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Black, Afro-Colombian, Raizal and Palenquero communities at the National Museum of Colombia PDF

227 Pages·2016·9.98 MB·English
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Black, Afro-Colombian, Raizal and Palenquero communities at the National Museum of Colombia: a reflexive ethnography of (in)visibility, documentation and participatory collaboration A thesis submitted to The University of Manchester for the degree of PhD in Social Anthropology with Visual Media in the Faculty of Humanities 2016 Sofía Natalia González Ayala School of Social Sciences, Department of Social Anthropology 2 Contents LIST OF IMAGES .......................................................................................................................................... 5 ABSTRACT ................................................................................................................................................. 7 DECLARATION ............................................................................................................................................ 8 COPYRIGHT STATEMENT ............................................................................................................................... 8 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ................................................................................................................................. 9 INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................................. 10 SUBJECT, HYPOTHESIS, THEMES ................................................................................................................... 10 ETHNOGRAPHER’S GAZE ............................................................................................................................. 13 VISUAL MATERIAL ..................................................................................................................................... 16 A MUSEUM ETHNOGRAPHY ......................................................................................................................... 23 Collaboration, communities and museums ..................................................................................... 24 RACE, RACISM AND RACIAL STEREOTYPES ....................................................................................................... 26 THESIS STRUCTURE .................................................................................................................................... 28 CHAPTER 1: ‘WAKES AND LIVING SAINTS: FINALLY!’ ......................................................................... 30 THREE ‘CURATORIAL SCRIPTS’ ...................................................................................................................... 33 The National Museum’s collections and the ‘invisibility of studies of the Black’ ............................. 34 The NM’s ethnographic collections and the ethnologist’s vision ..................................................... 35 ‘Invisibility’ and ‘stereotypy’ ............................................................................................................ 37 Huellas de africanía [traces of Africanness] .................................................................................... 39 Afro-genesis and the Colombian racialized geography ................................................................... 43 The 1991 Constitution and Law 70 of 1993 of ‘Black communities’ ................................................ 45 New museology and ‘contact zones’ ............................................................................................... 49 Milenios de diversidad [Millennia of Diversity] (1994) .................................................................... 51 The ‘voids’ in the Museum collections, the Strategic Plan 2001-2010 and the ‘48-91’ project ....... 52 Curating stereotypes ....................................................................................................................... 56 CONCEPTUAL THEMES ................................................................................................................................ 74 The politics of (in)visibility ............................................................................................................... 75 Ethnography, documents and the museum effect ........................................................................... 77 Exhibitions as documents ................................................................................................................ 78 Documents as ‘new’ museum objects.............................................................................................. 79 Participatory collaboration as curatorship ...................................................................................... 80 CHAPTER 2: BACKSTAGE .................................................................................................................... 83 Backstage - Frontstage .................................................................................................................... 86 MUSEUM MEETINGS AND MINUTES .............................................................................................................. 88 Taking minutes ................................................................................................................................ 89 3 Participation in meetings ................................................................................................................. 93 MEETING WITH SABEDORES AND SABEDORAS ................................................................................................. 94 Planning fieldwork: protecting, collecting and returning ................................................................ 96 Field-trips [salidas a terreno]: politics of visibility and visuality ...................................................... 98 AFRO-REPARATIONS: MEETING TO DISCUSS A HALL DEDICATED TO BLACK AND AFRO-COLOMBIAN PEOPLE ................. 