Whitney Biennial 2024

2024

Two men in light suits posing thoughtfully beside a bust sculpture on a pedestal.

Transcription: Isaac Julien, Once Again... (Statues Never Die), 2022 

Running Time: 00:31:33

(A soft wind blows.)

(A woman sings.)

♪Once again ♪
♪I defend ♪
♪My lonely heart ♪
♪No question ♪

(Somber piano music begins to play as a man speaks in French.)

Speaker 1 (The voice of a woman): They came that night when the tom-tom rolled from rhythm to rhythm. The frenzy of eyes, the frenzy of hands, the frenzy of statues' feet. Since how many of me, how many of me, me, me have died since they came that night when the tom-tom rolled from rhythm to rhythm. The frenzy of eyes, the frenzy of hands, the frenzy of statues' feet.

(A woman sings.)

♪Go beyond everything ♪

(A sound like prison cell doors closing and lights being turned on.)

Speaker 1: Who does not seek to be remembered? Memory is master of death. (The sound of a clock ticking repeatedly begins). The chink in his armor of conceit. But what do you wish to say to me? I need neither your pity nor the pity of the world. I need understanding. You were present at my defeat. You were part of my beginnings. You brought about the renewal of my tie to Earth. You helped in the binding of the cord.

(A woman sings.)

Speaker 2 (A man speaks while the singing continues): The significance of African art is incontestable. At this stage, it needs no apologia. Indeed, no genuine art ever does. Having passed, however, through a period of neglect and disesteem, during which it was regarded as if crude, bizarre, and primitive, African art is now in danger of another sort of misconstruction, that of being taken up as an exotic fad and a fashionable, amateurish interest.

(Multiple voices singing in harmony. The sound of a gun being slowly cocked and shot, repeatedly.)

Speaker 1: Everything that was ever torn apart has been torn apart in me. Everything that was ever mutilated has been mutilated in me. In the middle of the [inaudible] breath, the cut fruit of the moon forever on its way, toward to be invented contour of its other side. And yet, what remains with you are former ties, little more, perhaps, than a certain urge to prick up my ears, or to tremble in the [inaudible]. Contemplating them, I feel, occasionally, totally detached from my surroundings, and they become kind of mediums of introspection. Some of the deities represented, like the god Ogun, for instance, value their isolation. Ogun retreats into the hills and just steals away from humanity. And this is a trait I discovered in myself.

So, the real problem we say is [inaudible]. No. I repeat, for we are not men for whom it is a question of either/or. For us, the problem is not to make a utopian and sterile attempt to repeat the past, but to go beyond. It is not a dead society we want to revive. We leave that to those who go for exoticism. Nor is it the present colonial society we wish to prolong, the most putrid carrion that ever rotted under the sun. It is a new society that we must create, a society rich with all the productive power of modern times, warm with all the fraternity of olden days.

(Multiple voices singing in harmony.)

♪My son ♪
♪So free ♪
♪You think ♪
♪You’re free ♪
♪My son ♪
♪So free ♪
♪You think ♪
♪You’re free ♪
♪ [inaudible] ♪
♪ [inaudible] ♪

(The sound of slow footsteps echoing in a hallway.)

Speaker 3 (the voice of a man): Its chief need is to be allowed to speak for itself, to be studied and interpreted. Not to be praised and exploited. (Somber piano music plays). It is high time that it was understood, and not taken as a matter of, of oddness and curiosity, or quaint primitiveness and fantastic charm.

Speaker 4 (the voice of a man): It'll be the glory of a few men endowed with, with certain prophetic visions transcribed in history. On the beginning of the 20th century, the revelation of the primitive statues of the African black race.

Speaker 3: This so-called primitive Negro art, in the judgment of those who know it best, is really a classic expression of its kind, entitled to be considered on par with all other classic expressions of plastic art.

Speaker 4: Yeah, w- well, no psychologist would deny what we like, uh, we must share with others, uh, to obtain its, its full savor. I- its role in that manner is, is enlarged, since I do not hesitate at the outset to place African sculpture on the same plain as the incontestable masterpieces of contemporaneous art.

