THE FACULTY OF SENSING
Thinking With, Through, and by Anton Wilhelm Amo
-
With THE FACULTY OF SENSING – Thinking With, Through, and by Anton Wilhelm Amo, Kunstverein Braunschweig has worked in close cooperation with Bonaventure Soh Bejeng Ndikung to develop a project in honor of Anton Wilhelm Amo, an outstanding philosopher of the 18th century. On the basis of Amo’s writings and their reception, highly topical issues of referentiality, erasure, and canonization will be discussed.
With THE FACULTY OF SENSING – Thinking With, Through, and by Anton Wilhelm Amo, Kunstverein Braunschweig has worked in close cooperation with Bonaventure Soh Bejeng Ndikung to develop a project in honor of Anton Wilhelm Amo, an outstanding philosopher of the 18th century. On the basis of Amo’s writings and their reception, highly topical issues of referentiality, erasure, and canonization will be discussed.
In a 2013 essay The Enlightenment's 'Race' Problem, and Ours for the New York Times' philosophy page The Stone, Justin E. H. Smith wonders how and why philosophers like Immanuel Kant or David Hume could afford to be so explicitly racist, at a period when a contemporary of theirs Anton Wilhelm Amo was excelling as a philosopher. The explanation for this can be found in processes of erasure in relation to what Michel-Rolph Trouillot has called 'Silencing the Past'.
Anton Wilhelm Amo (* around 1700 — † after 1753) is considered to be the first Black academic and philosopher in Germany. His work was largely pushed to the margins and rendered obscure. Amo studied philosophy and law in Halle and positioned himself with his dissertations on the mind-body problem (1734) at the University of Wittenberg and Treatise on the Art of Philosophising Soberly and Accurately (1738) as an early thinker of the Enlightenment.
Anton Wilhelm Amo was abducted from the territory of present-day Ghana as an infant, enslaved, and taken via Amsterdam to Wolfenbüttel at the court of Duke Anton Ulrich. It was here that he began his academic career.
As part of the extensive research and exhibition project, 16 international artists and groups were invited to respond to the philosophical thought of Anton Wilhelm Amo in largely newly produced works. Curatorially, the project develops around questions of Amo’s understanding of the thing-in-itself, the discourse of body and soul, the legal status and recognition of Black people in the 18th century and the present time, transcendental homelessness, the politics of naming, and the narrative and history of the Enlightenment.
The exhibition is accompanied by an extensive public program of performances, artist talks, workshops, and discussions. As part of this, a symposium with international scholars and artists will take place. More detailed information will follow in due course.A publication will be produced alongside the exhibition THE FACULTY OF SENSING – Thinking With, Through, and by Anton Wilhelm Amo, linking theoretical and artistic contributions to the exhibition and the symposium.
Artists:
OLIVIER GUESSELÉ-GARAI AND ANTJE MAJEWSKI
Curators: Bonaventure Soh Bejeng Ndikung, Jule Hillgärtner, Nele Kaczmarek
Curatorial assistance: Franz Hempel, Raoul KlookerFunded by the German Federal Cultural Foundation
The exhibition is funded by:
The Kunstverein Braunschweig e.V. is supported by:
Partners:Amo – Braunschweig Postkolonial
Bundesakademie für kulturelle Bildung Wolfenbüttel
Braunschweig University of the Arts
Braunschweigisches Landesmuseum
Festival Theaterformen
Herzog Anton Ulrich-Museum Braunschweig
Herzog August Library Wolfenbüttel
Martin Luther University Halle/ Burg Giebichenstein University of Art and Design Halle
Municipal Museum Braunschweig
Museum für Photographie Braunschweig
Staatstheater Braunschweig
State National History Museum Braunschweig
Vertretung des Landes Niedersachsen beim Bund
-
OLIVIER GUESSELÉ-GARAI (*1976 in Paris, FRA, based in Berlin, GER)
ANTJE MAJEWSKI (*1968 in Marl, GER, based in Berlin, GER)Chainchainchain, 2012
Hi-fi system, usb stick, textile cable, soundfile
Variable dimensions
Created in collaboration between Antje Majewski and Olivier Guesselé-Garai, the work Chainchainchain is exactly as its descriptive title states: a (word) chain, a self-referential loop, a circle. Positioned in the center of the rotunda at the entrance of the Villa Salve Hospes, the sound work entices you to sing along.OLIVIER GUESSELÉ-GARAI (*1976 in Paris, FRA, based in Berlin, GER)
ANTJE MAJEWSKI (*1968 in Marl, GER, based in Berlin, GER)Chainchainchain, 2012
Hi-fi system, usb stick, textile cable, soundfile
Variable dimensions
Created in collaboration between Antje Majewski and Olivier Guesselé-Garai, the work Chainchainchain is exactly as its descriptive title states: a (word) chain, a self-referential loop, a circle. Positioned in the center of the rotunda at the entrance of the Villa Salve Hospes, the sound work entices you to sing along.The music playing is an excerpt from the song Chain of Fools by Aretha Franklin, which was first released in 1967. The constant repetition of the sample performs the content of the lyrics: Chainchainchain. Enchained by cables itself, the speaker transports the soundtrack into the adjacent exhibition rooms on an aurally level. This linkage can also be read as the expression of a shared authorship. In the historical context to which the exhibition refers, the motif of the chain has concrete implications: as a symbol of slavery, it represents the objectification of countless people, imprisoned and chained against their will. Originally sung by Franklin as the tale of a toxic relationship, this melodic sample and moment of joyful resonance makes the ideological potential of music both audible and tangible.
