26/06/2021

Sound from Palestine: Rim Banna & Checkpoint 303

 


Nami ya lo3ba - Rim Banna & Checkpoint 303 - نامي يا لعبة نامي - حاجز ٣٠٣ - ريم بنا



"Nami ya lo3ba" (نامي يا لعبة نامي ) is one of the tracks on the EP "Songs from April Blossoms" (Digital release on KKV - June 25th, 2021). The new remixes composed by Checkpoint 303 consist of traditional Palestinian lullabies and children songs which were originally performed and released on cassette by Rim Banna in Palestine in 1995. The remixed Children's songs are dedicated to the memory of 67 Palestinian children killed by the Israeli airstrikes on Gaza in May 2021, and to all children victims of war and violence. The EP is available on all digital music and streaming platforms ▶▶ https://orcd.co/9w8gbve "Songs from April Blossoms" is the latest in a series of collaborations and remixes that have appeared on the Norwegian label KKV, and in which Checkpoint 303 have put Rim Banna’s voice on center stage. In 2018, Checkpoint 303 co-produced Rim’s last album "Voice of Resistance" (KKV, 2018) in which Rim’s medical scans were converted to sonic soundscapes that were overlaid with her poetry and beautiful melodies by the outstanding Norwegian jazz pianist Bugge Wesseltoft. In 2019, KKV also released an album entitled R.I.M.I.X, which featured seven songs by Rim Banna remixed by Ministry of Dub-Key, Nour, Nasser Halahlih and Checkpoint 303. More info on Checkpoint 303: instaram: http://www.instagram.com/checkpoint303 web: http://www.checkpoint303.com facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CP303 More info on KKV record label: Web: http://kkv.no/en/

Lyrics - Translation: ________________________________________

Title: Sleep Dolly, Sleep Lyrics by Saud Al-Assadi Vocals by Rim Banna Sleep my dolly, sleep Under my quilt and my blanket My days are sweet But they get sweeter with you Sleep little dolly On the mattress, in my bed Even if we sleep on the straw mat My dreams get happier with you I want to be with you day and night to get amused And to share our secrets Even if my parents will go out of the house, Don't go away from me Don't go away And don't reveal my secrets Like the jasmine flowers spread your perfume Over the wings of the wild pigeon Little doll, I enjoy your company If you get angry I will try to please you Talk to me as I talk to you I will give you all my attention My little dolly when the sun shines You shine with all your light over us Over your cheeks flickers a jasmine flower A red rose and a lavender flutter

23/06/2021

LAND OF MANY WATERS: FRANK BOWLING in Bristol in July 2021

 So looking forward to this exhibition 


FRANK BOWLING | LAND OF MANY WATERS


Saturday, 3rd July 2021 to Sunday, 26th September 2021, 11:00 to 18:00

ARNOLFINI 



Sir Frank Bowling, OBE RA, photograph © Sacha Bowling


Arnolfini celebrates the work of pioneering painter Sir Frank Bowling, in its 60th anniversary year, sharing new and previously unseen work, alongside key paintings from the last decade.

At 87, Bowling continues to explore the ‘possibilities of paint’ with an experimental ethos that places material, colour and light at the heart of his practice. In his first public gallery exhibition since his highly acclaimed Tate retrospective in 2019, Land of Many Waters explores the ebb and flow in his practice between process and the ever-present autobiographical details that hover beyond.

In new works (made throughout 2020) surfaces are stripped back in luminescent colours, and paint bleeds, stains and seeps into imagined horizons and shorelines – ‘not a view but the idea of a view’. Alongside these sit older works in which Bowling revisits past techniques from his ‘poured’ paintings to vertical ‘zippers’, embedding surfaces with textiles, collage, and a multitude of materials so that the acrylic paint is littered and layered with remnants of life.

Animated by photographs, texts, and materials from Bowling’s personal archive and London studio, Land of Many Waters also evokes the colours and textures of his working life, highlighting the multiplicity of his practice

Sir Frank Bowling, OBE, RA, born in British Guiana in 1934, has been hailed as one of Britain’s greatest living abstract painters and as a ‘modern master’. Bowling’s innovations in technique, and his use of paint and surface texture, have changed the practice of painting. Aged 87 Bowling’s only ambition is to continue to work in his studio.

