some wines and possibly mask positive attributes in others. Terroir, then, represents the sum of the eects that the local physical and climatic environment has on the production of wine in concert with interwoven sequences of the human decision-making process.

INDIVIDUALLY, THE WORD HOME

conjures up a social space of birth beginnings, or the human living space within the architectural construction known as a house. Land, on the other hand, implies earth, physical territory, geographic and/or political space that has limits if not borders and boundaries. Placing the words home and land within proximity of each other can generate added layers of meaning; abutting them to form the single word homeland manufactures a term fraught with nationalistic and militaristic overtones when combined into phrases such as homeland security. In the title of this exhibition, the words home and land are aligned but kept distinct by the slash, not operating as a single term but as two words that are magnetically attracted to each other as partners in an interconnected relationship. In this installation-based exhibition by Sylvia D. Hamilton and Wilma Needham, the artists have each created projects that explore their home/landtheir individual experiences of home in relation to the land where

they were born: a relationship in which the social and geographic spheres combine to have added cultural signicance. In Hamiltons world, home/land is the diasporic African Canadian experience of life in Nova Scotia; for Needham, it is the city of Niagara Falls and the natural, geographic features that gave it its name. The concept of terroir is a useful entry into this work. It is relevant to consider how Hamiltons and Needhams artwork grew out of the social, cultural and political terroir that their lives are rooted in where their professional practices are cultivated. What are the historical (or temporal) arcs of their projects? What (or where) are the roots of the issues in the work? Who (or what) has been transplanted? Whose stories are being told (or channeled)? Which way are the political breezes (or hurricane winds) blowing? What role does the Gallery, as a cask for the installations, play to enhance (or water down) the elements of the social/cultural exchange? And how are we each the product of our own terroir?

MINING MEMORY
Sylvia D. Hamiltons Art of Telling History
By Pamela Edmonds

Installation view of Freedom Runners (detail)

the artist serves as the historic agent of memory, while the archive emerges as a place in which concerns with the past are touched by the astringent vapors of death, destruction and degenerationit is also within the archive that acts of remembering and regeneration occur, where a suture between the past and present is performed, in the indeterminate zone between event and image, document and monument. Okwui Enwezor, Archive Fever: Photography Between History and the Monument1 Much remains unspoken about the historical fact that Nova Scotia was a slave society, and the traces of its legacy haunt us still: in the names of prominent Nova Scotians, in street names, in archival records and in churches. African people were present here from the earliest period of European colonization. My ancestors were the Black Refugees from the War of 1812. I am their witness. Sylvia D. Hamilton, Artist statement from Excavation: A Site of Memory2 Until we excavate our history, we will never know who we are. James Baldwin, The Image, Three Views3

A MATERIALIST HISTORIAN ,

according to Walter Benjamin, must act as one who digs, to pull signs from the past into a new confrontation with the present4. This concept of quotation serves as a starting point referencing the theory and practice of memorialisation central to the creative practice of Nova Scotian artist Sylvia D. Hamilton. For over the past three decades, the acclaimed documentary lmmaker, writer, activist and educator has been dedicated to excavating and exposing the buried histories, experiences and contributions of African-Canadians neglected within the dominant historical and cultural narratives of the nation. Hamiltons conceptualization of memory manifests itself largely through the collection and preservation of oral histories, retrieving forms of testimony in order to acknowledge the genealogies of black existence in Canada which date back over four hundred years. Working archeologically to unearth hidden stories or forgotten archives, Hamiltons work does not simply oer a compensatory history for that which has been lost or omitted in the Canadian historic lexicon. Rather, in keeping with the historic materialism expressed by Benjamin in his Thesis on Philosophy and History, it brushes history against the grain to reveal how racial domination and colonization have situated black subjects and their geopolitical concerns as being elsewhere, a