-
ANNA DASOVIĆ (*1982 in Amsterdam, NLD, based in Rotterdam, NLD)
(Re)Producing “Antonius Guilielmus Amo Guinea-Afer” as biography as body. An exercise in unlearning, 2020
Anna Dasović’s practice aims to represent bodies of knowledge. She presents exhibition scenarios that are preceded by intensive research including interviews and archival/ bibliographic research. By reorganizing, and recontextualizing knowledge, Dasović highlights rhetorical structures in which violence and power are inscribed. This reinterpretation of existing material addresses how the concealment of such conflicts is ideologically motivated.In her response to the exhibition’s invitation, Dasović has focused on the narration of Anton Wilhelm Amo’s life, checking their sources and comparing them against each other. What counts as reliable testimony? What counts as subjective interpretation or speculation? Dasović compares the patchiness of Amo’s biography with those of other academic figures of his era. She reveals that history as a social construction is marked with processes of narrative erasure, and this erasure is most intense when the historical subject is non-white. Further, she proposes that the tacit and racist censorship of Amo’s life and work undermines historical factuality. By probing apparently credible sources that appear, on first inspection, to provide information about Amo, Dasović provokes further questions to arise. With (Re)Producing “Antonius Guilielmus Amo Guinea-Afer”, Dasović highlights historical aporias into which she poses unanswered questions around Amo’s biography and body that invite the visitor in a process of unlearning. As an artistic approach free of utopian wholeness, or, free of the expectation to undo the erasure Amo and others in his position have suffered, Dasović’s work centers on revealing uncertainties about history produced by racism.
Dasović’s gesture takes shape in a regular cycle in which she renders or makes these aporias visible by posing questions for the duration of the exhibition. While these questions are installed on the windows of the exhibition rooms of the Villa Salve Hospes as simultaneous retrospects and prospects, visitors can also encounter them online in pop-up windows on the Kunstverein's website, thus Thinking With, Through and by Anton Wilhelm Amo. Dasović brings attention to the invisible: the glass or the (pop-up) window between that which is on the surface (history) and that which is underneath that surface (everything and everyone else).
-
LUNGISWA GQUNTA (*1990 in Port Elizabeth, ZAF, based in Amsterdam, NLD)
Benisya Ndawoni: Return to the Unfamiliar, 2020
Razor-wires, sage, mpepho
Variable dimensions
Even before entering the room, Lungiswa Gqunta’s installation Benisya Ndawoni: Return to the Unfamiliar announces itself with the spicy-bitter scents of sage and dried mpepho, a liquorice strawflower cultivated in South Africa. In combination with the geometric barbed wire room drawings – harshly opposing the visitors in one moment while creating almost intimate retreats in the next – an equal appeal is made to the senses of sight, touch and smell. This multi-sensory approach establishes interesting links to the theses of Anton Wilhelm Amo, who noted in The Apatheia of the Human Mind: “Man has sensation of material objects not as regards his mind but as regards his organic and living body.”[1]Important starting points of the installation are experiences of forced migration: the controlled or forced movement of (Black) people in the past and present. “Where were you going?” asks the title in siXhosa, posing questions about accessibility and structural violence. “Benisya Ndawoni: Return to the Unfamiliar remembers all the homeless and therefore invisible bodies trying to find a home, and the violence inflicted upon them during this navigation. It is a tribute to migration, to the many houses that have been built and destroyed and which in turn build ‘houses’ within ourselves.” (Lungiswa Gqunta) By directly linking sage, mpepho and barbed wire, Gqunta evokes contradictory memories of private retreats, but also of exclusion and persecution. Ambivalent desires for belonging meet the disoriented flow of bodies through different places and contexts – a phenomenon for which Georg Lukács coined the metaphor of transcendental homelessness. With the additional title – Return to the Unfamiliar – Gqunta also refers to the movement of Amo, who, in 1746/47, returned to the place from which he was forcibly abducted as a child and who knew how to draw the qualities of his multi-logical philosophy from integrating different frames of reference.
[1] Amo, Anton Wilhelm: The Apatheia of the Human Mind. In: Antonius Gvilielmus Amo Afer from Axim in Ghana. Translation of his works. Halle (Saale), 1968, p. 73.
-
BERNARD AKOI-JACKSON (*1979 in Accra, GHA, based in Kumasi, GHA)
... and we, seeking to remember the roads that lead us back home, get strayed into the essences that will emerge ..., 2020
... and we, seeking to remember the roads that lead us back home, get strayed into the essences that will emerge... is an enigmatic film / installation / performance script that initiates a search by the fictitious character Amo to retrace his steps to his origins. It is an experimental process (based on Anton Wilhem Amo, Afer). The search of this character becomes the ritual that guides the flow of the piece. As the public goes through the materials made available; as they go through the motions that point to an unearthing of facts and legend, and eventually engage in a conversation with the artist, it is possible to collectively inscribe a story of one who has been shrouded in a lot of silence.
