The proposed contribution reconsiders a recent moment in the career of the artist Jimmie Durham, who has made transnational nomadism a life and operational practice. More specifically in the exhibition "God's Children. God's Poems" held in 2017 at the Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst in Zurich, Durham presents a series of animal sculptures realizedin his typicalbricoleur style, inviting the viewer to reflect directly on the ways in which European populations have hunted down and nearly exterminated numerous species,now onthe verge of extinction. In the era of the Anthropocene, where the dominant action and narrative arethe human ones, the history written by the winners appears incontrovertibly marked by an anthropocentric paradigm. What voice can the animal, relegated toa role similar to that which the philosopher Gayatri Spivak would have defined as "subaltern", play in the critical conformation of a Western and European cultural identity? The essay aims therefore to highlight the relationship between the artist and thedynamism of European culture and to analyze the ways in which some recent experiments in the visual arts can question an aspect that is only apparently marginal, concerning relations of appropriationism and exclusiondetermined by European thought.
L’Europa attraverso gli “occhi del Coyote”: un’analisi dell’opera di Jimmie Durham / Chiaraluce, Gianlorenzo. - In: NOVECENTO TRANSNAZIONALE. - ISSN 2532-1994. - V. 6 (2022):(2022), pp. 89-106.
L’Europa attraverso gli “occhi del Coyote”: un’analisi dell’opera di Jimmie Durham
Gianlorenzo Chiaraluce
2022
Abstract
The proposed contribution reconsiders a recent moment in the career of the artist Jimmie Durham, who has made transnational nomadism a life and operational practice. More specifically in the exhibition "God's Children. God's Poems" held in 2017 at the Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst in Zurich, Durham presents a series of animal sculptures realizedin his typicalbricoleur style, inviting the viewer to reflect directly on the ways in which European populations have hunted down and nearly exterminated numerous species,now onthe verge of extinction. In the era of the Anthropocene, where the dominant action and narrative arethe human ones, the history written by the winners appears incontrovertibly marked by an anthropocentric paradigm. What voice can the animal, relegated toa role similar to that which the philosopher Gayatri Spivak would have defined as "subaltern", play in the critical conformation of a Western and European cultural identity? The essay aims therefore to highlight the relationship between the artist and thedynamism of European culture and to analyze the ways in which some recent experiments in the visual arts can question an aspect that is only apparently marginal, concerning relations of appropriationism and exclusiondetermined by European thought.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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