03/05/2023

PAC - Direction Marseille!

 

15e Printemps de l'Art Contemporain à Marseille :

Journées d'ouverture les jeudi 4, vendredi 5 et samedi 6 mai



2023 : la 15e édition


Le Printemps de l’Art Contemporain revient du 4 au 21 mai 2023 à Marseille, Aix-en-Provence, et dans de nombreuses communes du pourtour de l’Étang de Berre et du pays d’Aix ; et une programmation enrichie par des rencontres professionnelles les 10, 11 et 12 mai à Marseille.

Lancée par une grande ouverture à Marseille du 4 au 7 mai, cette 15e édition du PAC propose au public une découverte de sa programmation par quartier, en nocturne et en journée, en centre-ville et en bord de mer, des quartiers Sud aux quartiers Nord. Ponctuée par une journée dans les centres d’art autour de l’Étang de Berre, le PAC se clôturera à Aix-en-Provence et en pays aixois avec deux jours de propositions artistiques et de circuits guidées ouverts à tou·te·s.

Avec plus de 100 expositions, vernissages, performances et installations, la scène émergente française et internationale s’active dans plus de 70 lieux du territoire – sur la mer, à la campagne, dans les galeries, les musées, les parcs et dans des sites patrimoniaux exceptionnels –, confirmant la place essentielle des acteurs et actrices fédéré·e·s par le réseau Provence Art Contemporain dans le paysage des arts visuels.


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réseau PAC (Provence Art Contemporain)

Regroupant depuis 2007 les volontés et actions des lieux, opérateurs, structures et associations œuvrant pour la diffusion et la promotion de l’art contemporain auprès du public à Marseille et dans son agglo­mération, le réseau PAC (Provence Art Contemporain, anciennement Marseille Expos) est au fil des années devenu le plus grand réseau territorial d’art contemporain en France.

Parmi ses 75 membres, s’y retrouvent des institutions muséales, des galeries associatives ou issues du secteur concurrentiel, des espaces expérimentaux et associatifs, des collectifs de commissaires, les Beaux­-Arts de Marseille, des lieux de résidences et de production, accueillant et accompagnant au quotidien les artistes, produisant, soutenant ou montrant leur travail.

Le réseau bénéficie du soutien attentif du Ministère de la Culture / DRAC PACA. Pour les collectivités territoriales, la Ville de Marseille et la Région Sud sont ses principaux partenaires, aux côtés du Département des Bouches-­du­-Rhône et d’Aix­-Marseille­ Métropole.
L’ADAGP accompagne nos événements.

www.p-a-c.fr



02/05/2023

After the hassle, welcome Month of May


 

A season in a journalist's life... 


Dear friends and readers,

I'm not going to lie, this has been a very difficult couple of months... Probably the hardest time in my life since the winter I lost my dad, in 2009, and the February/March/April that followed. 

Politically, the UK is crumbling down, and I still love Bristol so much; it's hard to think of these anti-protests and anti-immigration laws without cringing... And the French government only showed despise for the beautiful movement of resistance coming from the anti-pension reform demonstrations.



Work-wise, I had to tackle many jobs at the same time, only to learn that one of my employers cancelled their budget for our work from a day to another. 

One of my editors has also cancelled my music column (and another contributor's travel column on the SWANA region), just out of pettiness, and with no justification.

And I received the horrible news regarding the plagiarism of my book, that I worked so long on... 

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My book has been vastly copied by a very-privilege younger French white woman journalist, who read and loved my book years ago, wrote to send me praise then entirely copied my work with no reservation. 

The type of person you would expect respect and solidarity from, as she's much more well-off, very supported and well introduced by extremely well-known and much older French powerhouses in French media, also, in passing, proper millionaires.

How in France in 2023, a privileged person with no background or experience in England or in the global South can steal my work on a story like Bristol with almost no cultural journalists checking the real origins of the ideas is completely beyond me.

And it only reinforces my utter disillusionment about the current French society, marred with anti-intellectual sentiment.

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I've been complaining about it for too long now: we live through an anti-intellectual time.

Corroborating these feelings and reflections, recents worrying events resonated, especially the arrest of a left-wing publisher from La Fabrique at St Pancras, while on his way to the London Book Fair, apparently on a list sent by the French government.