– BERNARD AKOI-JACKSON -
PATRICIA KAERSENHOUT (*1966 in Den Helder, NLD, based in Amsterdam, NLD)
While we were Kings and Queens, 2020
12-part series, digital print on Hahnemühle paper, wooden boards with text, hammer
100 × 70 cm (Prints) / 42 × 29,7 cm (Wooden plates)
The title While we were Kings and Queens refers to the fact that highly developed cultures existed on the African continent long before the Europeans established the transatlantic slave trade. Up until today there is the notion that Black people’s history started when Europeans set foot on African shores. In 1712 – the same year that Jean-Jacques Rousseau was born – Willy Lynch gave an infamous speech to slave owners in the colony of Virginia, sharing his methods of oppressing Black slaves. The term ‘lynching’ is derived from his name. A basic principle of the Enlightenment says that knowledge is more important than origin. Everyone is born as a ‘tabula rasa’ (empty sheet) and gains knowledge and experience during their life. Everyone has the same start; accordingly, everyone deserves the same opportunities for emancipation and democratic living conditions.For the exhibition pieces I have printed images of proud and beautiful Black and Brown people on pages of a book called The European Enlightenment: Zeitalter der Aufklärung, published in 1976. The book gives an overview of the European and German Enlightenment and provides insight as well as historical context to Amo’s life and work. This particular book was part of my 2017 performance Daughter of Diaspora with students of the Decolonial Summerschool in Middelburg. Some of the pages contain angry texts and remarks by the Black and Brown students, whose ancestors were not considered here. I am fascinated by Wilhelm Amo’s ideas concerning the body and the mind, where he says that the mind cannot feel pain. It is only the body that can perceive pain. Willy Lynch’s speech, excerpts of which accompany the prints in the exhibition, shows how the brain can invent immense cruelties because it is decoupled from the body. With While we were Kings and Queens, I also want to show the white psychoses in which Black and Brown bodies are trapped. A psychosis that on the one hand has promoted emancipation and equality, but on the other hand is responsible for terrible crimes. The sentences from Willy Lynch’s speech thus stand in sharp contrast to the German Enlightenment texts and the philosophy of Anton Wilhelm Amo.
– PATRICIA KAERSENHOUTDownload Instruction Letter While we were Kings and Queens, 2020
-
ADJANI OKPU-EGBE (*1979 in Kumba, CMR, based in London, GBR)
Decolonising Knowledge (Anton Wilhelm Amo), 2020
Wood, acrylic paint, glue, books, mixed media
Variable dimensionsThe Son of Man, 2008
Toilet paper, acrylic, varnish, glue and pebbles on canvas
50 × 70 cmThe Foundation and Etymological Reinforcement of Erasure, 2020
Wood, acrylic paint, glue, linen, refrigerator, mixed media
Variable dimensionsA French Soldier’s Trophy Head in Cameroon, 1950s/1960s, 2019
Clay, metal, wood, hair
14 × 16 × 40 cmFabricated Anthropology (Quadriptych), 2019
Mixed media on wooden doors
200 × 305 × 4 cm
Adjani Okpu-Egbe’s relief-like paintings use a self-developed technique in which acrylic paint is poured onto a uniform surface structure with the help of bubble wrap. It is this that the artist then uses as a starting point for his two-dimensional but still figurative paintings.In the first room of the exhibition, Adjani Okpu-Egbe has created a hybrid portrait of Anton Wilhelm Amo that incorporates a bookshelf and uses it as a canvas. A central depiction of Amo which resembles a TIME magazine cover is surrounded by objects such as a globe, artificial plants, miniature sculptures of owls and the coat of arms of the city of Braunschweig, as well as a selection of Amos writings and various historical and contemporary texts that contextualize Amo’s work from a present-day perspective. To create the library included in the work, Okpu-Egbe asked a number of academics and other people, including Professor Carol Becker (Columbia University, New York), Professor Ulrike Bergermann (Hochschule für Bildende Künste, Braunschweig), peace researcher Professor Matt Meyer, and curator Soh Bejeng Ndikung to suggest academic and literary titles.
ADJANI OKPU-EGBE (*1979 in Kumba, CMR, based in London, GBR)
Decolonising Knowledge (Anton Wilhelm Amo), 2020
Wood, acrylic paint, glue, books, mixed media
Variable dimensionsThe Son of Man, 2008
Toilet paper, acrylic, varnish, glue and pebbles on canvas
50 × 70 cmThe Foundation and Etymological Reinforcement of Erasure, 2020
Wood, acrylic paint, glue, linen, refrigerator, mixed media
Variable dimensionsA French Soldier’s Trophy Head in Cameroon, 1950s/1960s, 2019
Clay, metal, wood, hair
14 × 16 × 40 cmFabricated Anthropology (Quadriptych), 2019
Mixed media on wooden doors
200 × 305 × 4 cm
Adjani Okpu-Egbe’s relief-like paintings use a self-developed technique in which acrylic paint is poured onto a uniform surface structure with the help of bubble wrap. It is this that the artist then uses as a starting point for his two-dimensional but still figurative paintings.In the first room of the exhibition, Adjani Okpu-Egbe has created a hybrid portrait of Anton Wilhelm Amo that incorporates a bookshelf and uses it as a canvas. A central depiction of Amo which resembles a TIME magazine cover is surrounded by objects such as a globe, artificial plants, miniature sculptures of owls and the coat of arms of the city of Braunschweig, as well as a selection of Amos writings and various historical and contemporary texts that contextualize Amo’s work from a present-day perspective. To create the library included in the work, Okpu-Egbe asked a number of academics and other people, including Professor Carol Becker (Columbia University, New York), Professor Ulrike Bergermann (Hochschule für Bildende Künste, Braunschweig), peace researcher Professor Matt Meyer, and curator Soh Bejeng Ndikung to suggest academic and literary titles.
In the Gartensaal at Villa Salve Hospes, Adjani Okpu-Egbe presents a series of works that critically examine the Christianization of the African continent and its role in the erasure of African civilizations. A wooden chapel stands in the center of the space with its ceiling draped in black fabric with painted on words, and its exterior walls clad in nailed-on abstract paintings. The wood construction houses an installation in which a refrigerator serves as the presentation site for an anthropomorphic sculpture whose title identifies it as a colonial human ‘trophy’, as well as several profane and ritualistic use objects.
