The Archival Impulse: From the Deep with Ayana Jackson
Presented by Communication, Culture and Technology and African Studies Programs
Additional support from: Georgetown’s Humanities Initiative, English Dept., Art and Art History Dept., Engaged and Public Humanities Program, Gender+ Justice Initiative, Black Studies Dept., Women’s and Gender Studies Program, Georgetown Center for the Study of Slavery and Its Legacies, Racial Justice Institute and Culture and Politics Program.
Ayana V. Jackson employs archival impulses to challenge the impacts of colonialism and the racialization and sexualization of Black bodies. Her solo exhibition From the Deep: In the Wake of Drexciya, which is currently on display at the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art, extends the impulse through the production of collaborative and multimedia artworks that reframe the memory and legacy of trans-Atlantic slavery. The exhibition weaves a rich tapestry that invokes ecological concerns, Afrofuturism, the histories of techno music, the transfer of technology and artistic traditions, and the cosmology of African water spirits. In this talk, Jackson will discuss how her “impulse” engages historical archives in order to suggest alternative and more just futures.