In parallel, I read more and more often from friends in the academic world that plagiarism is becoming a common practice, and that many young writers even tend to erase the work of previous researchers to posture as pioneers in their own dissertations and journal's articles.

Often, in the same way that in the case of my book, they are young, powerful and well-supported, pushing the mainstream media to congratulate them, without looking into the origins of their so-called personal work.

While I was figuring out that my work had been copied, pasted and used with almost no credit, I read on Twitter complains from brilliant academic researchers, also denounced the practice of young and nepotist newcomers erasing the very work they are supposed to mention, just in the hope of advancing their career a little quicker.

In the meantime, in England, while discussing with the brilliant artist Alfredo Jaar and his close circle of friends in art criticism and academia at his exhibition opening's private dinner, I also learned about similar practice in art history in the UK.

One case: 'The Story of Art Without Men' by the 29-year-old Guardian writer Katy Hessel, which turns out to be rewriting history and erasing the work of two generations of less famous hard-working feminist historians, as you can read herehere and here.

Extract:

Advertising works. I kept seeing this book everywhere—on social media, in the news, on the shelves at my local bookstore. I like art. I’m an advocate for feminism, to use bell hooks’s preferred phrase. Surely, I’d get on well with this book. I bought it and started reading.

Unfortunately, the problems start on pretty much the first page.

The real inspiration for this book: E.H. Gombrich’s 1950 The Story of Art. 

(...) The fact that Hessel’s project takes for its centre of gravity a concept so deeply rooted in white supremacy and patriarchy speaks to a lack of critical engagement with feminist histories and historiography. 

For art historian Maura Reilly, ‘revising the canon to address the neglect of women and/or minority artists is fundamentally an impossible project because such revision does not grapple with the terms that created that neglect in the first place’.

(...)

Secondly, despite the long parade of names of women artists from the seventeenth century to today, the book’s politics suck. Without any real sense of self-awareness, The Story of Art Without Men enacts a huge erasure of other women. Namely, women (and men) art historians, academics, artists journalists, curators and other art workers. Not a single one of the words written in this 450-page book would have been possible without the vital contribution of the people who have dedicated themselves to the study of the artists mentioned throughout.

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Hopefully, this coming month seems to bring change, like it happens after many ordeals.

In April 2009, I was lucky enough to apply and get a job interview with the BBC World Service, and to be chose for the job. 

Mid-May 2009, I moved to London after three months of horrible grief and mourning and a new life started for me. I finally realised my dream to work on African news, not only International news, which in general only cover the global north...

This profoundly changed my life and my work, and also led me to write my book on the African-Caribbean British community and culture, and their counter-cultural allies and activism.

18 months later I moved to Kenya, and from 2010 to 2014, I went to report in 14 African countries, on top of my parents' native Algeria, where I had already been regularly since the age of 8 months... I was actually almost born there, as my mother kept going back to Algiers, missing her family, until the very last weeks before my birth... 

In the same way, I now hope that this month for May 2023 will be a time for a new departure and some healing.

Though he would not always have chosen the same methods, a lot of what I do in my work, I do it for the memory of my father, and his family of resistants and freedom fighters, as much as my mother's father was. They lost their brothers, cousins, sons and daughters during a terrible war of resistance again an oppressive regime that never acknowledged publicly or demanded forgiveness for its acts of spoliation, violence and even torture, over 130 years...

My family re-emerged from this fight owning strictly nothing, and both my parents had to immigrate to find work.

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Of course, this winter and early spring also brought wonderful events my way. First, the latest eye-opening exhibitions I covered, like the photographs of Zanele Muholi at MEP Paris, the new Basquiat exhibition at La Philharmonie, the showing of ‘Grenfell’ by Steve McQueen at the Serpentine Galleries, and the great artist-activist I interviewed: Alfredo Jaar. 

My piece on his most recent exhibition for Art UK comes out on 2 May 2023:

Alfredo Jaar: poetic visual interventions

https://artuk.org/discover/stories/alfredo-jaar-poetic-visual-interventions




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I also met wonderfully warm and engaged people, sharing my values, and received comments from readers showing deep support. 