Fabricated Anthropology, a large-format painting on a wall adjacent to the hut shows a central figure confronted with and resisting the violence and the symbols of right-wing movements like 8chan, KKK, RAHOWA. The size and the graphic style of the quadriptych contrasts sharply with the smaller format and religious subject matter of The Son of Man. Created in 2008, the abstracted depiction of Christ’s crucifixion testifies to Okpu-Egbe’s ongoing engagement with and critique of Christian iconographies and their (post-)colonial legacy.
Download the annotated literature recommendations by Prof. Carol Becker, Prof. Ulrike Bergermann, Valentine Eben and Prof. Matt Meyer
-
THEO ESHETU (*1958 in London, GBR, based in Berlin, GER)
Amo Speaks, 2020
4K Video
5:38 min
Filmmaker and video artist Theo Eshetu traces the collective unconscious, using symbols and signs to question cultural identities and media narratives. In Amo Speaks, a newly developed video work for Kunstverein Braunschweig, he develops a fictive portrait of Anton Wilhelm Amo as a speculative and performative attempt to evoke a visual memory of him and thus also point both to the absence of any verified portrait and to the presence of many projections and faked representations of Amo that circulate online, in books, and writing.In Amo Speaks, images of Amo are projected onto the face of a performer. Text fragments from Anton Wilhelm Amo’s reflections on the body-mind problem and the faculty of sensing are read aloud in English, German, and Latin to create a sound texture that makes tangible the multi-perspective position from which Amo developed his thoughts.
“Through the combination of a real person and the popularly projected image of Amo I try to create a real image which is clearly not real, alluding to the mask we all wear in real life.” (Theo Eshetu)
-
JEAN-ULRICK DÉSERT (*in Port-au-Prince, HTI, based in Berlin, GER)
“Paradisum Calamitate” (Paradise Catastrophe) after C.D.F., 2020
Acrylic on parchment, easels, Monstera deliciosa
Variable dimensionsGuten Morgen Preußen, 2009
6 cyanotypes on Bütten-Ingres paper- Morgensglück, 31 × 48 cm
- Vater Sohn vor Wasser Pyramiden, 24 × 31 cm
- Preußisches Schicksal, 24 × 31 cm
- Reflexionsbecken, 24 × 31 cm
- Mother Delta, 31 × 48 cm
- Guten Morgen Preußen, 29,7 × 42 cm
Jean-Ulrick Désert’s installation “Paradisum Calamitate” (Paradise Catastrophe) after C.D.F., developed especially for the exhibition, combines tropical plants with large parchment strips embellished with acrylic. It invokes The Wreck of Hope (Das Eismeer) by Caspar David Friedrich, a key work of German romanticism. The tragedy depicted by Friedrich is re-imagined as a metaphorical shipwreck of a lost saga. Désert’s implicit narrative is intentionally ambiguous, creating a broken image of a fictional history that points in several directions.Désert contextualizes the story hinted toward in the installation with recognizable symbols and motifs: patterns reminiscent of church windows, a book depicting Amo as the mythical Janus, coats of arms and title plates & bands with wilting ‘black’ tulips considered and commodified as rarities, and a mystical looking shipwreck that, as an (art) historical metaphor, evokes both Germanic providence and Germany’s colonial complicities. Also on display in the Spiegelsaal is Guten Morgen Preußen, a series of analog cyanotypes in Prussian blue on Bütten-Ingres paper and generated with digitally collaged negatives. This series of works narrates the story of Sabac el Cher, a boy from Egypt who was ‘gifted’ to Prince Albrecht of Prussia in the 19th century and lived at his court in Germany. The series comprises Morgensglück, a portrait of Gertrud (née Perlig) and Gustav Sabac el Cher at the Muskau Park in then-Prussia, Vater Sohn vor Wasser Pyramiden, a superimposed portrait of August Sabac el Cher and his son Gustav, Preußisches Schicksal showing Gustav Sabac el Cher and the German Emperor on horseback, Reflexionsbecken, a portrait of August Sabac el Cher in Prince Muskauer Pückler’s gardens, and Mother Delta, a depiction of Anna and her future husband August Sabac el Cher. This project serves as an echo of the conspicuous presence of Africans among the German ‘Adel’ class.
-
OLIVIER GUESSELÉ-GARAI (*1976 in Paris, FRA, based in Berlin, GER)
Their eyes were watching cop, 2015/2020
Mixed media, wood
Variable dimensions
Olivier Guesselé-Garai lends poetic expression to his FACULTY OF SENSING – Thinking With, Through, and by Anton Wilhelm Amo contribution. In a poem written in 2015, the artist deals with the cross-generational identity issues of a “race of doubt”(Olivier Guesselé- Garai). Here too connecting social injustice in different times, Guesselé-Garai explicitly refers with the title of his poem to the literary work Their Eyes Were Watching God, 1937, by Zora Neale Hurston, a leading figure of the Harlem Renaissance in 1920s New York. With the orthographically close shift from “God” to “Cop”, the artist transports the same old questions – with regard to Anton Wilhelm Amo even centuries-old questions – into the very present, allowing for references to movements like Black Lives Matters, which have been formed against sys-temic (police) violence against Black People of Color (BPoC).For the exhibition, the artist translates what he has written into space. In the horizontal presentation, different materials are combined and what is read is repeatedly linked with what is seen, thus generating a top view as the superordinate perspective on things. The wooden letters fixed to panels show traces of other floor coverings and can be read together with individual statements of the poem: “uptown or downtown tonic asphalt”. The first line, “A negro way of running”, opens up different connections yet again as a reference to Henry Louis Gates Jr.’s epilogue for Hurston’s novel, A Negro Way of Saying. Guesselé-Garai develops an individual type-image with universal appeal. The typeface in the sense of typography is simply designed and thus bears signs of universality too. The letters have something educational about them, they are reminiscent of a basic learning tool for reading and writing. With their help, knowledge can be grasped, shared and stored over time – and ultimately, they also provide access to those writings by Amo which are existing today. Divided into four paragraphs, the flow of reading in Guesselé-Garai’s poem is marked as interrupted, thus also referring to historically re-curring and continuing incisions: an ongoing fragile history.