99 The critical visits of ‘Afro subject researchers’ and ‘community representatives’ ......................... 100 Disagreements with the exhibition ................................................................................................ 102 Meeting at the Ministry of Culture ................................................................................................ 103 Article El Dipló ............................................................................................................................... 104 ‘WILL THE EXHIBITION BE MADE?’ .............................................................................................................. 108 CONCLUSION ......................................................................................................................................... 109 CHAPTER 3: FRONTSTAGE ............................................................................................................... 113 POLITICAL LEGIBILITY AND MUSEOGRAPHY .................................................................................................... 127 Lack of context: complex social relationships ................................................................................ 127 THE ‘SCRIPT’ OF THE EXHIBITION ................................................................................................................ 130 THE EXHIBITION: SACRED AND PROFANE ...................................................................................................... 141 Inauguration: sacralization............................................................................................................ 141 Closing ceremony ........................................................................................................................... 144 POLITICAL (IN)VISIBILITY ........................................................................................................................... 145 READING ACKNOWLEDGEMENT .................................................................................................................. 146 FRONTSTAGE CONCLUSION ....................................................................................................................... 148 CHAPTER 4: TRAVELLING WAKES AND LIVING SAINTS ..................................................................... 151 (RE)DESIGNING THE ITINERANTE ................................................................................................................ 155 The Itinerante’s physical presentation........................................................................................... 156 WORKING AS ‘COMMISSARY’..................................................................................................................... 162 Reports .......................................................................................................................................... 164 BUREAUCRACY ....................................................................................................................................... 165 Paperwork ..................................................................................................................................... 166 LOCAL VERSIONS OF THE ITINERANTE .......................................................................................................... 172 Travelling as return ........................................................................................................................ 172 The audience as curators ............................................................................................................... 177 Buenaventura, Juanchaco and Ladrilleros: the Month of Afro-Colombianness ............................ 178 Funerary rituals of the Pacific in the Religious Art Museum of Cali ............................................... 181 Audiovisual documentation and authorship.................................................................................. 182 CHAPTER 5: TOUR-GUIDING ............................................................................................................ 185 TOUR-GUIDES AND EDUCATION IN MUSEUM MEETINGS .................................................................................. 188 MONITORES DOCENTES [MONITOR-TEACHERS] AT THE NMC .......................................................................... 190 4 ‘SCHOOL OF GUIDES’ AND ‘VOLUNTARIADO’ ................................................................................................ 191 PROGRAMME FOR THE VOLUNTARIADO COURSE ............................................................................................ 193 The Voluntariado: monitor-teachers and mediators ..................................................................... 195 TOUR-GUIDING, VELORIOS AND AFRO-COLOMBIANS ..................................................................................... 197 NICHES EN ACCIÓN (NEA) AND VELORIOS Y SANTOS VIVOS ............................................................................. 202 Travelling through racism .............................................................................................................. 204 TOUR-GUIDING CONCLUSIONS ................................................................................................................... 207 CONCLUSION ................................................................................................................................... 208 SOCIAL LIFE OF DOCUMENTS, IMAGES AND TEXTS........................................................................................... 210 ‘EVERYONE FOR A NEW COUNTRY’ AND ‘MEMORY AND NATION’ ...................................................................... 215 CONTRIBUTION....................................................................................................................................... 216 BIBLIOGRAPHY ................................................................................................................................ 