A CAMH exhibition unearths this country’s strangeness
By Kelly Klaasmeyer
Published on June 26, 2008
Where:
Details:
Subject(s):
“The Old Weird America”, folk themes in American art, Contemporary Arts Museum Houston
If questioned, many of us would agree that the idyllic Thanksgiving stories we learned about the pilgrims and Indians were a crock of shit. But who has really rejected that grade-school version of events? Yes, we know the arrival of settlers led to the genocide of America’s native peoples, but that cognitive dissonance remains. It’s hard to be revisionist with those childhood memories of construction paper pilgrim hats, feathered headdresses and cafeteria turkey slices. Sam Durant illustrates this conflict with his installation Pilgrims and Indians, Planting and Reaping, Learning and Teaching (2006).
Durant has installed displays and worn-looking wax figures he purchased from the defunct Plymouth National Wax Museum in Massachusetts on a divided, slowly rotating circular platform. One side illustrates the famed story of how Native Americans taught the settlers to grow corn by fertilizing it with herring — a tip that gave the pilgrims a bountiful fall harvest. But the tableau on the other side depicts Captain Miles Standish killing the Pequot man Pecksuot. According to a 1624 account from the colony, Pecksuot, who was quite a bit taller than the diminutive Standish, challenged the settler’s strength and courage, prompting Standish to freak out and stab him. Standish then led a raiding party to kill the Pequots. When the party returned, their mission a success, a day of Thanksgiving was declared.
To accurately re-create the first Thanksgiving, my third grade class should have shot and clubbed to death the kids sporting construction paper feathers. Durant pulls off a pointed, successful critique by appropriating the hokey techniques used to promote the popular version of our country’s origins.
And speaking of hokey, Cynthia Norton’s work really resonated with me. But then, I grew up in a dry county in Arkansas where moonshine was delivered inside dog food sacks and square dancing was an integral part of our PE program. The artist, from Kentucky, land of Jack Daniel’s, presents Fountain (Emotion) (2002), a supposedly working distillery (the hot plate was unplugged when I visited). Norton skipped the traditional lead-soldered radiator component but convincingly assembled her still from other found objects. Copper tubing leads from a pressure cooker on a hot plate and coils down into a five-gallon plastic bucket; it all rests on an old wooden magazine stand. Norton has taken the redneck quest for booze and transformed it into an assemblage art object.
Continuing the folksiness in Dancing Squared (2004), Norton uses hidden motors and what looks like an old umbrella clothesline to turn some bouffant square dance dresses into hillbilly whirling dervishes. The sculpture starts up unexpectedly, and the red-and-white dresses with their puffy sleeves and crinolined skirts turn into an ecstatic blur of color. Unoccupied by thick-legged elderly women with tightly permed hair, the empty dresses suddenly become giddy, fanciful objects.
Kara Walker’s work is not just about finding the weird in America’s history; she’s unearthing the horrifying. Walker is known for her appropriation of the genteel 19th-century pastime of silhouette making. But she doesn’t make sentimental portraits of loved ones — her silhouettes address America’s decidedly ungenteel history of slavery, using caricatured figures, both white and black. There’s a warning label at the door to the room where her video 8 Possible Beginnings or: The Creation of African-America, a Moving Picture by Kara E. Walker (2005) is screening. Inside, Walker creates a purposefully grainy, vintage-feeling film in which she uses her silhouettes like shadow puppets to act out sordid, metaphorical scenes. In one, a burly slave and a scrawny “master” engage in sodomy, and the master impregnates the slave with a cotton boll. The slave character later gives birth to a plant that grows up to be a giant cotton tree, from which Brer Rabbit and Brer Fox lynch black figures while Little Timmy, a white boy, scampers and giggles underneath. Except for an Uncle Remus voiceover in one section, most of the dialogue is conveyed through silent film-style text panels.