-
ANTJE MAJEWSKI (*1968 in Marl, GER, based in Berlin, GER)
Die Apatheia der menschlichen Seele (I–IV), 2020
I
Oil on wood
40 × 80 cmII
Oil on wood
77,8 × 77,8 cmIII
Oil on wood
50 × 50 cmIV
Oil on wood
73 × 50,5 cm
On the first floor of the rotunda Antje Majewski presents new paintings created especially for the exhibition. Majewski’s series of works is based on Anton Wilhelm Amo’s dissertation of the same name, written at the University of Wittenberg in 1734: On the Apathy of the Human Mind; or, the Absence of Sensation in the Human Mind and its Presence in our Organic and Living Body. In his dissertation Amo explores the body-mind problem and posits the following with regard to the debate at the time: “that the mind acts with the body with which it is in mutual union, we concede; but that it suffers with the body, we deny”[1].
Majewski also begins with this idea of the sanctity of the soul and examines the relationship between the internal and the external, our inner soul and our outer body. The final form of the series is painting, but each work has gone through a process of translation several times in the course of its creation. This is not only in the sense of Amo’s original Latin text being translated into a contemporary language version, but more in terms of how Amos’ writing conjured notions and individual ideas about the depiction of a soul, which were then shared in a dialogue using spoken language, and then finally translated into a visual language. The paintings are inscribed with the artistic interpretation of previous discussions with the people involved in the exhibition about the visual representation of a soul, which rendered the challenges of speaking the unspeakable and painting the un-paintable visible. Translated into writing, transcriptions of these conversations – in the different languages in which the conversations took place – accompany the pictures as texts, thus establishing an additional layer to the image-text relationship.
Presented on the upper level of the rotunda on pedestals from the Villa Salve Hospes, the works also become portraits in terms of their presentation format; portraits of those who were involved in the dialogue around the creation of the exhibition project and Majewski’s works. Ultimately, the paintings can also be interpreted as portraits of Anton Wilhelm Amo himself, whose philosophical vocabulary is the inspiration for the entire exhibition.[1] Amo, Anton Wilhelm: The Apatheia of the Human Mind. In: Antonius Gvilielmus Amo Afer of Axim in Ghana. Translation of his works. Halle (Saale), 1968, p. 73.
-
ADAMA DELPHINE FAWUNDU (*1971 in New York City, USA, based in New York City, USA)
Sunsum, in Spirit, 2020
HD Video, 09:53 min
Samples: May Ayim “Blues in Black and White” in Maria Binder “Hope in My Heart – The May Ayim Story” Film Trailer; Louis Henderson “The Sea is History” Soundtrack; Michelle Parkerson “A Litany For Survival – the Life and Work of Audre Lorde” Film Trailer; Ella Andall “Yemaya (Great Divine Mother of the Orisas)”; Bessie Jones “Beggin’ the Blues”; Humboldt Universität Berlin Lautarchiv “Duala (Kamerun), Gesang – LA 1334”, “Baule (Elfenbeinküste), Flöte – PK 1596/1”Sunsum, in Body, 2020
Archival pigment, synthetic hair, yarn, paper, leather thread, acrylic medium on handmade mulberry paper – bound onto wooden frame
21,5 × 33 × 26 cmSunsum, in Mind #1 + Sunsum, in Mind #2, 2020
HD Video, archival pigment, human hair, synthetic hair, sage, cowrie shells, acrylic medium on 100% Brazilian banana tree stem paper
each 50 × 140 cm
Water is the connecting element that runs through the works of Adama Delphine Fawundu. The artist is interested in the nexus of social movements and collective tendencies and how these are mirrored in the motif of water. With a view to and awareness of transhistorical connections, a range of temporalities are connected: past, present, and future all coincide within Fawundu’s artistic vision. As a locus of memory, the sea narrates generations of its own stories – and it is here that Derek Walcott’s well-known poem The Sea is History, a source of inspiration to Fawundu alongside texts by Anton Wilhelm Amo, offers many forms of explicit connection.ADAMA DELPHINE FAWUNDU (*1971 in New York City, USA, based in New York City, USA)
Sunsum, in Spirit, 2020
HD Video, 09:53 min
Samples: May Ayim “Blues in Black and White” in Maria Binder “Hope in My Heart – The May Ayim Story” Film Trailer; Louis Henderson “The Sea is History” Soundtrack; Michelle Parkerson “A Litany For Survival – the Life and Work of Audre Lorde” Film Trailer; Ella Andall “Yemaya (Great Divine Mother of the Orisas)”; Bessie Jones “Beggin’ the Blues”; Humboldt Universität Berlin Lautarchiv “Duala (Kamerun), Gesang – LA 1334”, “Baule (Elfenbeinküste), Flöte – PK 1596/1”Sunsum, in Body, 2020
Archival pigment, synthetic hair, yarn, paper, leather thread, acrylic medium on handmade mulberry paper – bound onto wooden frame
21,5 × 33 × 26 cmSunsum, in Mind #1 + Sunsum, in Mind #2, 2020
HD Video, archival pigment, human hair, synthetic hair, sage, cowrie shells, acrylic medium on 100% Brazilian banana tree stem paper
each 50 × 140 cm
Water is the connecting element that runs through the works of Adama Delphine Fawundu. The artist is interested in the nexus of social movements and collective tendencies and how these are mirrored in the motif of water. With a view to and awareness of transhistorical connections, a range of temporalities are connected: past, present, and future all coincide within Fawundu’s artistic vision. As a locus of memory, the sea narrates generations of its own stories – and it is here that Derek Walcott’s well-known poem The Sea is History, a source of inspiration to Fawundu alongside texts by Anton Wilhelm Amo, offers many forms of explicit connection.For her contribution to the exhibition, the artist pursued and filmed along Braunschweig’s waterways. The resulting video work uses collage-like methods to bring together a range of images from various river points. References include poets and activists May Ayim and Audre Lorde, whose years in Berlin in turn inspired Ayim. In her expansive installation, Fawundu combines collages of moving image material together with photographs, with new image levels being added via superimposed projections. Here too, the sea is projected as a place that mediates sinking and (ritual) healing. Finally, various (narrative) threads coalesce into a handmade book. Page by page, recurring symbols from the artist’s work – such as the sea, natural and artificial hair, roots and routes – are closely interwoven. Collage as an artistic medium is also prominent in the room-filling soundtrack, overlaying the other works from the starting point of the large projection.
