Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Humanizing an Anti Human Agenda: Sugar, Pineapples - A Subtlety & This Is Paradise

Humanizing an Anti Human Agenda[1]
Sugar, Pineapples - A Subtlety & This Is Paradise

            Kara Walker’s A Subtlety was widely seen and critiqued for the two months it was on view at the historic Domino Sugar Factory in Brooklyn. Now cited for demolition, this opportunity was consciously utilized to tell the story of the sugar commodity, and the bitter exploitation that made its wide distribution and consumption possible. My visit began with a trusted friend, speaking about our personal memories of the Domino sugar factory. We spoke of the iconic nature of the sign, anyone who has ever passed through the FDR drive has spotted it, billions of people by now. As someone who is not from New York, but moved herself here, I remember my frequent trips to NYC as a child and seeing that worn yellow sign. I didn’t know the history of sugar then like I do now, or have the critical understanding to place it in a historical context, but I knew the image of sugar, and ask anyone who knows me well, I’ve always loved the taste. By the end of our experience in the factory, we were heavy, quiet, and tired. We needed to digest exactly what we were seeing and how it was being presented, but there were so many intertwined layers. I knew immediately upon exiting the premises that A Subtlety reminded me of another exhibit I had seen in 2013 at el Museo del Barrio’s Bienal. The artist, Hector Arce Espasas, used the pineapple commodity to tell a similar narrative about colonization and erasure, exploitation and murder, the connection between enslaved black bodies and other trans-Atlantic commodities, and the rhetorical contradictions power uses to mask the reality of an oppressed life. I’d like to take some time to outline my experience in both shows, and discuss why these artists know it is beyond important, and in fact necessary, to make work about colonization’s effect on modern life in the midst of severely confused and bleached ‘post racial’ and ‘post sexist’ dominant cultural attitudes.

Upon entering the premises of A Subtlety, a wooden wall encased the old factory, creating a visual barrier, but even more noticeably, a sound barrier that would carry with me throughout the entire show. We talked about the slightly upturned smile on the sugar babies faces. It reminded us that children don’t want - or accept - pity for their situation. They appear resilient, but they are holding baskets, the indicator that they have been stripped of their childhood entirely and have already been inundated as laborers. Their bodies produced, not even viewed as birthed, to be groomed for their labor power and submission. “An import of 400,000 slaves produced a population of 4 million at the time of the American civil War.”[2] We can see here how reproductive labor becomes central to the success of the southern US colonies, which I believe Walker was touching on by including children and their labor so explicitly in the exhibit.  It’s a slavery narrative that has clearly been stricken from the record - what of black motherhood then?



Especially striking were the sugar babies whose broken pieces lay dismembered in a pool of molasses. As we stood in Brooklyn, which had had shootings over that very weekend, we remarked that this image was as much an image of history as it was an image of 2014. As I write this, Twitter is on fire with tweets from Ferguson, Missouri where protests have erupted, demanding justice for Mike Brown, a young black man who has been murdered by the Ferguson police with eyewitnesses sharing the account live.[3] Weeks ago the story of Eric Garner shook New York after he was choked to death by the NYPD.[4] The stories of Shantel Davis, Renisha McBride, Kimani Gray, Ramarley Graham, Amadou Diallo, Trayvon Martin, Jordan Davis, Oscar Grant, and a horrendous list of so many others crossed my mind at that moment. These cases are the ones that were able to penetrate the media, and it troubled me that so many people’s lives have been snuffed out, and no one cried out. So often do I listen to the way black people who are close to my heart speak about their lives in terms of having not been one of these cases, including my brother who accompanied me through this experience. We have had countless conversations about this topic, and the dismembered sugar subtleties[5] were the embodiment of those dialogues.

 Impossible to ignore at any point upon entering the premises, the Sphinx woman commanded the entire room with her awesomeness - how I would imagine it would feel to stand before a Sphinx in Egypt, but it was clear that her form and image was far more complex than to be defined as simply a Sphinx replica. This particular Sphinx has lived all the generations of lives of her history - a modern woman who carries Mammy and Minstrel and so many other weights on her body and her face right into this present moment to tower over all of us. Walker describes her: “It’s not a kind of Egyptophile relic, this is someone from the New World.”[6] The enormous body and posture of the Sphinx took us to ancient Egypt roughly 4,000 years ago.[7] The archetypal mammy face and handkerchief took us to 1889 where a tune called “Aunt Jemima” was being sung by a blackface performer who was wearing an apron and bandana.[8] The sculpted sugar curvatures recalled the life of Saartjie Baartman & the Hottentot Venus[9], a body always on display, complete with racist, ignorant white participants.[10] And she was filming you the whole time![11] Damn, you wish you were on Kara Walker’s level.





