Showing posts with label Romani artists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Romani artists. Show all posts

Friday, 27 March 2015

Artist Corrina Eastwood reflects on her talk at the Stuart Hall Library Research Network meeting - February 2015

Corrina Eastwood and fellow artist Delaine Le Bas kindly agreed to talk about their art practices in relation to British identities at the Stuart Hall Library Research Network meeting in February. The meeting is a forum for researchers, artists, academics, curators, students and activists to introduce an aspect of their art practice, research, cultural activism. 

Corrina brought her experience of bridging two worlds. She has a Romany Gypsy father yet was raised in a house and sought different educational paths than is usual within the community. Corrina has just started to explore this through the making of a documentary film with Gavin Round.

Both Corrina and Delaine have offered their reflections on what it meant to them to share their thoughts with the group. Recordings of the event are available here and a project bibliography based on the Library's holdings can be downloaded here  (Delaine's thoughts on her talk in this blog)

Still from The Baby and The Snake (2015) by Corrina Eastwood and Gavin Round. ©
Corrina Eastwood on her talk at the Stuart Hall Library Research Network

I was honoured to be asked by Iniva's Stuart Hall Library to team up with artist Delaine Le Bas to present some of my artistic practice with reference to issues surrounding English Romani Gypsy identity.

In retrospect the evening has been an important catalyst in a specific kind of development in my creative process and thinking. This in terms of an exploration and negotiation of proximity of the self and subject when creating a narrative that is both personal and potentially political.

I feel in many ways that the work that Delaine and I both presented created an interesting and challenging contrast as a departure point for discussion.

The work in progress that I presented was 9 minutes of a documentary film that I am directing and collaborating on with my husband Gavin Round. My father is a Romani Gypsy and we started filming my family with a view to focusing on archetypal story telling in Romani Gypsy culture. For me the presentation and following Q & A really clarified my thinking behind this chosen focus. Addressing the issue of this part of my identity is something I have not approached as of yet in my practice and the personal nature of this exploration was something I had in many ways avoided.

Working with Delaine and thinking with others as part of the evening created for me what felt like a tension in my creative process mirrored in the group discussion. Where do I locate myself in this story, what about this story is mine and what parts of the multi faceted nature of identity and the archiving of history do I wish to consider?

The use of documentary film chosen as a medium for this exploration has also been an aspect of my practice that I have been able to consider in greater detail since the evening at Iniva. The explicit nature of film lends to a sense of moving beyond the anecdotal in terms of archiving, yet a use of metaphor and a particular aesthetic has proven to expose the subject to interpretation I had yet to consider before this being highlighted in group discussion.

Still from The Baby and The Snake (2015) by Corrina Eastwood and Gavin Round. ©
In conclusion, I have found the tensions and deliberation evident between the conveying of the stories of individuals through artistic means, and this being with in a context of culture, interesting and surprising.

Finding a balance within my practice so that the stories of individuals are not lost but are privileged within a wider political context has become a focus for further consideration.  
I have also been inspired by Delaine and other artists met through the evening and look forward to future collaborations further exploring personal stories of identity. 

Corrina Eastwood 2015
 



Artist Delaine Le Bas on SAY NO TO IDENTITY THEFT presentation at the Stuart Hall Library 12 February 2015

The artist Delaine Le Bas is an English Romani Gypsy. Delaine has exhibited widely in the UK and internationally, she was an advisor and one of the sixteen artists who were part of The First Roma Pavilion Paradise Lost, 52nd Venice Biennale 2007. 

Delaine and fellow artist Corrina Eastwood kindly agreed to talk about their art practices in relation to their identities at the Stuart Hall Library Research Network meeting in February. The meeting is a forum for researchers, artists, academics, curators, students and activists to introduce an aspect of their art practice, research, cultural activism.

Both Delaine and Corrina have offered their reflections on what it meant to them to share their thoughts with the group. Recordings of the event are available here and a project bibliography based on the Library's holdings can be downloaded here  (Corrina's thoughts on her talk in this blog )

Delaine Le Bas on her presentation at Stuart Hall Library Research Network

Archive material donated by Delaine Le Bas to the Stuart Hall Library

Stuart Hall has been a major figure in my life so to be able to present Say No To Identity Theft at Iniva’s Stuart Hall library was I feel personally a great privilege made even more poignant by the fact that it was exactly a year since his death, this held particular resonance for me.

The Stuart Hall Project has been influential in its impact upon how I feel about who I am, how to question the ideas put forward by institutional and academic 'othering' as to who and what I should be.

Archive material donated by Delaine Le Bas to the Stuart Hall Library

I hope that the presentation that I made had some sense of the impact and power that I feel the work of Stuart Hall has had upon myself and many others in claiming our own identity and not being afraid to question the history and identities that have for generations been forced upon us.
Delaine Le Bas 2015

Archive material donated by Delaine Le Bas to the Stuart Hall Library








Friday, 20 February 2015

Audio Recordings: Delaine Le Bas and Corrina Eastwood at the Stuart Hall Library Research Network Meeting


Delaine Le Bas and Corrina Eastwood

If you missed the event, here is a chance to listen to the fascinating talks from the artists Delaine Le Bas and Corrina Eastwood at our meeting on 12 February 2015. Both artists talked about their experiences as as part of the UK Romany Gypsy community. Corrina and Delaine showed the audience excerpts from their art practices: performance, installation and film. Their artworks revealed the complex challenges involved in defining their identities and inhabiting space.

The talks were followed by a lively question and answer session from the audience.

Read more on the webpage.