218 Word count: 80,827 5 List of images Exhibition Velorios’s catalogue cover (p. 17) Simulated funerary altar, made in 2007 by Augusto Sánchez (p. 18) Museum designs based on photograph of simulated altar (p. 19) Photograph of exhibition’s entrance (p. 20) Image of ‘ninth night’ banner (p. 21) Photograph of set up of the Itinerante in Villavicencio in 2010 (p. 22) Chapter 1: ‘Wakes and living saints: finally!:’ Jaime Arocha’s column in El Espectador (p. 30) Un negro es un negro (p. 58) Negra menta in Negricolas (p. 60) Negra Nieves in Negricolas (p. 61) Front cover of book Afro-reparaciones (p. 63) Negra Menta in Afro-reparaciones (p.69) Jesús Abad Colorado’s picture (p. 70) Martha Posso Rosero’s picture (p.71) Slave ships 1 (p. 72) Slave ships 2 (p. 73) Chapter 2: Backstage: Page 29 of Velorios’s exhibition catalogue (p. 83) The minutes of 5 May 2006 (p. 92) Page of minutes with Arocha's hand-drawn scheme, dated 31 January 2008 (p. 107) Chapter 3: Frontstage: Screenshot of Velorios’s ‘Profane area’ from Manglerojo’s website (p. 113) Picture of the ‘Profane’ area, from Lleras’s thesis (2011: 68) (p. 116) Sacred and profane: Velorios’s exhibition’s scale model and screenshot from Manglerojo’s website (p. 118) Screenshots of the ‘African ancestors’ corner and the ‘Agony’ stage (p. 120) Screenshots of the ‘Death’ stage and the corner for the ‘Adoration feasts to Baby Jesus (p. 122) Arocha’s hand-drawn plan for the exhibition (p. 134) Moya's plans for the exhibition (p. 137) Museography division's plans for the exhibition (p. 140) StillS from the lobby's video of the exhibition inauguration (p. 143) Screenshot of Velorios’s ‘script’ (p. 150) Chapter 4: Travelling Wakes and living saints: Screenshot of the Itinerante’s website (p. 151) 6 Banner with the titles, logos and names of the institutions that organized, supported and sponsored the exhibition (p. 159) Images of the rest of the banners, which can be expanded and downloaded freely (p. 160) Letter 1: a new presentation of the exhibition’s script (p. 167) Letter 2: a new presentation of the exhibition’s script (p. 168) González’s drawing of the plan (p. 170) View of the two rooms where the Itinerante was setup (p. 171) The set up in Guapi’s coliseum (p. 175) Before and after the Itinerante in Buenaventura’s House of Culture (p. 176) Banners in the entrance of the Itinerante in Buenaventura (p. 180) Chapter 5: Tour-guiding: Stills from tour-guides videos that travelled with the Itinerante (p. 185) Stills from the video I edited of Niches en Acción members, Marly Estrada and Jhonatan Fruto tour- guiding at the Javier Sánchez school in Barranquilla (p. 201) 7 Abstract The University of Manchester PhD Candidate: Sofía Natalia González-Ayala Thesis title: Black, Afro-Colombian, Raizal and Palenquero communities in the National Museum of Colombia: a reflexive ethnography of (in)visibility, documentation and participatory collaboration 12 April 2016 The subject of this thesis is the temporary and travelling exhibition Velorios y santos vivos: comunidades negras, afrocolombianas, raizales y palenqueras [Wakes and living saints: Black, Afro-Colombian, Raizal and Palenquero communities]. ‘Velorios,’ as many people involved in the project referred to it, portrayed Afro-Colombian funerals and devotions to Catholic saints, and was on display in the temporary exhibitions hall in the National Museum of Colombia, in Bogotá, from 21 August to 3 November 2008. Before it closed, a travelling version was designed that began to go around the country in 2009. When I wrote this thesis, ‘the Itinerante,’ as the travelling version was referred to at the Museum, was still available as one of the displays that its Travelling Exhibitions Programme (TEP) offered to the public. I use Velorios and the Itinerante as the main ‘characters’ in an ethnography of the National Museum of Colombia, where I explore the different instances in which this major exhibition produced visibilities and invisibilities regarding the place of Afro-Colombian people in the nation. As a museum, this institution is responsible for managing, researching and displaying its four collections (of art, history, ethnography and archaeology) but also, as one of the Ministry of Culture’s ‘special administrative units,’ it is in charge of designing and implementing policies that regulate all the other museums in Colombia. This is in keeping with national and international official legislation regarding cultural heritage, like the National Culture Plan and UNESCO’s resolutions, and in support of the development and strengthening of museums, museology and museum design in the whole country. Here I show what these responsibilities and duties translate into on the ground. The themes that the thesis explores are i) (in)visibility, ii) participatory collaboration and, also as the means to approach these themes, iii) documents and documentation. They are all components of the kind of curatorship that this museum exhibition conveyed. 8 Declaration No portion of the work referred to in the thesis has been submitted in support of an application for another degree or qualification of this or any other university or other institute of learning. Copyright statement i. The author of this thesis (including any appendices and/or schedules to this thesis) owns certain copyright or related rights in it (the “Copyright”) and s/he has given The University of Manchester certain rights to use such Copyright, including for administrative purposes. ii. Copies of this thesis, either in full or in extracts and whether in hard or electronic copy, may be made only in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 (as amended) and regulations issued under it or, where appropriate, in accordance with licensing agreements which the University has from time to time. This page must form part of any such copies made. iii. The ownership of certain Copyright, patents, designs, trade marks and other intellectual property (the “Intellectual Property”) and any reproductions of copyright works in the thesis, for example graphs and tables (“Reproductions”), which may be described in this thesis, may not be owned by the author and may be owned by third parties. Such Intellectual Property and Reproductions cannot and must not be made available for use without the prior written permission of the owner(s) of the relevant Intellectual Property and/or Reproductions. iv. Further information on the conditions under which disclosure, publication and commercialisation of this thesis, the Copyright and any Intellectual Property and/or Reproductions described in it may take place is available in the University IP Policy (see http://documents.manchester.ac.uk/DocuInfo.aspx?DocID=487), in any relevant Thesis restriction declarations deposited in the University Library, The University Library’s regulations (see http://www.manchester.ac.uk/library/aboutus/regulations) and in The University’s policy on Presentation of Theses. 