In The Making : Traversing the project exhibition In the Desert of Modernity: Colonial Planning and After
Author
Summary, in English
The principal aim of my PhD research is to think through practices involved in the making of In the Desert of Modernity. Colonial Planning and After (Berlin 2008, Casablanca 2009), that constituted as well as traversed the exhibitions and went beyond. The project developed through a transnational constellation of culture producers, scholars, and activists from Berlin, Zurich, Paris, Delft and Casablanca. In the process of its experimental study mode the finding was made that European ideas on architecture and urbanism were projected onto postwar French North African colonies, where they underwent change, modification, and testing before being re-projected back onto architecture and urban planning in France and Switzerland in the late 1950s. Through the creation of a transnational network, including architects, activists and local inhabitants from Casablanca, it became evident that the construction sites of the architectural cases under investigation became sites of anticolonial revolt in 1952 in Morocco. These findings revised existing assumptions by Western scholars and called for the decolonializing of the European episteme on modernist housing and urbanism.
Completing the PhD research made me see the project exhibitions of In the Desert of Modernity in Berlin and Casablanca not as endpoints. Instead, this thesis addresses practices as in continuation, rather than completed through events and curatorial methods. The need to establish a mode of thinking that allows constant revision created temporalities and socialites that revealed exhibitions as a too-limited frame for analysis and for a decolonializing practice. Instead practices that transcend the 鈥渟how鈥 are discussed in six chapters focussing each on a specific site, a document, conceptual thinking or conversational dialog. I conclude that the PhD research allowed me to think through my parainstitutional practice that aims to take long durational, dialogical and material approaches and local agencies into account. From the perspective of 鈥渋n the making,鈥 I imagine a new understanding of culture production that also asks for supplements of our existing institutional infrastructures.
Completing the PhD research made me see the project exhibitions of In the Desert of Modernity in Berlin and Casablanca not as endpoints. Instead, this thesis addresses practices as in continuation, rather than completed through events and curatorial methods. The need to establish a mode of thinking that allows constant revision created temporalities and socialites that revealed exhibitions as a too-limited frame for analysis and for a decolonializing practice. Instead practices that transcend the 鈥渟how鈥 are discussed in six chapters focussing each on a specific site, a document, conceptual thinking or conversational dialog. I conclude that the PhD research allowed me to think through my parainstitutional practice that aims to take long durational, dialogical and material approaches and local agencies into account. From the perspective of 鈥渋n the making,鈥 I imagine a new understanding of culture production that also asks for supplements of our existing institutional infrastructures.
Department/s
Publishing year
2018-04-25
Language
English
Publication/Series
Doctoral studies and research in fine and performing arts
Issue
21
Full text
- - 39 MB
- - 139 kB
Links
Document type
Dissertation
Publisher
Malm枚 Faculty of Fine and Performing Arts, 51重口猎奇
Topic
- Visual Arts
Keywords
- Colonial planning
- Anti-colonial resistance
- Decoloniality
- Parainstitutional practice
- Art and politics
Status
Published
Supervisor
- Sarat Maharaj
- Gertrud Sandqvist
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1653-8617
- ISBN: 978-91-7753-703-8
- ISBN: 978-91-7753-704-5
Defence date
31 May 2018
Defence time
10:00
Defence place
Lecture room, Malm枚 Art Academy, Bergsg.29, Malm枚
Opponent
- Lucy Cotter (Doctor)