Land of Many Waters coincides with Sir Frank Bowling’s OBE, RA, first exhibition with Hauser & Wirth, Frank Bowling: London | New York, in London and New York, May 2021. A new publication from Arnolfini to accompany the exhibition and will be available from the Arnolfini Bookshop.

 

About Frank Bowling
Sir Frank Bowling, OBE, RA, has been hailed as one of Britain’s greatest living abstract painters and as a ‘modern master’. His uniquely beautiful paintings are said to display a ‘visionary approach that fuses abstraction with personal memories’. They have been described as ‘late modern masterpieces’ of ‘astonishing physical power and stunning visual drama’ made during a lifetime of relentless experimentation. They have been exhibited in hundreds of group and solo exhibitions and can be found in fifty institutions worldwide.

Bowling’s innovations in technique, the use of paint and surface texture have changed the practice of painting. Bowling has won a great many accolades during his career including the silver medal in painting and an honorary doctorate from the Royal College of Art (in 1962 and 2020, respectively).

He was made a Member of the Royal Academy of Art in 2005 and awarded an OBE for services to art in 2008 and has been given the honour of Knight Bachelor conferred upon him in the Birthday 2020 Honours List by Her Majesty The Queen. Bowling is an artistic pioneer who has shown dedication and dogged persistence in the face of obstacles throughout his life of painting, writing and teaching. His work ethic is second to none, painting in his studio every day.

Bowling is an inspiration to younger artists and supports students at a number of art schools and many other good causes. Recognition has come late in Bowling’s career. As well as ‘magnificent’, ‘joyous’, ‘spectacular’ and ‘astonishing’, his 2019 Tate Britain retrospective was described as ‘long overdue’. Aged 86 Bowling’s only ambition is to continue to work in his studio. Through his paintings, that ‘crackle with experimental energy’, his writing and impact on the canon of contemporary painting, and in his support for younger artists, Bowling has made a strikingly original and world-leading contribution to British painting and art history.

 

Read more at Frank Bowling — Artists | Hauser & Wirth

@ArnolfiniArts @HauserWirth Instagram: @FrankBowlingStudio Facebook: @FrankBowlingRA

#FrankBowling #SirFrankBowling #ArnolfiniArts #HauserWirth

  

Publications
The exhibition is accompanied by a publication featuring newly commissioned essays, an interview with Sir Frank Bowling, and previously unseen archival material, alongside works from the last 10 years. The publication is kindly supported by Hauser & Wirth and will be available for purchase and pre-order from Arnolfini Bookshop and for review via Arnolfini marketing.


18/06/2021

Colston Fall, One Year On: Reflections from M Shed, Bristol

 

The now infamous monument was erected in November in 1895. 



The statue of 17th century merchant and slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down here in Bristol during a Black Lives Matter protest, on 7 June 2020. 125 years later.

One year on, the statue now forms part of a new display at M Shed museum, on the docks, as the result of a partnership between M Shed and the We Are Bristol History Commission. 

the goal is to start a city-wide conversation about its future, and the future of statues and pedestals in general, and about the way we intertwine history and public art. 

If you follow this blog, you know what I think of pedestals... You can go back to the piece I wrote on 7 June 2020 for the Independent.

Statues came and went through time, of course, despite accusations by some of erasure of history, otherwise our streets would be full of statues dating from as far as the Roman times... And imagine the streets of Naples or Athens!

All over the world, since the toppling of this one in Bristol, the ripple effect has been felt everywhere and people who had hardly heard of Bristol, UK, suddenly penned their opinion about a movement they had not seen coming. They didn't know about Countering Colston, or the activism that demanded the removal of the statue or the change of name of the Colston Hall - now Beacon (of hope?) - but admit Bristol people were pioneers. 

The statue is on display alongside a selection of placards from the protest as well as a timeline of key events leading up to the final toppling. 