All compensating for the few old friends I thought I’d rejoice to see more often in France, now that the Covid crisis is over, but who have been of very little support, unavailable, and for some of them just cynical regarding all the aforementioned issues... 

Finally, I'm about to start a new full-time job, working on African news again, and international affairs, more on it very soon! 

I hope that this month of May will thus be the start of a new dawn, for my work, art writing. and new, better friendships, the joy of life. 

And I wish the same for you. 


MC


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My latest articles:


Alfredo Jaar: : poetic visual interventions

Alfredo Jaar is most often referred to as a photographer, and he was even awarded the prestigious Hasselblad Award in 2020. Yet, he sees himself more as a critic of our visual culture, a commentator on the 'politics of images', as he says. 

Art UK: https://artuk.org/discover/stories/alfredo-jaar-poetic-visual-interventions


'Two Basquiat exhibitions in Paris shine light on art superstar' (April 2023)

On art: Basquiat has been one of my favourite artists for years, and influenced so many of my other favourite artists! Lucky Parisians!! Read on RFI English's website: https://www.rfi.fr/en/culture/20230415-two-basquiat-exhibitions-in-paris-shine-light-on-art-superstar


Ugandan activists brace for ratification of harsh anti-homosexuality bill

Covering African & International news for RFI English. Latest feature - on Uganda and LGBTIQ+ rights and worries, from April 2023: https://www.rfi.fr/en/africa/20230414-ugandan-activists-brace-for-ratification-of-harsh-anti-homosexuality-bill


All for RFI English on African news:

https://www.rfi.fr/en/author/melissa-chemam-with-rfi/

'Herstory' sings new song for Saudi Arabia's female musicians

An exciting scene of women musicians has emerged in Saudi Arabia. Two filmmakers have decided to document their emergence with a ten-episode series. The result: ‘Herstory’, broadcast on Shahid, the largest streaming platform in South West Asia. Read my feature / interviews for The New Arab here: https://www.newarab.com/features/herstory-sings-new-song-saudi-arabias-female-musicians


Meet Ghoula—Arabic Music Remixed Via Tunisia

This is sadly the last episode of my disappearing monthly column on music & the SWANA region (the review cancelled it without notice)... I chatted with the talented Tunisian electronic music artist Wael Sghaier, aka Ghoula, part of a very select but exciting underground electronica scene from North Africa, who have managed to find in Paris the means to showcase his music.
Read more here: https://themarkaz.org/fr/meet-ghoula-arabic-music-remixed-via-tunisia/



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You can check my newsletter for free here: 

https://melissa.substack.com/



29/04/2023

Demonstration in Paris to support migrants against the coming anti-immigration bill

 

Thousands of people marched on Saturday 19 April 2023 in Paris against the immigration law brought by the French Minister of the Interior Gérald Darmanin. 

I was there with friends, and would rather report on it here, on my blog, rather than wait until I'm back at the newsroom.

Here is a short video clip I took:


In the French capital, demonstrators marched behind a banner proclaiming "No to the Darmanin law, against repression, imprisonment and deportations, for a welcoming migration policy", in a reference to Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin.







The protesters also took aim at Operation Wuambushi (Take Back) being carried out by the authorities on the French Indian Ocean Island of Mayotte to send back illegal immigrants, most from neighbouring Comoros, currently housed in unsanitary shanty towns.




They also demonstrated to support proper healthcare for workers waiting for papers.




The controversial bill, entitled "Controlling immigration while improving integration", is aimed, among other things, at providing greater scope for deportation, especially for foreigners who commit crimes. 




It also stipulates a minimum level of French be required before a multi-year residence permit is granted and allows for mandatory fingerprinting as well as tightening requirements for the renewal of long-term permits.




25/04/2023

'I Inside the Old Year Dying' - PJ Harvey's 10th album


PJ Harvey's tenth studio album 'I Inside the Old Year Dying' will be released July 7th 2023 on Partisan Records, and is available to pre-order on gatefold 140g vinyl and CD, along with some newly designed merchandise products. 




There are a limited number of hand-signed lyric cards available from the official PJ Harvey store.