spatial practice that erases and obscures the situated knowledge of these communities and their contributions to real and imagined human geographies.5 Excavation: A Site of Memory has the artist employing the situational aesthetics of contemporary installation-based practice to explore how systems of representation that produce the past as a functioning social discourse are imagined, recuperated, transposed and positioned within public and private spaces. Her work also asks us to consider how testimony might take the form of objects and images, in addition to the words of eyewitnesses and the memories of survivors. Utilizing a combination of video footage, still photographs, audio, text, archival documents as well as an inventory of personal and found objects, Hamilton invites her audiences to imaginatively travel across time and space to engage with narratives that bring to life stories of early black settlement. These are stories of both hardship and resilience, informed by multiple histories of migration beginning with the Middle Passage from Africa to the Atlantic, to journeys from slavery to liberation during the American Revolution (1775-1783) and the War of 1812 (1812-1814). Nova Scotia has the distinction of having the earliest population of free African people in North America. At the same time, as Hamiltons work attests,
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Installation view of Naming Names, Mining My Archives, and Mama Hamiltons Quilt

it was also a slave societya fact much hidden and its traces and legacy, rarely discussed nor acknowledged.6 Working with what might be called the evidence eect of artefacts, Hamiltons display allows for an otherwise inexpressible history to be imagined through a materialist autotopography. In Subject to Display: Reframing Race in Contemporary Installation Art, art historian Jennifer A. Gonzlez describes this as similar to an autobiography, however an autotopographyis a practice of claiming ontopological rights through the preservation and display of personal objects: the right to exist, the right to a story, and the right to a territory, whether imaginary or actual, where the psyche of the subject dwells and leaves behind a physical trace.7 Tracing her own family history, as a descendent of Black Refugees who settled in the community of Beechville, Nova Scotia, Hamilton builds and imagines a powerful and evocative archive of African-Nova Scotian life within the gallery space, re-telling personal and communal histories to stake claims to space and place. The entrance to the exhibition presents re-produced prints of actual advertisements in Nova Scotian newspapers with details of a slave auction, the search for a run6

away slave or freedom runner as Hamiltons preferred term which are juxtaposed with poems in the imagined voices of the Freedom runners. Two large wooden barrels, called hogsheads and a mound of potatoes on the gallery oor stand asin haunting reminders of human bodies reduced to bartered objects. Hamilton juxtaposes compelling poetic verses, presented as wall texts throughout the space, which give voice life and life to the imagined experiences of adversity and resistance related to the individual and communal will to survive. In another part of the space, she includes ve 12 foot wall mounted paper scrolls which tower in scale and presence, listing individual names drawn from archival records documenting the presence of Black Loyalist, Maroon, Black Refugee and enslaved Africans in Nova Scotia from the 1700s to 1815. The names of African peopleenslaved and free are also read into the record through an audio soundscape with actual names drawn from T. W. Smiths The Slave in Canada, and Black Loyalist and Black Refugee archival records. These acts of armation also reects the annual practice of African Baptist churches which record and acknowledge in their church minutes the passing of community members.

Similar to West African griots, revered traditional storytellers entrusted to keep memories to pass on to future generations, Hamilton mines her own memories in another section of the installation, visitors observe remnants of her own family genealogy at a wooden desk stacked with a collection of treasured objects, including hair combs, her grandmothers handmade quilt, books and photographs. She also includes a video projection of a short lm titled Keep on Keepin On (2004), a work she refers to as a visual poem that chronicles the distinct development of African Nova Scotian communities as told through her personal history and research. Melville Island, a former prison used to house free Black Refugees, is re-imagined in poetic text, photographic image, archival record and projected images of rocky shorelines. Combined they relay how bodies of water have linked human bodies via the trans-Atlantic slave trade as well as through the emigration of Black Loyalists to Sierra Leone in 1792. Projected images of Halifax Harbour and Melville Island (used as a receiving depot for black refugeesescaping slavery in the United States) relay how bodies of water have linked human bodies via the trans-Atlanticslave trade as well as through the migration of Black Loyalists to Sierre Leone in 1792. Pairing these compelling landscapes with poems (presented as text and audio) such as The Passage, opens up new ways of thinking about how African diasporic subjects have and continue to negotiate and re-narrativize the contested historical and contemporary geographies of the new world. Taken as a whole, this compelling, viscerally-charged exhibition is a synthesized journey through a temporal site of memory where the real and the imagined co-exist, embracing the concept articulated by French historian Pierre Nora.8 Memory and history are not seen as xed, linear or static, but as moving, changing and persisting into the present. Hamilton acts as intermediary and participant across generations of lived history collecting stories and re-appropriating experiences that serve as lessons to be passed down to future generations. With an impetus to continue and encourage dialogue and dissemination, Hamilton also invites gallery visitors to engage in the process of leaving a memory where she has installed another desk with a blank notebook to ll. This work aligns itself similarly with what critic Andreas Huyssen terms memory sculpture and, in so doing, transfers the work of remembering from artist to viewer. Huyssen identies the emergence of artistic projects that perform a kind of memory work that activates body, space, and temporality, matter and imagination, presence and absence in a complex relationship with their beholder.9 These works, which occupy not the public spaces of monuments and memorials but the more intimate spaces of the museum or gallery, address individuals at a corporeal level, even