As part of the free visit, museum-goers are also invited complete a survey on what happened that day and what they think should happen next. The feedback will help the History Commission make a recommendation on the future of the Colston statue and its former plinth, in the city centre.







This timeline is a good reminder of some of the events that led to the situation of 2020: 



The two mayors Bristol ever elected, George Ferguson and Marvin Rees, refused to take the statue down. One was a member of the Society of the Merchant Venturers, founded by slave traders a few centuries ago, and the other one didn't want to be the first Black mayor to tackle the issue. 

Meanwhile, city councillor Cleo Lake did campaign for a peaceful removal, and while she was Lord Mayor she took down a portrait of Colston set in the City Hall.


The rest of the museum addresses bits and bobs of Bristol's local history, as you can see below.











And the museum will welcome a show on the history of street art from 26 June 2021.


But let's go back to Colston and the significance of the moment before I end this blog post.

In his recent essay for The Art Review, Dan Hicks, Professor of Contemporary Archaeology at the University of Oxford, Curator at the Pitt Rivers Museum, and author of The Brutish Museums (Pluto Press), which advocates for the return of stolen artefacts and decolonisation of European and American museums, is addressing the legacy of the toppling gesture.

And he writes: "The grassroots practice of physically dismantling cultural infrastructure that promotes white supremacy – has been part of anti-colonial and anti-racist struggles since at least the early 1960s, when a ‘statue war’ broke out in Algeria at the moment of independence. The impulse towards preservation was also part of that history from the start. Back then, it operated as a kind of counter-insurgency. Algerians started defacing and destroying plaques and statues that commemorated colonial domination, making that domination and violence persist. The French military responded with a massive salvage operation. More than one hundred monuments were collected, shipped across the Mediterranean, and, as Alain Amato documented in his 1977 book Monuments en exil, re-installed in towns and cities across France. The Enlightenment maxim expressed by Diderot in 1795 hung in the air: ‘My friend, if we love truth more than the fine arts then let us pray to God for iconoclasts’."

As a French-Born writer of Algerian roots, I can only relate too well. My entire family was involved in the independent war against metropolitan and colonial France, and maybe died in the fight for freedom. 

Dan Hicks continues by quoting n Frantz Fanon, who described colonialism as ‘a world of statues’. In his famous book The Wretched of the Earth, Fanon indeed wrote how each statue never stops representing the exact same message: ‘We are here by the force of bayonets’. "We learn from Fanon that every monument to anti-Black violence operates to re-inscribe that violence every day it remains on display. But is Colston still falling? Or did the museum break his fall?" Hicks ask.

As a white man writing about these issues, he voices what us, formerly colonised people, women, people of colours, 'ethnic and religious minorities' still struggle to state in public, for a lack of authoritative voices to let us do so.

The reason I came to Bristol is precisely to write about how arts, artists, and activists deal with such complex debate. And because it was extremely hard for me to do so in France. As the daughter of Algerian freedom fighters, I have always felt suspicion, and always been refused pitches and articles.

So after working in Africa and on post-colonial issues for years for non-French media, I was inspired to write more about these issues here in England, to come to Bristol to write a book centred on the Bristol band Massive Attack, to address these matters via their multicultural and counter-cultural journey. And the 2nd and 12th chapters address the issue of Colston and the Merchant Venturers in depth. 

But I've not taken part in the public debate this year for now. 

For many reasons. 

First, because many people are currently jumping on the bandwagon and trying to claim they had a fair share in decolonising, while they had no say in the matter when they were in power to do so, like the current mayor of Bristol, Marvin Rees, fearing it could jeopardise his next carrier move. 

The second reason is that most people in Bristol think it's a 'Bristol' matter, like many issues around here, they are held by gatekeepers, and I'm everything but one of them.

Yet,  I'm part of the conversation, as a Bristol citizen, as a writer on African-European relations and post-colonial reflections, as a Lecturer in Journalism and Media production at the University of the West of England, as the writer in residence at the Arnolfini Gallery, one of Brisotl's main art centre. I hope I will remain. 