Samples such as Bessie Jones’s Beggin’ the Blues or Ella Andall’s Yemaya are mixed with sonic artifacts from Humboldt University of Berlin’s sound archives. As a practice of merging distinct sound recordings, sampling is also used skilfully by the artist in the context of the emergence of (new) language and thus deployed to develop her own: “The ‘new language’ symbolizes life, a sense of freedom, living rather than just surviving within the complexities of systematic oppression. This is what the body does intuitively – the ‘body’ never truly dies, it transforms.” (Adama Delphine Fawundu)
-
AKINBODE AKINBIYI (*1946 in Oxford, GBR, lebt in Berlin, GER)
Attempts at Understanding, 2020
Series of 8 black-and-white photographs
Inkjet Pigment Print
each 60 × 60 cm
Akinbode Akinbiyi thinks of photography in line with its original idea: writing with light. When wandering through towns and cities with his camera searching for subjects that – when viewed briefly – seem like trivialities, he thus becomes a storyteller. But it is precisely this negligibility of our everyday life that here articulates itself, the details of the captured moment pointing to grander associations.AKINBODE AKINBIYI (*1946 in Oxford, GBR, lebt in Berlin, GER)
Attempts at Understanding, 2020
Series of 8 black-and-white photographs
Inkjet Pigment Print
each 60 × 60 cm
Akinbode Akinbiyi thinks of photography in line with its original idea: writing with light. When wandering through towns and cities with his camera searching for subjects that – when viewed briefly – seem like trivialities, he thus becomes a storyteller. But it is precisely this negligibility of our everyday life that here articulates itself, the details of the captured moment pointing to grander associations.
While Akinbode Akinbiyi otherwise often roams large cities such as Bamako or Berlin, principally capturing scenes of public life, his gaze was directed via the viewfinder toward Braunschweig for this exhibition. It is fundamental to the photographic medium that it can make visible that which would otherwise be overlooked, and it is in keeping with this that the photographer commenced a search for Amo within this city. Where could Amo have been to? Which streets may he have walked along? Which buildings did he see? Did his potential presence in these places and in this region have visible impacts on how we see them today? For Akinbode Akinbiyi, raised in London and now resident in Berlin for more than 30 years, the movements with which we traverse urban space are important. “In movement, we are constantly in interaction with our environment, with what is immediately around us, and the environment reacts in turn.”(Akinbode Akinbiyi)Seeing and being seen – both fundamentally happen in both directions. In keeping with this, seeing via the camera can be understood as an intensification of the dialog between a person who sees (and photographs) and the person they face. We already know from our own experiences that from either in front of or behind the camera, this visual clash can be informed by openness or by shyness; by aggression, vulnerability or sovereignty. In the most well-intentioned sense, Akinbiyi’s photographs have an equalizing effect: similarities between the people, streets and corners portrayed in various places and times carry more weight than the difference emphasized in other contexts.
-
KITSO LYNN LELLIOTT (*1984 in Molepolole, BWA, based in Johannesburg, ZAF)
291 years condensed into the same number of seconds (or) one day out there our paths might cross, 2020
Three-channel video installation
9:42 min
Kitso Lynn Lelliott’s artistic practice includes video installations, filmmaking and writing. Lelliott’s work explores the realities produced by contradictory forms of knowledge and concerns the narratives and forms that emerged on both sides of the Atlantic during colonialism, a constitutive element of the modern era. For THE FACULTY OF SENSING – Thinking With, Through, and by Anton Wilhelm Amo, Kitso Lynn Lelliott has developed a new two-part video work. Both parts are 291 seconds long, representing the number of years that have passed since Anton Wilhelm Amo’s disputation in 1729.KITSO LYNN LELLIOTT (*1984 in Molepolole, BWA, based in Johannesburg, ZAF)
291 years condensed into the same number of seconds (or) one day out there our paths might cross, 2020
Three-channel video installation
9:42 min
Kitso Lynn Lelliott’s artistic practice includes video installations, filmmaking and writing. Lelliott’s work explores the realities produced by contradictory forms of knowledge and concerns the narratives and forms that emerged on both sides of the Atlantic during colonialism, a constitutive element of the modern era. For THE FACULTY OF SENSING – Thinking With, Through, and by Anton Wilhelm Amo, Kitso Lynn Lelliott has developed a new two-part video work. Both parts are 291 seconds long, representing the number of years that have passed since Anton Wilhelm Amo’s disputation in 1729.In the first part of the video work, two projections run in parallel on separate screens, juxtaposing landscape photographs from modern-day Ghana, the region where Amo was born, and Germany with historical images of each region. While exploring specific geographical reference points of Anton Wilhelm Amo’s life, these landscape shots enable a more general consideration of the body’s encounter with an environment, recalling Amo's notes on the faculty of sensing and the human body’s relation to the mind.