She sits inside of the Domino sugar factory - an industrial giant whose roots are in excess, commodification, and its operational system: capitalism. Arturo Escobar writes that, “Capitalism…is of the essence for both the conception of modernity and its darker side, coloniality.”[12]  The industrial booms that are praised in the dominant historical narratives are impossible without the exploitation of black bodies - and we see a keen focus here on black women, specifically and unapologetically.

The floor of the old Domino Sugar Factory was soaked in years of molasses compounded - The air smelled sweet, but it was suffocating in the same breath. The stark contrast between the dark walls of the building, which have been stained with layers of sugar from the refining process, and the bright whiteness of the Sphinx, made striking visual and metaphorical connections. Brown sugar is bleached and refined to turn pure white for aesthetic and cultural reasons, colloquially known as ‘plantation white sugar’.[13] There is, and never has been, a utilitarian purpose. Interrogating the refinement of sugar - the whitewashing of sugar - is key to understanding its symbolism as a colonial commodity that simultaneously symbolized wealth status among whites.  Howard Zinn writes that “it is noted that, even before 1600, when the slave trade had just begun… the color black was distasteful… Elizabethan poetry often used the color white in connection with beauty.”[14] He is discussing the naturalizing of race through the social construction of racism and the capitalistic incentive for enslavement, and it manifests in the sugar refinement process we commonly know today. Frantz Fanon put this even more succinctly when he said “Imperialism leaves behind germs of rot which we must clinically detect and remove from our land but from our minds as well.”[15]

The sensory nature of this experience relayed the contradiction of sugar and its social history. Kara Walker sees her work not as ‘effectively dealing with history’ but being ‘subsumed by it’[16] and I’m inclined to agree because the most successful part of the show, which we know now was intentional, was the social experiment it became as people experienced and interacted with the work. The various backlashes and pings of social media discussions raged about the way the work was perceived, and under whose narrative the story of the Marvelous Sugar Baby was told. Walker had access to a space that was an intersection for multiple contradictions - historical and contemporary. We are often told in mainstream settings, be they academia, media, or otherwise, that these contradictions aren’t worth discussing because revisionism and erasure makes it easier to justify anything the powerful deems useless of preservation.

“The ‘discovery’ of America and the genocide of Indians and African slaves are the very foundation of ‘modernity,’ more so than the French or Industrial Revolutions.”[17] These events are the bedrock foundation of our modern culture.
Kara Walker is not the only artist to literally mold their art through the layered and intersecting contradictions of the 'colonial wound'. I’m borrowing this phrase from the brilliant author Walter Mignolo, who writes in the preface of The Idea of Latin America, “Perspectives from coloniality, however, emerge out of the conditions of the ‘colonial wound,’ the feeling of inferiority imposed on human beings who do not fit the predetermined model in Euro-American narratives.”[18]


I saw Hector Arce Espasas’ piece This is Paradise at the 2013 Bienal at El Museo del Barrio and I immediately saw connections while I was viewing A Subtlety because they were using similar materials. His piece used the pineapple, another transatlantic commodity whose presence in the lives of Europeans and Americans as a fruit of ‘tropical paradise’ was not possible without the exploitation and cold blooded murder of black people. This is Paradise along with the accompanying print, command the room. The pyramid arrangement of mercantile crates with shiny silver pineapple ewers signify colonization and the triangular trade (and the eventual triangular hierarchy of capitalism). My other immediate reaction was to associate the ewers with struggling bodies, reminding me of reading on slave-ship mutiny, which most often went unrecorded by the white men on the ship, especially when committed by women.[19] I couldn’t help but think of Billie Holiday's Strange Fruit as somehow being related to this. The ewers really evoke a 'strange fruit' and what would have been flowing from the vessels, had they been filled, would be blood, like Holiday's lyrics 'blood on the leaves.'[20]


            The small parrot at the top of the triangle also brought the viewer abruptly to the image of the ship - I believe Espasas wanted to bring us right there - perhaps to insert what history has been lost from those voyages.

To the left is the print of King Charles II receiving a pineapple from his gardener - believed to represent the first one grown in a European hothouse[21]. The social history of the pineapple serves as a great symbol for colonization’s evil mask. It was received in England as an 'exotic' commodity, so rare that the King of England posed with the fruit as a measure of royal privilege and status. It was considered both sweet and visually compelling, and over time the pineapple made its way to the dinner table arrangements of high class Europeans.