I know that most British people don't value the study of history much, let alone colonial history. so how could I ask them to know Algerian-French history? However, the brutal, early and unique colonisation of Algeria by France, from as early as 1830, led the path to the rest of the colonial process. The infamous 'Scramble for Africa', the horrendous sharing of the continent between European powers that led to the conflicting borders Africa knows today date from... 1885, 55 years later. Algeria was also of of the rare examples of settler colonialism, where the European settlers moved 'en masse' to the country, and tried to outnumbers the local and indigenous inhabitants. With the rare other examples being South African, Palestine and... well the United States of America, all based on apartheid for decades, if not until today. 

"Does Colston’s provisional preservation repeat the nostalgic counterinsurgency of the French army in Algeria?" Ask Hicks, "Or could it catalyse some new form of co-curation that destabilises the statue, and makes the fall rather than the man endure?"

He continues: "This temporary display would be a positive first step in such a process. As someone who lived in Bristol for twelve years – first in in the 1970s and then in the 1990s-2000s – and like many who know this statue, I was moved to tears by visiting. Everyone who cares about racism, empire and slavery should see this exhibit. It should win awards. But that’s hardly the point. This is the kind of exhibit you come away from feeling that you can’t wait for it to be closed. I mean, the kind of exhibit that you come away from wishing to God it had never been necessary to create."

As a Bristol resident who came to address these issues in 2015, after crossing 15 African countries, America and the Caribbean, and after working for a year on a film to come on the Algerian years of Frantz Fanon, I ask the same questions. 

And I thank Dan Hicks for his work and his voice. 

But that story concerns me directly. Yet, all my pitches to the Art Review have always been ignored, as well as the one to Frieze

Hopefully, one day, I won't feel silenced when it come to this debate. 

As a writer who feel extremely blessed to have been published widely, I have to wonder: If I feel silenced, how many other Algerians, Africans and other direct victims of colonialism with a story to tell feel the same? Probably hundreds, thousands if not hundreds of thousands...

Hicks recommend to not display the statue further.

"Should Colston now be venerated in the carceral spaces of the museum store for posterity?" he asks. "I’d prefer to see him returned to the bottom of the harbour, sunk forever into the Avon mud and forgotten. But whatever the fate of the statue, let’s keep Colston falling."

Now that it's here, and hearing the manipulation around history, see how many ignore colonial history so widely, I'd say maybe such displays are still necessary.

Isn't everyone on Earth condemning fiercely slavery? I cannot fathom... Slavery is a hot topic, yet the bigger problem is colonialism, the consequences of which are still very real in our every day life. As long as millions of us have to face to live an impaired and unfulfilled life because of this ideology, we need to keep on educating, fighting for knowledge and equal rights, and producing art, music, films and writing that enable us to build a different future. 

That won't happen through party politics, activism recuperation or white people's guilt and 'saviour' complex.

-

I encourage everyone to go and see the display, or read about it, with an open mind, and to remember that the debate is far from 'black and white'. So aren't its protagonists. 


14/06/2021

Soon to be based @ UWE Bristol, Bower Ashton Campus

 

Two more weeks of tackling my 2 jobs! Fascinating research for a television series on a forgotten part of British history...

Then I'll move back to UWE Bristol at Bower Ashton as a Senior Lecturer in Media Production and Journalism.

In the meantime, wish me luck.





All the best, everyone.
m

10/06/2021

Bristol reopening 2021

 

I've been neglecting this blog... Too much work!

I haven't been able to write short pieces this month because I'm working on a longer project, as a researcher, for a British television series.

But I've tried to make the most of our gorgeous city, Bristol, all open for the spring. I've seen two marvellous films at the Watershed cinema, 'Nomadland' and 'After Love', and been back to Bristol Museum for the Photo Festival and of course Arnolfini. 

Here are a few photos:


Bristol Musum
'Island Life
and
'James Barnor - Ghanaian Modernist'
exhibitions




Watershed Cinema




Arnolfini Gallery




And there is much more to come!

I'll go back to M Shed to see the display of the toppled Colston Statue (read here for the whole story), and for the Vanguard Exhibition on the history of street art in Bristol and beyond, from 26 June.