The duality of screens and environments alludes to Amo’s dualist thinking which the artist subverts by interrupting the landscape shot progressively with complex layers of history. Elements from the two separate environments start to interfere with each other, complicating the neat divisions between the two and finally breaking out of the confines of those neatly demarcated scenes in order to offer a critique of and a possible resistance to a strict dualist conception of the world.
In the second part, a large-format third channel self-critically raises the problems and issues that the artist encountered while searching for Anton Wilhelm Amo. Using accredited but historically questionable representations of Amo, Kitso Lynn Lelliott draws a deliberately blurred picture, challenging our interest in his unique fate in the context of the countless unknown names and lives whose individual existences, works, and oeuvres have not been passed down through history. Due to circumstances revolving around the COVID-19 virus, the artist has not yet been able to complete the second half of the work on site.
-
CLAUDIA MARTÍNEZ GARAY (* 1983 in Ayacucho, PER, based in Amsterdam, NDL)
Muy blanco para indio y muy poco para blanco / Too white for a cholo, not enough for a white man, 2020
Clay painting (clay on cotton canvas)
155 × 500 cm
“The prejudice of platitude is that the new is neither to be sought nor set out; rather, it is safest to follow the old. Note: This prejudice will be countered 1) by comparing the old with the new, 2) by investigating everything until all doubt is eradicated, 3) by not mistrusting one’s own strength too much, but by doing as much as one can.” [1]In her artistic work, Claudia Martínez Garay explores symbolic translations of exoticization, resentment, and the schizophrenic perception of indigenous peoples of the Andes. While cultural artifacts from the Incas shape the region’s ethnographic and visual memory, their descendants are still exposed to various forms of racism in the present. The starting point of the newly created work Muy blanco para indio y muy poco para blanco/ Too white for a cholo, not enough for a white man (2020) is this line from the film Túpac Amaru, in which Amaru – the last Inca monarch and fighter against the Spanish invasion in the sixteenth century – defines his own identity as mestizo. “His body and soul was as brown as white, Amaru himself was the embodiment of the contradictions, and the gathering of the two worlds that until this moment cannot recognize and reconcile themselves as Peruvian inhabitants”. (Claudia Martínez Garay) Like Anton Wilhelm Amo, Amaru was affected by discrimination, Christianization, and colonization; like Amo, Amaru spoke Latin fluently, among other languages, and so both sought to use their means to revolt against colonial oppression and a lack of acceptance. The installation is based on historical and current representations from textbooks, museum catalogues, and archaeological journals. The illustrations have been reproduced in various shades of clay. Combined, they form a kind of mental map in which a variety of systems of symbols and images, ideas and ideologies enter into new relationships and address the prevalent mechanisms of exclusion and the representation of power. In doing so, Martínez Garay investigates how a canon of images influences cultural identity and which new compositions can be used to speculate about alternative historiographies and future utopias.
[1] Amo, Anton Wilhelm: Treatise on the Art of Philosophizing Soberly and Accurately. In: Antonius Gvilielmus Amo Afer of Axim in Ghana. Translation of his works. Halle (Saale), 1968, p. 191f.
-
RESOLVE COLLECTIVE (founded in 2016, based in London, GBR)
PROGRAMMING IM/PASSIVITY, 2020
Multi-media installation
Variable dimensions
Aporias, blind spots, and contradictions are key stylistic traits of this retelling of Anton Wilhelm Amo’s inspiring life and his philosophy to a modern audience. To fill the gaps in Amo’s life and work, it is often necessary to take a position. The position chosen in the narrative can be shown via the power of fictional works, but also and more subtly in acts of reading and perception, themselves linked to Amo’s philosophies. Our PROGRAMMING IM/PASSIVITY project is divided into three central strategies.RESOLVE COLLECTIVE (founded in 2016, based in London, GBR)
PROGRAMMING IM/PASSIVITY, 2020
Multi-media installation
Variable dimensions
Aporias, blind spots, and contradictions are key stylistic traits of this retelling of Anton Wilhelm Amo’s inspiring life and his philosophy to a modern audience. To fill the gaps in Amo’s life and work, it is often necessary to take a position. The position chosen in the narrative can be shown via the power of fictional works, but also and more subtly in acts of reading and perception, themselves linked to Amo’s philosophies. Our PROGRAMMING IM/PASSIVITY project is divided into three central strategies.The Double:
The curatorial aspect of the work follows Justin E. H. Smith’s position that Amo’s dualistic beliefs are based upon his fundamentally anti-racist stance. We wish to continue this approach with the help of auto-ethnographic and historical research that reflects both Amo’s work and our own diasporic position. For this we have integrated two bodies of literature: publications by and about Anton Wilhelm Amo in the context of the early Enlightenment, and publications that deal with African-diasporic doubleness and double consciousness in a wider sense.
Selected books can be borrowed for free at the Kunstverein. Our staff will be happy to assist you.