though the human body is often just as absent and elusive as it would be in any memory of the past. 10 Hamiltons work gives voice to the stories of individuals silenced by racism and colonialism, she does not speak for them, but nds ways to bring these individuals forward to speak for themselves through counter-histories and counter-memories. In doing this, we can imagine the everyday and local lives of communities and their cultural identications, as implicit to the past and presently remembered landscape. By touching viewers in a way that produces an aective response, Excavation revives the principle of oral tradition through not only auditory, but visual and other sensorial means. Here the resiliency of the African spirit is a testimony to endurance, adaption and the ability to evolve while embarking on continual processes of imaginativerecovery.

NOTES

1 Okwui Enwezor. Archive Fever: Photography Between History and the Monument, in Archive Fever: Uses of the Document in Contemporary Art, exhibition catalogue, (New York: Steidl/ICP, 2008), 11. 2 Sylvia D. Hamilton. Unpublished artist statement, 2013. 3M  alcolm Preston, The Image: Three Views- Ben Shahn, Darious Mihaud and James Baldwin Debate the Real Meaning of a Fashionable Term in Conversations with James Baldwin, eds. Fred L. Standley and Louis H. Pratt, (University Press of Mississippi, 1989), 12. 4 Walter Benjamin, Theses on the philosophy of history, in Illuminations, ed. Hannah Arendt, (London: New Left Books, 1973), 257. 5 Ibid. 6 Sylvia D. Hamilton. Unpublished artist statement, 2013. 7 Jennifer A. Gonzlez, Subject to Display: Reframing Race in Contemporary Installation Art. (Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press, 2008), 19. 8P  ierre Nora, Between Memory and History: Les Lieux de Mmoire, Representations 26 (Spring 1989): 7-24. 9 Andreas Huyssen, Present Pasts: Urban Palimpsests and the Politics of Memory, (Standford: Standford University Press, 2003), 67. 10 Ibid.
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WORKS IN EXHIBITION
Dimensions are in centimetres, height precedes width, precedes depth. Works are collection of the artist. This exhibition is installed in ve sections that each display text, images, objects and media. Freedom Runners multimedia installation consisting of: wall-mounted vinyl text, digital text panels of poetry and historical news clippings; two oak barrels; potatoes, red ribbon and severed dreadlocked hair dimensions vary video: Gull Island 2013 (0:48) Melville Island mixed media installation consisting of: digitally printed photograph and text panels of poetry; electro-set historical certicate on mylar dimensions vary Naming Names multimedia installation consisting of: digitally printed The Ledger panel; ve digitally printed columns of names on suspended fabric; audio recitation of names The Ledger 91.0 71.0; fabric panels 336.0 91.0 each Mining My Archives mixed media installation consisting of: digital text panels of poetry; antique table and stool with collection of personal memorabilia, combs, cameras and news clippings; books and baskets dimensions vary Mama Hamiltons Quilt c.1966 cotton and wool 185.0 178.0 Unidentied2013 digital photograph 43.7 66.0 Jason Harper, Blacksmith, St John, NB1978 two contemporary black and white digital prints generated from 35mm negatives 45.7 30.5 each
VIDEOS:

EXCAVATION: A SITE OF MEMORY

I am who they imagined. When we came here more than two hundred years ago, they thought, no hoped, we would not survive. Wed be a burden on the scarce resources of the new society. But survive we did. We made a way out of no way. We had to. For them: our kin who died in the Middle Passage. We survived for them, and for the children they would never know. For the children like me, from generations in the future. I am who they imagined. Memory is a non-linear, non-chronological mobius strip; it is uid, porous, a collage. In this temporal site of memory the real and the imagined co-exist. Much remains unspoken about the historical fact that Nova Scotia was a slave society, and the traces of its legacy haunt us still: in the names of prominent Nova Scotians, in street names, in archival records and in churches. African people were present here from the earliest period of European colonization. My ancestors were the Black Refugees from the War of 1812. I am their witness. I am who they imagined.

