Carrie Mae Weems: Aca gallery of the Savannah College of Art and Design.
Auslander, Philip
The video in Carrie Mae Weems's installation Constructing
History: A Requiem to Mark the Moment, 2008--a project commissioned by
the National Black Arts Festival and the Savannah College of Art and
Design (where Weems was in residence last year)--begins topically. In
voice-over, while the screen is black, the artist unleashes a litany of
statements about social unrest and protest, after which extreme
close-ups of Senators Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, respectively,
fill the screen. The politicians reappear at the end, at which point the
artist speaks about living at a moment in American history when both a
black man and a white woman seem to have a real chance of becoming
president (though as of this writing, of course, only the former has an
opportunity next month).
The action occurring between the segments showing the
senators' faces is pedagogical, and takes place in a schematic
classroom demarcated by a wall with a schoolhouse clock and two windows
down which water pours, seemingly perpetually. The viewer hears the
voice of a teacher--at times portrayed in the classroom by a shadowy
figure, played by Weems; at others by a young black woman in a kimono facing a cherry tree amid falling snow, also located within the
room--instructing a class of young people of various ages and
ethnicities in the history of twentieth-century political violence,
primarily in the United States. As suggested by the title of A Class
Ponders the Future, 2008--one of the twenty-one black-and-white
photographs taken during the shooting of, and exhibited in conjunction
with, the video--the idea is to use the past as a basis for imagining
the future. The closed classroom setting, static clock, and the
implication of unending rain outside suggest that both teacher and
students are confined until they come to some kind of terms with
history.
With a view to representing historical flash points, the teacher
has the students pose in a series of tableaux vivants that reenact
specific media images, or at least mimic the type of pictures that come
to symbolize fraught moments. A Japanese woman cradles another to
illustrate the aftermath of the bombing of Japan in World War II; a
young white man portraying James Earl Ray sits, pondering a gun; three
African-American women, one dressed like Coretta Scott King, mourn the
fallen. The idea that history must be grasped somatically, not just
intellectually, that people must feel in their bodies what has happened,
not just see it with their eyes, fascinates, but unfortunately the video
does not deliver fully on this premise. Since the characters are
students, it is not surprising that their enactments tend to be
amateurish, but their incredibility detracts from the video's force
by periodically jarring the viewer out of a meditative mood.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
In the past, Weems has staged allegorical photographs focusing on
issues of race and gender as well as rephotographed--and
recontextualized with superimposed text--historical or ethnographic
images of black people. In the new installation, she combines both
strategies by representing, and adding her own dialogue and narrative
to, iconic historical moments, but without the clarity of purpose
evident in earlier work. The students are not reenacting lived history
but simulating media images, and it is not entirely clear what is gained
by doing so. In the video, the images may represent the teacher's
feverish stream of consciousness as she tries to trace the development
of the present and provide a means for her students to imagine the
future. In leaving lighting equipment and camera tracks visible, the
photographs acknowledge, however, that these images are just media
constructs. But the purpose of staging plangent historical images only
to reveal them as staged remains elusive.