PJ Harvey says, "After many years of work I am very happy to release this collection of new songs. It was a difficult album to make and took time to find its strongest form, but it has finally become all I hoped for it to be." 

I Inside the Old Year Dying marks PJ Harvey's first album in seven years, produced and mixed by her long-time creative collaborators John Parish and Flood.

"On this album PJ Harvey builds a sonic universe somehow located in a space between life's opposites, and between recent history and the ancient past. Scattered with biblical imagery and references to Shakespeare, all of these distinctions ultimately dissolve into something profoundly uplifting and redemptive." - John Harris, March 2023

PJ will be on Lauren Laverne's breakfast show on BBC Radio 6 Music on Wednesday April 26th between 8:30 and 9am BST for the premiere of lead single, 'A Child's Question, August'.


24/04/2023

PJ Harvey announces new single, arriving this Wednesday!

 

It's titled "A Child's Question, August" - extract: 




PJ Harvey's last album, The Hope Six Demolition Project, came out in 2016, but she's been busy since then, with, in 2020, the reissue of her entire catalogue, and last year the release of PJ Harvey: B-Sides, Demos and Rarities

She also released a novel-in-verse written in the Dorset vernacular English, titled Orlam, and provided the music for acclaimed Irish comedy Bad Sisters, written with the composer Tim Phillips. 

In 2022, she announced that her 10th studio album would be arriving this summer!



22/04/2023

'All The Beauty And The Bloodshed'

 

Finally found time to see the Nan Goldin film, what a great lesson in activism!!


 'All The Beauty And The Bloodshed' - Official Trailer






21/04/2023

R.I.P. Mark Stewart

 

I'm listening to our conversation from January 2019 on Soho Radio, and I can't believe the news:

https://www.mixcloud.com/sohoradio/morning-glory-2101019/


"One of the key countercultural figures of European post punk, industrial funk and electronic dub has died today" - The Quietus 


#MarkStewart #Bristol




With him, Miranda Sawyer, Inkie and Mad Professor in March 2019, at the British Library:






20/04/2023

IF IT CONCERNS US, IT CONCERNS YOU: ALFREDO JAAR IS BACK IN LONDON

 

Spent a great couple of days in London to introduce the opening tour of Alfredo Jaar's new exhibition in London, ending up meeting brilliant art historians, philosophers like Chantal Mouffe, and one of my favourite artists: Sonia Boyce!

More on the exhibition in my coming piece of writing for Art UK.

EXHIBITION DETAILS


Alfredo Jaar | IF IT CONCERNS US, IT CONCERNS YOU | 2023

Alfredo Jaar18 April - 24 May 2023Goodman Gallery, London




In his media critique, Jaar continues to seek out what we might call slips of the eye – those moments when ideological univocality founders and we glimpse those unspoken truths, those unacknowledged histories that insist on reappearing – Tom McDonough, OSMOS Magazine

IF IT CONCERNS US, IT CONCERNS YOU is a potent survey of works by Alfredo Jaar which chronicles the artist’s forty-year critique of the Western media. The exhibition features important works which span the artist’s career, from the early 1980s through to new works created in 2022, which have not been exhibited before. It is the largest presentation of Jaar’s Press Works series to date.

In the early 1980s, when Jaar moved from the military dictatorship of Chile to Ronald Reagan’s United States, he felt at odds with the Western art world: “While I admired the American avant-garde and the conceptualists, when I looked around New York I didn’t see the world being reflected in the art that was being made. It was a world of fiction”. Engaging with the Western media was an equally alienating experience. Confronted with a heavily biased news agenda, Jaar become an avid observer of the media itself, paying close attention to areas of emphasis alongside areas of erasure. His routine of four decades involves reading daily international newspapers from around the world.

Jaar’s practice has developed as a means of intervention – isolating specific adverts, articles or magazine covers and displaying them anew within a museum or gallery context. At times, the artist doctors the image to change the intended message – as with works in the exhibition, such as You and Us (1984), Life Magazine, April 19, 1968 (1995), Welcome to the USA (TIME) (2018), War Criminal (2022) and Mea Culpa (2022) – but his approach is mostly just to lift the image directly from its original context in the hope that this displacement will allow us to see our reality in a different way.