Leaving Home 1975 (2:36) Sierra Leone Odyssey 1996 (22:47) Keep On Keepin On 2004 (2:85) Leave a Memory multimedia installation consisting of: desk and chair; Memory Book and pen dimensions vary video: Waters of the Diaspora: The Passage 2013 (1:02) projection over vinyl text

Installation view of Freedom Runners 10 11

Thursday of Gull Island


I Thursday waited for the tides to leave. She walked the sand out to the island taking her footprints with her. She was not hiding. Just not where that indendure paper say she should be. The gulls, her watchers. The blueberries and sea kelp her food. The evergreen boughs, her bed. II She descend over rocks flat and jagged. Some say she fly with the gulls. Some say that whale wait for her just off shore. Some say she that odd rock stuck look there last spit of land before the sea open. Some say she that wave smash high, high hugging hard rock face trying not to return to sea.

By Some Other Name


breath wait until night fall creep into the forest bowels run crawl roll down jagged hills breath wade deep inkblack lake bog sucking swollen feet away slip breath bloody fingers claw moss breath gasping grasping hand upon hand breath before come the moon

Melville Island 1816


Silenced by the snow they wondered if even God had finally forsaken them
home a stone prison temporary officials say we used to temporary come in from the fields one day to find out we been up and sold we invented temporary when they line us up after they drag us off them waterbeds of death we ready for a new kind of temporary nova scarcity seed potatoes turnip tobacco good crop in the fall now all froze to the floor and if we still here in spring we try again

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Installation view of Mining My Archives

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Installation view of Leave A Memory

Waters of the Diaspora: The Passage

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CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT:

Video stills from Sierra Leone Odyssey Keep On Keepin On Keep on Keepin On Leaving Home 18 19

Freedom Runners (detail)

BIOGRAPHIES
SYLVIA D. HAMILTON is a multi award winning Nova Scotian lmmaker and writer who is known for her documentary lms as well as her publications, public presentations and volunteer work on the local and national levels. She has published in journals and anthologies including The Dalhousie Review, West Coast Line and The Great Black North. Her most recent lm is The Little Black School House produced through her company, Maroon Films Inc. She teaches part time at the University of Kings College in Halifax. PAMELA EDMONDS is a visual and media arts curator who received her BFA and an MA in Art History from Concordia University, Montreal. With family ties to African Nova Scotian heritage, she is interested in developing contemporary art projects that deal with African diasporic cultural identity and the politics of representation. Recent curated exhibitions include Bounty: Chikonzero Chazunguza (Gallery 101, Ottawa, 2013), 28 Days: Reimagining Black History Month (Justina M. Barnicke Gallery/Georgia Scherman Projects, Toronto, 2012) and Streaming Alterity (Art Gallery of Peterborough, 2012). She is a founding member of Third Space Art Projects, a curatorial collective co-founded in 2009 with Sally Frater. It is a forum for the promotion, presentation and development of multidisciplinary art exhibitions that focus on visual cultures of the Black Atlantic.

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Dalhousie Theatre Props Department Maritime Museum of the Atlantic Public Archives of Nova Scotia Dan Conlin Pam Edmonds Eye Candy Lorraine Field Dan OBrien Juanita Peters Mark Pineo Katrina Pyne Mike Rossi Ada Thompson Craig Yorke and Hugo Ford, Image House Digital Inc. Sylvia D. Hamilton recognizes the support of Arts Nova Scotia and is pleased to work in partnership with the province to develop and promote our cultural resources for all Nova Scotians.

Hamilton also gratefully acknowledges the nancial support from the University of Kings College.

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