If questioned, many of us would agree that the idyllic Thanksgiving stories we learned about the pilgrims and Indians were a crock of shit. But who has really rejected that grade-school version of events? Yes, we know the arrival of settlers led to the genocide of America’s native peoples, but that cognitive dissonance remains. It’s hard to be revisionist with those childhood memories of construction paper pilgrim hats, feathered headdresses and cafeteria turkey slices. Sam Durant illustrates this conflict with his installation Pilgrims and Indians, Planting and Reaping, Learning and Teaching (2006).
Durant has installed displays and worn-looking wax figures he purchased from the defunct Plymouth National Wax Museum in Massachusetts on a divided, slowly rotating circular platform. One side illustrates the famed story of how Native Americans taught the settlers to grow corn by fertilizing it with herring — a tip that gave the pilgrims a bountiful fall harvest. But the tableau on the other side depicts Captain Miles Standish killing the Pequot man Pecksuot. According to a 1624 account from the colony, Pecksuot, who was quite a bit taller than the diminutive Standish, challenged the settler’s strength and courage, prompting Standish to freak out and stab him. Standish then led a raiding party to kill the Pequots. When the party returned, their mission a success, a day of Thanksgiving was declared.
To accurately re-create the first Thanksgiving, my third grade class should have shot and clubbed to death the kids sporting construction paper feathers. Durant pulls off a pointed, successful critique by appropriating the hokey techniques used to promote the popular version of our country’s origins.
And speaking of hokey, Cynthia Norton’s work really resonated with me. But then, I grew up in a dry county in Arkansas where moonshine was delivered inside dog food sacks and square dancing was an integral part of our PE program. The artist, from Kentucky, land of Jack Daniel’s, presents Fountain (Emotion) (2002), a supposedly working distillery (the hot plate was unplugged when I visited). Norton skipped the traditional lead-soldered radiator component but convincingly assembled her still from other found objects. Copper tubing leads from a pressure cooker on a hot plate and coils down into a five-gallon plastic bucket; it all rests on an old wooden magazine stand. Norton has taken the redneck quest for booze and transformed it into an assemblage art object.
Continuing the folksiness in Dancing Squared (2004), Norton uses hidden motors and what looks like an old umbrella clothesline to turn some bouffant square dance dresses into hillbilly whirling dervishes. The sculpture starts up unexpectedly, and the red-and-white dresses with their puffy sleeves and crinolined skirts turn into an ecstatic blur of color. Unoccupied by thick-legged elderly women with tightly permed hair, the empty dresses suddenly become giddy, fanciful objects.
Kara Walker’s work is not just about finding the weird in America’s history; she’s unearthing the horrifying. Walker is known for her appropriation of the genteel 19th-century pastime of silhouette making. But she doesn’t make sentimental portraits of loved ones — her silhouettes address America’s decidedly ungenteel history of slavery, using caricatured figures, both white and black. There’s a warning label at the door to the room where her video 8 Possible Beginnings or: The Creation of African-America, a Moving Picture by Kara E. Walker (2005) is screening. Inside, Walker creates a purposefully grainy, vintage-feeling film in which she uses her silhouettes like shadow puppets to act out sordid, metaphorical scenes. In one, a burly slave and a scrawny “master” engage in sodomy, and the master impregnates the slave with a cotton boll. The slave character later gives birth to a plant that grows up to be a giant cotton tree, from which Brer Rabbit and Brer Fox lynch black figures while Little Timmy, a white boy, scampers and giggles underneath. Except for an Uncle Remus voiceover in one section, most of the dialogue is conveyed through silent film-style text panels.
Walker’s use of music — she employs snippets of ’30s and ’40s recordings — is especially effective. Adding to the macabre irony, the lynching scene is accompanied by a joyous choral version of “Zippity Do Dah,” probably from the opening or ending credits of Disney’s notorious Song of the South. Walker has traditionally placed or projected her silhouettes on gallery walls. She has gotten a lot of flak from other African-American artists for her caricatures of black people — big-lip, big-butt images that differ little from vintage racist imagery. With static, soundless images, Walker’s point of view is less clear and the work less effective. But by animating her images in video and adding text, narration and a soundtrack, Walker fleshes out the dark satire of her work, engulfing viewers in her disturbing visions.
