Whitney Biennial 2024

2024

Silhouette of a person with an afro dancing next to a wig on a stand, all cast in a warm, orange hue.

Transcription: Ligia Lewis, A Plot A Scandal, 2023

Running Time: 00:19:58 

(A bell tolls.) 

Speaker 1: (A woman’s voice, in a whisper) Revenge. 

Revenge. What does it taste like? What does it smell like? What does it look like? 

(Soft muttering and laughing.) 

What does it sound like? This is a story about particulars. This is a story about you and me. This is a story, morning glory. This is a story, you’ll see. You’ll see.

(The loud chatter of people can be heard in the background while the two figures rapidly move around the stage, making guttural noises and grunts.) 

Speaker 2: (A deep baritone voice) Now you must be wondering how all these seemingly disparate parts fit together.

Well… they do and they don’t. 

(The woman in the purple silk robe yelps with excitement as she’s chased around the tree.)

Seventeenth century Britain, a master plot, the dream of natural rights, life, liberty, and property. Seventeenth Century France and its colonies: Code Noir, a master plot, words inscribed to become law. For example: Article XII (12). Children born from marriages between slaves shall be slaves. 

(Excited yelps continue. A sound of wind muffles the camera’s microphone.)

Article XIII (13): If the father is free and the mother a slave, the children shall also be slaves....Article XLIV (44). We declare slaves to be charges, and as such enter into community property. Property that can be whipped, but not quite tortured.  Article LIX (59). We grant to freed slaves the same rights, privileges and immunities that are enjoyed by freeborn persons. We desire that they are deserving of this acquired freedom, and that this freedom gives them, as much for their person as for their property, the same happiness that natural liberty has on our other subjects.

(A slow synth plays in the background.)

In Britain the plotting of natural rights goes hand in hand with the love of property.

Now with property, the proper comes into sharp focus.

(A bell tolls.)

Corey enters. Nineteenth century Cuba: Jose Antonio Aponte a carpenter, an artist, a historian, a free man of color dreams up a plot. This plot is depicted in Aponte’s Libro de Pinturas, his book of drawings that imagines a black future outside of the master's plot.

The end of Eighteenth Century the age of Revolution...1795 perhaps the most revolutionary year in Caribbean history, with rebellions in Grenada, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent, Curaçao, Dominica, Guyana, Trinidad, Jamaica...and the unfolding Haitian Revolution!

(A bell tolls.)

1521. 1570. 1729. 1730. 1731. 1732. 1752. 1754. 1774. 1793. 1803. 1737. 1570. 1825. 1835. 1844. 1796. 1803. 1799. 1789. 1773. 1766. 1755. 

(Slow synth plays in the background.)

Speaker 1: Could it be that my proclivity for trouble, for scandal, for deviance, and the like

have everything and nothing to do with where this plot begins. It’s 1898 and this DIOS DIRA, a small village 198 Kilometers east of the Haitian Border, the Black border, where stories like this unfold. 

Rosa Zapata a.k.a Lolón Zapata a.k.a Lolón (in a sing-song voice) Lolón. Lolón. Lolón.

mis bisabuela, my great grandmother, was born here, and she was born here by way of...

By way of…well some stories are hard to tell, particularly those of this region, you see Lolón Zapata was a deviant, committing herself to scandal, potentially unknowingly. You see she works the land that becomes hers and on that land, yes, on that land, 

Not yet property

Lolón hosts an ecstatic dance of the flesh, a dance otherwise known as Dominican voodoo,

a.k.a Palo.

Now when this dance was performed, it was not only scandalous to the government put in place

by the United States and other global anti-black forces of the time. It was made completely and utterly scandalous by the entire Judeo Christian tradition.

(In a whisper) tradition, tradition, tradition, yes.

Could it be that when this dance was performed, Lolón was inviting us into another form of life.

As I said, some stories are hard to tell. Lucky for us, ghosts don’t die so easily.


Ligia Lewis, still from A Plot A Scandal, 2023. HD video, color, sound; 20 min. © Ligia Lewis

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