Summer at Arnolfini also promise to be unforgettable! See below: 

COMING SOON TO ARNOLFINI

Our Summer exhibition features new work from the pioneering painter of contemporary art Sir Frank Bowling. Our second major international artist shows will be Bristol born photographer Stephen Gill this Autumn, where we'll be hosting the first extensive retrospective of his career.
FRANK BOWLING AND STEPHEN GILL

El Dorado with my shirt collar, Frank Bowling 2019
Photo by Angus Mill

Land of Many Waters, a major exhibition with pioneering painter Sir Frank Bowling, OBE RA., will feature new and recent work, as Bowling continues his exploration and experimentation with the painted surface that has marked his extraordinary career.

This show will be Bowling’s first museum exhibition since his widely applauded and long overdue retrospective at Tate Britain in 2019 which cemented his reputation as a ‘modern master’. 

3 July to 26 September 2021

Hackney Flowers 2004 - 2007 © Stephen Gill

In Autumn 2021 Arnolfini will celebrate over thirty years of extraordinary practice from Bristol-born photographer Stephen Gill, drawing together new previously un-exhibited work, alongside works from other iconic series.

The exhibition will explore Gill’s rich sense of place, leading us through the flea markets and towpaths of Hackney Wick in London, to his current rural surroundings amidst the Swedish countryside.

16 October 2021 to 16 January 2022

08/06/2021

Martina Topley-Bird's 'Hunt' video

 

'Hunt'

Lyric video:  



'Hunt'
from 'Pure Heart' EP, co-produced by Robert Del Naja https://martinatopleybird.lnk.to/JLk3xL Video by FZG Arrangement and production by Robert Del Naja and Euan Dickinson Mixed by Ian Caple Mastered by Jean Pierre Chalbos
-

Lyrics by Natasha Graham:

Use me slowly... Old until it's worn, soul's what makes you whole role is your only game hunting for a slice of fame Crime's in all the traps you fall into the reason for this glitch is only you dissolutely falling to seduce Paranoid are your thoughts do you feel betrayed? gunman's messing up does it mean he'll return? When winter dooms you won't betray me. You turned your broad flat back, it's your own way of showing your façade "get me all my body parts" Dear lover, cast in this caprice, it’s late, now hide, you’re late this time Sense of mass discontent, gonna peel the skin off you "Come down with the full size, come down where the truth lies come down where the pig flies, come down with the pink blues come down with the red sun, come down with the black star come down with the re-run, come down, we’ve come so far" Throne, but you sit alone, home, but the room is cold, prize, but it's not for sale Mainly need to shut, lying mouth is sore, crying tears of blood Flying a kite that's stained, robbing skies of joy, blinding you with blames, then asking you for more "wait here for me, we both can see" Old until its worn, soul's what makes you whole, role is your only game Crime's in all the traps you fall into, reason only is you Paranoid are your thoughts, do you feel betrayed? gunman's messing up, does it mean he'll return?
 

07/06/2021

Colston gone, one year on

 

An important debate with key questions, raised by a group of artists who have always had their heart and activism invested in this debate, since the late 1990s at least, from Bristol UK: 


7 June 2021, posted on Twitter: 

+ THREAD + Today marks the 1st anniversary of the #Colston statue finally being pulled down; a hugely symbolic action that resonated around the world.

History is now being written & set before our eyes, but before these accounts turn into authoritative records, there is a brief window of time to pose several important questions …

Why are the civic contests & campaigns that tried to remove the statue (& rename “Colston Hall”) & the institutional & political failures that protracted/frustrated those efforts both now being overlooked, undermined or glossed over?

What could Bristol and other cities potentially learn from those multiple institutional & political failures?

What role did individuals and organisations such as the Society of Merchant Venturers play in those repeated frustrations?

Is it right for private, opaque bodies to be exercising influence on the civic stage? How is this influence – then & now - reported or recorded for public interest & accountability?

It has been suggested publicly that the SMV (via its investment arm SMV Investments) has major holdings in sectors that continue to have a devastating impact on the people of global south, notably the arms and fossil fuel industries…

If these suggestions prove to be correct, what role should this, or any institution with unethical policies be allowed to play in the civic decision making of a modern, progressive city?