Programming Im/Passivity:
Conceptually, the project revolves around Anton Wilhelm Amo’s ideas of passivity and impassivity. The Remise will be a space for workshops, lectures, and performances while also being a place for quiet contemplation and research on Amo. A number of academics and artists will be invited to explore Amo’s work.
Mind-Body Commercio:
Within our process-driven design approach, we use dual methods to process a range of recycled local materials that thus become “spatial currency.” Each method is inspired by one aspect of Anton Wilhelm Amo’s theory and his theses on body-soul dualism. The procedures were rehearsed in advance in a school pupil workshop.
– RESOLVE COLLECTIVE
-
KONRAD WOLF (*1985 in Neubrandenburg, GER, based in Berlin, GER)
Anton Wilhelm Amo Center, 2020
www.kunstvereinbraunschweig.de
As part of his final thesis for his architectural studies, Konrad Wolf was in 2016 tasked with planning a redesign of the Herzog August Library in Wolfenbüttel. Rather than taking the obvious option of an architectural sketch, he developed an idea for the Anton Wilhelm Amo Center – a place that could be located anywhere in the world, dedicated for a defined time to the critical examination of hegemonic knowledge. The name of Amo, early philosopher of the German Enlightenment, was chosen for this planned temporary space for reflection and its program. His scholarly status within European philosophy has been and remains suppressed, ignored, and at best remembered as a curiosity. But buried at it may be, it may be his work that provides a key to better understanding of European Enlightenment philosophy, marked as it was by extreme contradiction and racism.Given that Anton Wilhelm Amo grew up at court in Wolfenbüttel, certainly used the Herzog August Library located there and likely attended the knight academy, we must post the question of why Amo remains largely unknown in the Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttel region. As an institution, why does Herzog August Bibliothek still fail to pay adequate tribute to him? And, as a more fundamental question, why are some people remembered and others not? And not least, how can an institution play an active role in our memorial culture? Together with activists from the Amo – Braunschweig Postkolonial group, Konrad Wolf has developed two public workshop events for the supporting program. As well as interrogating the historical circumstances in which Amo has been rendered invisible, there will be discussions of the imperative for and possibilities of visible memory. For the duration of the exhibition, Konrad Wolf has renamed the Kunstverein Braunschweig the Anton Wilhelm Amo Center via an intervention on the organization’s website. Wolf’s concept thus fits seamlessly into an exhibition dedicated to Anton Wilhelm Amo. At the same time, the mere act of temporarily renaming the entire institution that is Kunstverein Braunschweig to Anton Wilhelm Amo Center goes far beyond the exhibition and its title, calling fundamental institutional structures into question. This (minimal) uncertainty, even merely at the level of language, already touches at the question of the immense power of calling things by their name – or not doing so.
-
ANDCOMPANY&CO. (founded 2003 in Frankfurt am Main, GER)
Black Bismarck revisited (again), 2020
Lecture-Performance, approx. 40 minPerformance in cooperation with Staatstheater Braunschweig as part of Digitale Thementage 2020
With Black Bismarck revisited (again), the andcompany&Co. collective combats the preconception that Germany was not truly a colonial power. In their lecture-performance, Alexander Karschnia, Nicola Nord, and Sascha Sulima take to the stage with arguments based on historical fact alongside pop-cultural references, everyday experience, and theory. This all serves to illuminate the traces of colonialism that can still be found in Germany today – from Edeka to Sarotti, Brandenburg to Berlin. It shows too the borders that were laid across the African continent 135 years ago by the “Africa Conference” and that have led to repeated conflict ever since.ANDCOMPANY&CO. (founded 2003 in Frankfurt am Main, GER)
Black Bismarck revisited (again), 2020
Lecture-Performance, approx. 40 minPerformance in cooperation with Staatstheater Braunschweig as part of Digitale Thementage 2020
With Black Bismarck revisited (again), the andcompany&Co. collective combats the preconception that Germany was not truly a colonial power. In their lecture-performance, Alexander Karschnia, Nicola Nord, and Sascha Sulima take to the stage with arguments based on historical fact alongside pop-cultural references, everyday experience, and theory. This all serves to illuminate the traces of colonialism that can still be found in Germany today – from Edeka to Sarotti, Brandenburg to Berlin. It shows too the borders that were laid across the African continent 135 years ago by the “Africa Conference” and that have led to repeated conflict ever since. From 1884 to 1885, Bismarck invited the 14 leading colonial powers to his Imperial Chancellery to divide Africa along geometrical lines.Not far from this location, and thanks to the initiative of the African community, a plaque has been in place since 2005 to commemorate the fateful European appropriation of Africa. Also close by however is “M*Street” which activists have for years been campaigning to rename “Anton-Wilhelm-Amo-Straße”. Spiked with such indications and connections, the format of the lecture-performance takes a look back at itself to a certain degree. Language – here the principal medium of expression – also achieves a prominence as an instrument of power.
Black Bismarck revisited (again) is a further iteration of a 2015 performance at the Hebbel am Ufer Theater in Berlin.The revised version for Braunschweig is again concerned with making people aware of an “internalized colonialism” and the putatively “normal” perspectives of the “overprivileged and under-pigmented” that are stubbornly present in literature, music, academia, and not least in historiography. Black Bismarck revisited (again) confronts its audience with the historical conditions that have shaped our everyday language and experience. Meaning that “The Faculty of Sensing” is once again presented as an experience of a profoundly colonial nature.
Related Events
Student Workshop XXL with students from IGS Franzsches Feld, and RESOLVE Collective
In the context of the exhibition THE FACULTY OF SENSING – Thinking With, Through and by Anton Wilhelm Amo a student workshop was held in collaboration with IGS Franzsches Feld and London-based RESOLVE Collective.