The title of the exhibition is derived from one of the early works which feature at the start of the exhibition, titled You and Us, in which the artist radically reverses the message of a CBS advert rolled out on New York City subways in the mid 1980s. The original advert stated, “If it concerns you, it concerns us”, alluding to the power of the public to inform their coverage. Jaar’s reversal of the words “you” and “us” suggests that the original message is a fallacy and a manipulation: “it is actually the power forces at play behind the media outlets – in this instance a TV channel owned by the General Electrics Corporation that manufactures refrigerators but also bombs and aeroplanes – that are setting the media agenda” – Jaar.

Recent works exhibited for the first time include Liberation (Brexit Let It Be) (2019), War Criminal (2022) and Mea Culpa (2022). Here, the artist highlights media coverage of Brexit and the Russian invasion of Ukraine, “pointing once again at what the mainstream press can avow and what must remain disavowed, what can be shown and what demands to return to visibility” (Tom McDonough, OSMOS Magazine).
IF IT CONCERNS US, IT CONCERNS YOU also features a series of works from the 1990s and 2000s in which Jaar focuses on the mass erasure and misrepresentation of Africa from the Western media agenda, taking aim at publications such as Life Magazine, The Economist, The New York Times and TIME. A centrepiece of the exhibition is a new large-scale lightbox edition of Searching for Africa in Life (1996), an iconic work in the artist’s oeuvre which was exhibited at the 8th Triennial of Photography in Hamburg last year (curated by Koyo Kouoh) and is now permanently installed at the library of The New School in New York.

This major index of LIFE magazine’s coverage from the 1930s through to the 1990s reminds us that images are far from innocent, always representing an ideological position on the world: Jaar includes every one of the magazine’s front covers across 60 years, a total of 2128 – placed in chronological order – to reflect the scant coverage of Africa by one of the most influential magazines in the world. The appropriation of these magazine covers is a formula that Jaar adopts in other significant pieces, such as From Time to Time (2006), which expose the three themes on Africa dealt with the most by the Western media: animals, famine and disease. The dearth of coverage relating to the life, culture, society, and scientific developments happening on the African continent is inadvertently raised as part of the problematic image – or ‘non-image’ – of Africa that is fed to the Western world.

Alfredo Jaar (b. 1956, Santiago, Chile) is a New York-based artist, architect, and filmmaker who considers social injustices and human suffering through thought-provoking installations. Jaar has explored significant political and social issues throughout his career, including genocide, the displacement of refugees across borders and the balance of power between the first and third world. He is known as one of the most uncompromising, compelling, and innovative artists working today.

Major solo museum shows this year are held at Pinakothek del Moderne (29 March – 27 August) in Munich, at the Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art (Hiroshima MOCA), which will be a major anthology exhibition featuring four newly commissioned works (opening 22 July), and at Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes in Santiago (opening 14 September).

Over the course of his career, Jaar has realised over seventy public interventions around the world and has participated in the Biennales of Venice (1986, 2007, 2009, 2013) and Sao Paulo (1987, 1989, 2010, 2021) as well as Documenta (1987, 2002). Jaar’s work can be found in collections of The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Tate, London, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; MASP, Museu de Arte de Sao Paulo, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; M+, Hong Kong, among others. He was awarded the 11th Hiroshima Art Prize in 2018 and received the prestigious Hasselblad award for 2020. In September 2019, Jaar’s The Garden of Good and Evil was placed on permanent display at Yorkshire Sculpture Park, United Kingdom.

IF IT CONCERNS US, IT CONCERNS YOU runs concurrently to another solo presentation in London by Alfredo Jaar, titled Alfredo Jaar: 50 Years Later (19 April – 19 May), at Cecilia Brunson Projects. The exhibition marks the time passed since General Augusto Pinochet’s coup over Chilean President Salvador Allende’s democratic government on 11 September 1973. This exhibition constitutes the most comprehensive review of Jaar’s work on Chile in recent years, with key historic pieces that established him as one of the most eloquent and uncompromising commentators on state-sponsored brutality and violence to date.


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SEE MORE HERE: https://www.goodman-gallery.com/exhibitions/london-gallery-alfredo-jaar-if-it-concerns-us-it-concerns-you-2023