Online (German Maritime Museum Bremerhaven), Apr 8–09, 2021
Dr. Gisela Parak
Seeing the ‘Other’? Theories & Histories of (Post-)Colonial Visual Cultures
German Maritime Museum Bremerhaven
in cooperation with the Institute for Postcolonial Literary and Cultural Studies, the Institute for Anthropology and Cultural Studies and the Institute for Art History/Film Studies/Art Education at the University of Bremen
PD Dr. Gisela Parak, Prof. Dr. Kerstin Knopf, PD Dr. Cordula Weißköppel, Jun.-Prof. Dr. Elena Zanichelli
Preceding the German Maritime Museum’s exhibition, “Seeing the Other? The Colonial Gaze”, to be opened on 18. April 2021, the conference “Seeing the Other? Theories and Histories of (Post-)Colonial Visual Cultures” brings together an international network of renowned scholars in the field of postcolonial studies and visual history. The conference aims to provide an overview of the explosive issue of dealing with pictorial expressions and reflections of our colonial heritage in order to foster discussion.
Five thematic panels will discuss methods and theories dealing with colonial history and postcolonial practices and bring together perspectives of different academic disciplines such as ethnology, cultural history, history, postcolonial studies and art history. The panels will consider the geographical structures of the former German colonies of Northeast China, German New Guinea and Namibia and point out specific agendas and histories that accompanied the imperialist conquest of these territories.
No matter how “unencumbered” and “harmless” some individual travel photo-graphs involved in the colonial seizure of the world may appear, the colonialist gaze with its ideological dispositions runs through all Western image collections like a red thread. Under the cloak of photographic objectivity, imagery stored in photographic travel albums contain numerous examples of an anthropometric “measurement” of strangers and of a violent oppression of indigenous cultures. Following the discussion of “robbed shadows” and a “photography against one’s will”, some representatives of postcolonial studies today demand that the photographs taken under coercive power relations should no longer be displayed in public, because no consent of those depicted can be assumed. The unlawful act of “taking a picture” symbolically perpetuates oppression and the ideology of white supremacy. Other scholars argue against iconoclasm and eliminating the material traces of a colonial past, highlighting the dangers of social amnesia. Instead, the wounds caused by colonialism should be left open in order to continually prompt public debate.
In recent years, visual historians have diversified our understanding on the ambivalences and contradictions inherent in the colonial gaze. At the turn of the century, despite an incarnated Eurocentrism, indigenous cultures appropriated Western pictorial conventions and subverted them to their advantage.
Today, museums have started to include knowledge from people of origin in their refurbishment of pictorial collections and attempt to make this contested heritage accessible. Finally, yet importantly, postcolonial scholars have sensitized the public to ongoing acts of racism to which some parts of Western societies still fall prey. Taking up these issues, the conference will question and illuminate examples of a historic distribution of images taken during the colonial period and seeks to develop recommendations for dealing with these materials.
Program
Time zone Central European Time (CET)
Thursday, 8 April 2021
9:00 – 9:10 Welcome Address
Prof. Dr. Iris Pigeot (Deputy Chair U Bremen Research Alliance,
Scientific Director Leibniz Institute for Prevention Research and Epidemiology – BIPS)
9:10 – 9:30 Introduction
Prof. Dr. Sunhild Kleingärtner (Director, German Maritime
Museum Bremerhaven – GMM) and PD Dr. Gisela Parak (GMM)
9:45 – 12:00 Panel „Theories and Methodologies“
Chair: Jun.-Prof. Dr. Elena Zanichelli (University of Bremen)
9:45 – 10:30 Colonial Heritage in Museums. Critical Whiteness Studies in Practical Work
Prof. Dr. Anna Greve (State Museum for Art and Cultural History Bremen-Focke Museum/University of Bremen)
10:30 – 11:30 KEYNOTE: A Problem with Categories: Some Thoughts on Colonial Photographs in Museums
Prof. Dr. Elizabeth Edwards (Professor Emerita, De Montfort
University / Andrew W. Mellon Visiting Professor, V&A Research Institute, London)
11:30 – 12:30 Break
12:30 – 14:45 Panel „German-Namibian Stories”
Chair: PD Dr. Cordula Weißköppel (University of Bremen)
12:30 – 13:15 “Ovizire – Somgu” From Where do We Speak? Confront-ing a Colonial Photo Collection in the Museum am Rothenbaum
Vitjitua Ndjiharine, artist & cultural scientist (Windhoek, New York) in dialogue with Ulrike Peters, historian (University of Hamburg)
13:15 – 14:00 Visual Analysis of Material Culture Represented via Two
Stages of Governance in Namibia from Colonial to Pre-Apartheid Era
Dr. Frauke Stegmann (Visual Arts, University of Namibia)
14:00 – 14:45 Didactics of Decolonization in Higher Education: “Walk-ing Windhoek” – Insights from Interdisciplinary Collaboration During a Workshop on Visual Storytelling
Dr. Martin Gruber & PD Dr. Cordula Weißköppel (University of Bremen)
14:45 – 15:15 Break
15:15 – 17:30 Panel „China and Japan“
Chair: Dr. Helga Rathjen (University of Bremen)
15:15–16:00 Johann Lauts’ Amateur Photographs. A Merchant’s
Perspective on China
Jan Waßmann, M.A. (University of Oldenburg)
16:00–16:45 Souvenir Photography in Japan – Between Stereotype and Art
Dr. Renate Noda (Übersee-Museum Bremen)
16:45–17:30 Picturing the Boxer War: Public and Private German
Photo Albums
Prof. Dr. Thoralf Klein (Loughborough University)
Friday, 9 April 2021
8:00 – 10:15 Panel „Pacific“
Chair: Prof. Dr. Kerstin Knopf (University of Bremen)
8:00 – 8:45 Say My Name: Countering Visual Narratives of Papua Niugini Bodies
Lisa Hilli (Artist & PhD researcher, Australian National University)
8:45 – 9:30 Euer Deutscher Blauer Junge” – German Sailors & Samoans in the Early 1900’s: Snapshots from Private Albums
Tony Brunt (Independent Historian, New Zealand / Samoa)
9:30 – 10:15 Images Matter: Germans in the Pacific 1889-1914
Dr. Nicole Perry (University of Auckland)
10:15 – 10:45 Break
10:45 – 13:00 Panel „Dealing with Anthropological Photo Collections in Museums and Other Research Institutions“
Chair: Dr. Elke Bauer (Herder-Institut für historische Ostmitteleuropaforschung)
10:45 – 11:30 Re/actions. Putting Images Online
Dr. Agnes Matthias (Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden)
11:30 – 12:15 Archives of the Future: Dealing with Colonial Photo Collection Items
Carolin Bräuer / Lucia Halder (Rautenstrauch-Joest-Museum, Cologne)
12:15 – 13:00 Creating Accessability – Whom, Why, and How Digitisation Might Help
Dr. Beatrice Voirol (Museum der Kulturen Basel)
13:00 End of Conference
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Conference Language: English
The conference will take place online as a Zoom webinar.
Free admission, but registration is required.
To register, please follow
https://uni-bremen.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_YBh9xNDeTOi22grj8hsydA
Reference:
CONF: Seeing the ‘Other’? (online, 8-9 Apr 21). In: ArtHist.net, Feb 27, 2021 (accessed Mar 1, 2021), <https://arthist.net/archive/33487>.