All posts tagged: Memory

Eye on The Bahamas

By Dr Ian Bethell-Bennett. Beauty surrounds us. Waters flow over us.  Sands, pink, grey, white, beige provide support for life.  Mangroves with their gaseous smells and nursery roots, sustain coastal health as they prevent full-on impact from storm surges and hurricanes. Art provides a salient view into these natural beauties and the past, as it also imports past ideas into the present.  It inspires and it heals.  In the early days of tourism in the colony, people came to be healed in the balmy tropics The Bahamas offered.  Some in turn captured and marketed this. Others were here and transported the feeling of the space to other shores through their visual and literary experiences.  The Bahamas is known for its natural beauty: the way the sun strikes the waves and refracts into the eye of the beholder.  This natural beauty is fragile, though it seem everlasting.

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Movements and Memory: An interview with Anina Major on art practice and the hauntings of history.

By Natalie Willis. We often speak of Slavery in regards to one demographic in particular and the detrimental effects that remain today – and rightly so. It is a painful legacy, but it is also a shared one. “The Slave’s Lament,” written by Scottish poet and lyricist Robert Burns in 1792, is a song that spoke to this history in its own time. It is also the title of a work by another Scot, Graham Fagen, who used this song in his presentation at the 2015 Venice Biennale International Art Exhibition. This newer rendition, featuring Reggae artist Ghetto Priest and a string ensemble, serves as the focus and starting point for us to begin to discuss this history through a slightly different lens. The exhibition, “We Suffer To Remain,” opens in March and features Fagen’s artwork along with that of three Bahamian artists, namely: Sonia Farmer, John Beadle, and Anina Major

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