Arce-Espasas is using the pineapple as a profound motif for the transportation of commodities and emigration-enslavement of exotic bodies. In the same ways that Europeans received the pineapple as this 'otherly' and 'exotic' fruit, the justification for the exploitation and export of black bodies also relies on a naturalization of a difference i.e. exoticisation. The pineapple's context in Europe masks colonization by celebrating it as a sign of hospitality. Ironic, of course, because it's presence in Europe originates in violence, not hospitality. But all of that is erased from the European narrative because this is the very moment in history where primitive accumulation of capital begins on these exploitative terms.[22]

Whitewashed sugar was mass produced in places like the Domino Sugar Factory and sold by mid century advertisers who whitewashed its history for consumption by white people - this was a project to mask the utter exploitation, violence, and oppression that it takes to mass produce sugar along with many other commodities.  It also masked the bodies of black people that such violence was enacted upon. This was carried out through the production of advertisements such as this Domino sugar ad, which pictures white faces at a kitchen table with a bowl of fruit - but not just any fruit - notice the pineapple centerpiece is present. So here we have the sugar and the pineapple in the same room in this image. This advertisement generates correlations between the erasure of history and its revision to appease the desires of white people, providing a sweetness that was not previously available. Hector Arce Espasas and Kara Walker have been using these two sweet substances of the tropics to speak of our modern understanding i.e. lack of understanding of the wake and perpetration of colonization. At the time where mass production and marketing came together to sell the idea behind sugar as a commodity, the pineapple was, and still is, widely recognized as a symbol of hospitality. Quietness - and then connections - more specifically - contradictions.

            Both of these pieces stayed with me in my consciousness. They mapped an alternative landscape to understanding colonization - to understanding modernity. Kara Walker and Hector Arce-Espasas are rejecting post racial attitudes of tolerance and taking it to the root. What are the present day struggles of peoples, workers and their families, communities, who cultivate sugar and pineapple under global finance capitalism today? What are the present day struggles of black people to be, to simply live freely? What are the unique struggles of black women, whether they be cis, queer, or trans* women? They continue to exist in a world that has always used and hated them at the same time. Arce-Espasas and Walker are pointing out how the cultural attitudes towards white supremacy, misogyny, and capitalism are directly rooted in colonization - and at every turn we are encouraged to forget, move on, stay silent. These artists refuse that. Mass convergences of people are refusing it. We are armed and empowered with the knowledge of history - a history that has been purposefully untold. It is our collective responsibility to uncover the contradictions of our present life. 




[1]The irrationality of capital’s rational accumulation, its constant humanization of an anti-human agenda was, in the onslaught of its expansion, understood to require profound structural shifts in the operation of mediation in order to adequately distort the field of intelligibility and operationalize it in accord with its deeper though unrepresentable logic.” - Jonathan Beller, The Cinematic Mode of Production p. 298
[2] Martin Klein, Towards a Theory of Slavery
[3] http://mashable.com/2014/08/15/live-tweet-michael-brown-killing-ferguson/
[4] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Eric_Garner
[5]Once a luxury — subtleties were sugar sculptures made for the rich as edible table-decorations — sugar became more widely available due in large part to slave labor.” Roberta Smith, NY Times.  http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/12/arts/design/a-subtlety-or-the-marvelous-sugar-baby-at-the-domino-plant.html?_r=0

[6] Kara Walker: "A Subtlety, or the Marvelous Sugar Baby" | ART21 "Exclusive" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sRkP5rcXtys

[7] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sphinx
[8] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aunt_Jemima
[9] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saartjie_Baartman

[10] Kara Walker's Sugar Sphinx Spawns Offensive Instagram Photos, Cait Munro http://news.artnet.com/art-world/kara-walkers-sugar-sphinx-spawns-offensive-instagram-photos-29989

[11] Kara Walker Secretly Filmed You Taking Selfies in Front of Her Sphinx by Rachel Corbett http://www.vulture.com/2014/11/kara-walker-filmed-you-in-front-of-her-sphinx.html

[12] The Idea of Latin America, Walter Mignolo
[14] A People’s History of the United States, Howard Zinn
[15] Frantz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth
[16] Kara Walker: "A Subtlety, or the Marvelous Sugar Baby" | ART21 "Exclusive" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sRkP5rcXtys
[17] The Idea of Latin America, Walter Mignolo
[18]  The Idea of Latin America, Walter Mignolo

[19]  "Mama's Baby, Papa's Maybe: An American Grammar Book,” Hortense Spillers
[20] Strange Fruit, Billie Holiday https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h4ZyuULy9zs

[21] King Charles receiving the first Pineapple cultivated in England http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?objectId=3231524&partId=1

[22] Primitive Accumulation of Capital http://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Primitive+Accumulation+of+Capital