The weirdness of “Old Weird” goes on and on, from Greta Pratt’s portraits of Lincoln impersonators, to Dario Robleto’s fabricated album covers for Godspell and the like, to David Rathman’s Western outtake drawings. Kamps has curated a fascinating exhibition that mines a rich and provocative vein of influence in contemporary American art — and culture. Leaving the CAMH, you look with fresh eyes at the weirdness all around you.
SOURCE: http://houstonpress.com/2008-06-26/culture/the-old-weird-america-folk-themes-in-contemporary-art/
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“In one, a burly slave and a scrawny “master” engage in sodomy, and the master impregnates the slave with a cotton boll. The slave character later gives birth to a plant that grows up to be a giant cotton tree, from which Brer Rabbit and Brer Fox lynch black figures while Little Timmy, a white boy, scampers and giggles underneath. “
Sodomy.
Many of us are very much familiar with the rape and abuse of black women and girls during slavery.
But, how many of us can picture sodomy aginst black males, “burly” or otherwise, as well as sodomy against little black boys? Rape, forced impregnation, incest (white masters raping their own daughters), there is much historical documentation of the sexual abuse black females suffered at the hands of any white man on the slave platantation.
But, sodomy against black males is something that is never discussed. It’s as if all the way through slavery, homosexual behaviour put the brakes on, did not happen, nor was there any historical documentation given to it. It’s as if during over 450 years of enslavement, not one black man or boy was sexually raped, and therefore, physically and psychologically, damaged by the bestial behaviour of white men. Perhaps it is an image that many people cannot wrap their minds around. Perhaps it is an image that no one wants to conjure up.
The images of white men’s cruelties against black women during slavery (as well as during segregation) are painful enough to picture; white men forcing their penises into defenseless little black boys, tearing their insides up, is something of a horror that many people do not want to think of.
I have searched through books on the history of slavery, but have found no historical documentation of white male homosexuality against enslaved black men and black boys, nor any documentation of white male homosexuality against black males during Jim Crow segregation.
Now, why is that?
So, readers, why do you think there is no mention of buggery of black males during slavery? Do you think that white male homosexuality of black males took a vacation during slavery and segregation, only to pop up all of a sudden, centuries later after Loving vs. Virginia – 1967?
Does anyone really believe that there were no white men raping black men and boys during slavery? That white men who were homosexuals could control themselves around black men and boys, many of whom while working on slave plantations wore practically nothing but rags while going about their daily labors on slave plantations?
Since there were white males raping and abusing black females, why would it be so inconceivable of them abusing and raping black males?

u mean thanks stealing
great post
Whenever you hear a negro rapper talking about thug supremacy including other males performing fellatio on his hero this is a direct descendant of slave culture…
The great Toni Morrison in Beloved recounts Paul D.’s sexual abuse by white prison guards…
Look for Sodomy and the Pirate Tradition and search for the “slave ship cabin boy”…
BTW: Please look me up on FaceBook.com!
Interesting! One must also “stretch” their imaginings around the idea that there were black men and boys having sex with EACH OTHER – forcibly and WILLINGLY both in the slave era as well as in Jim Crow. And if that’s hard for some to imagine, I guess the idea of something approaching love is out of the question.
“One must also “stretch” their imaginings around the idea that there were black men and boys having sex with EACH OTHER – forcibly and WILLINGLY both in the slave era as well as in Jim Crow.”
Heterosexism will do that to many people’s image of two males having sex with each other.
On the issue of “forcibly and WILLINGLY”. . . .it is possible that there may have been some consensual sex between both BM/boys as well as WM/BM men and boys.
Some. . . .consensual sex. Then, it depends on what consensual means to many people.
What would also be inconceivable in many people’s minds would be the White slave mistress having sex with the enslaved Black women and girls.
I find that image harder to fathom than the ones of men/boys having sex with each other.