9 Acknowledgements This thesis is dedicated to my mum, Nancy, who is my pillar and role model in life. To Pete and Rupert, my two supervisors, who committed patiently to this project, and helped me to cross boundaries in ideas, ways of writing and of doing anthropology that I was not aware of, I am deeply grateful. To Katie, Hong and Owen, my housemates and family in Manchester. To María de Lourdes and Michael Brendan, my dearest friends. Special thanks to my uncle Julio, the representative of Ayala family in the UK. I also thank my colleagues and friends at the anthropology department, most especially Sofía and Paola, and also Ines, Thodoris, Hester, Rachel and Hannah. Jaime Arocha, my teacher and mentor, and other members of the GEA – Grupo de Estudios Afrocolombianos, made this work possible institutionally and personally. Thank you too. Cristina Lleras supported me both on a personal and institutional level, and encouraged me to make the most of an anthropological environment very different from the one I was used to in Colombia. Colciencias funded my studies and expenses in the UK, making it possible for me to dedicate myself fully to many days of thinking and writing. Last but not least, during ‘fieldwork,’ which often felt like a déjà vu, Niches en Acción in Barranquilla, particularly Deibys and Marly, supported me and invited me to be part of their social project, to which I hope this thesis contributes. In Bogotá, I must give special thanks to Johanna Galindo, Loretta Meneses, Yasaira Sánchez, Bertha Aranguren, Antonio Ochoa and Adriana Parra. Introduction Subject, hypothesis, themes The subject of this thesis is the temporary and travelling exhibition Velorios y santos vivos: comunidades negras, afrocolombianas, raizales y palenqueras1 [Wakes and living saints: Black, Afro- Colombian, Raizal and Palenquero communities]. ‘Velorios,’ as many people involved in the project referred to it, portrayed Afro-Colombian funerals and devotions to Catholic saints, and was on display in the temporary exhibitions hall in the National Museum of Colombia, in Bogotá, from 21 August to 3 November 2008. Before it closed, a travelling version was designed that began to go around the country in 2009.2 When I wrote this thesis, ‘the Itinerante,’ as the travelling version was referred to at the Museum, was still available as one of the displays that its Travelling Exhibitions Programme (TEP) offered to the public.3 I use Velorios and the Itinerante as the main ‘characters’ in an ethnography of the National Museum of Colombia, where I explore the different instances in which this major exhibition produced visibilities and invisibilities regarding the place of Afro-Colombian people in the nation. As a museum, this institution is responsible for managing, researching and displaying its four collections (of art, history, ethnography and archaeology) but also, as one of the Ministry of Culture’s ‘special administrative units,’ it is in charge of designing and implementing policies that regulate all the other museums in Colombia. This is in keeping with national and international official legislation regarding cultural heritage, like the National Culture Plan and UNESCO’s resolutions, and in support of the development and strengthening of museums, museology and museum design in the whole country.4 Here I show what these responsibilities and duties translate into on the ground. The themes 1 ‘Black’ [negro] refers to a racial category inherited from the colonial period, which alludes to the local Black movement that emerged in the 1970s and also to the ‘Black communities’ [comunidades negras] that the 1991 constitution includes in Law 70. ‘Afro-Colombian’ [afrocolombiano] is a more recent name that acknowledges ancestry from African enslaved people, and alludes to the word ‘Afro-descendent.’ ‘Raizal’ is an ethnic category that refers to the native people and diaspora from San Andres, Providencia and Santa Catalina Islands in the Caribbean Sea. ‘Palenquero,’ also an ethnic category, refers to the people from San Basilio de Palenque, a maroon enclave founded by African enslaved people in the colonial period near Cartagena, Bolívar, in the Caribbean continental region, and also to their diaspora and language. For readability I will include all four categories into the label ‘Afro-Colombian.’ I discuss these categories in more detail below. 2 There was one international version of the exhibition, which took place in 2010 at the University of Barcelona, in Spain, led by a historian who had presented a paper in one of the seminars organized at the Museum in 2008. I do not have the space or enough information to discuss it here. 3 In the beginning of 2016, the Itinerante appears as one of the TEP’s ‘past’ exhibitions, possibly not available for lending anymore. According to this office’s website the exhibition travelled until 2014, and had 64,731 visitors (http://www.museonacional.gov.co/exposiciones/itinerantes/Paginas/Pasadas.aspx, 10-Feb-2016). 4 http://www.museonacional.gov.co/el- museo/objetivos%20y%20funciones/Paginas/Objetivos%20y%20funciones%20.aspx, 10-Feb-2016.

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that refers to the native people and diaspora from San Andres, Providencia and Santa Catalina Islands in the. Caribbean Sea. continental region, and also to their diaspora and language. ethnic and multicultural nation requires a Museum that has a plural script, less asymmetrical and more.
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