Speaker 3: Perhaps the most important effect of interpretations like these is to break the invidious distinction between art, with a capital A, for European forms of expression, and, uh, exotic and primitive for the art expressions of other peoples.

Speaker 4: Hmm.

(A woman singing while a piano plays, slowly.)

♪And I would ♪
♪Apologize ♪
♪Cuz I’m ♪
♪I’m makin’ a new way ♪

(The sound of soft footsteps while a piano plays.)

Speaker 5 (the voice of a man): He said, "Put no difference into your tone when you speak of his name. Wear no forced air of solemnity or sorrow. Let my name be spoken without effect, without the ghost of shadow on it."

(A saxophone plays and a man sings.)

♪Whatever happens to the dream deferred ♪
♪Whatever happened to the dream deferred ♪
♪Things haven’t changed much ♪
♪We still find power in our words ♪
♪I wonder ♪
♪As you wandered ♪
♪And I’ve seen how far you’ve come ♪
♪Though history’s ♪
♪Forgotten names♪
♪Your name will not be one ♪
♪ [inaudible] ♪
♪ [inaudible] ♪

(Slow piano music begins to play.)

Speaker 4: The work of the young painters, uh, such as, as Picasso, Modigliani, Soutine, for example, is, is, to a certain extent, the work of the African emotion in a new setting. In that same way, the sculptures of Archipenko, Lipchitz, and Epstein is impregnated with Africanism. Uh, the music of Berard, Satie, Poulenc, Auric, uh, Honegger, in short, all that which is interesting since Debussy is, is African.

Speaker 3: Thus, the African art object, a half a generation ago the most neglected of curios, has now become the cornerstone of a new and more universal aesthetic that has all but revolutionized the theory of art, and considerably modified its practice. The movement has a history, dumb, dusty trophies of imperialism, assembled from the colonially exploited corners of Africa, first as curios, and then, as it says, prizes of comparative ethnology.

(A saxophone plays.)

Speaker 6 (the voice of a man): We sneak all over town, like two thieves, whisky on our breath. No streetlights on the back roads, just the stars above us, as ordinary as they should be. We always have to work it out, walk it through, talk it over, drink and smoke our way into night.

Speaker 7 (a man speaks while slow piano music plays): And he awoke, Beauty was smiling and asleep, half his face stained flush color by the sun, the other half in shadow. His eyelashes casting cobwebby blue shadows on his cheek. His lips were so beautiful, quizzical. I would kiss your lips. He would like to kiss Beauty's lips. He flushed warm with shame. Or was it shame? His pulse was hammering from wrist to fingertip. Beauty's lips touched his, his temples throbbed. Beauty's breath came short now, softly staccato. Beauty's lips pressed cool, cool and hard. How much pressure does it take to awaken one?

(The sound of thunder and rain.)

Speaker 5: Sometimes, on the edge of sleep, these faces and others are projected against the wall of memory. And almost immediately, I am back in the gallery where I first saw these faces and heard their names. Being introduced to Alain Locke at an impromptu all boy tea party. Kissing Langston Hughes, and never forgetting it. Being photographed by Carl Van Vechten. Staging the first production of Baldwin's The Amen Corner at Harvard University. Straightening Harold Jackman's tie. Not caring much for Countee Cullen's looks. Hunting dark meat with Auden up in Harlem. Being loved.

(The sound of a typewriter clacking while a man softly mutters under his breath. Another man sings in the background.)

Speaker 3: By what evolution of art, or through what personal experience did this deep understanding of the inner springs of African character come to a European painter? Since African art has had such a vitalizing influence in modern European painting, sculpture, poetry, and music, it becomes finally and, and naturally an important question as to what artistic and cultural effect it can or will have upon the life of the American Negro? It does not necessarily follow that it should have any such effect.

Speaker 4: Negro art has a spiritual mission. It has the great honor to develop the taste, to stir the depths of the soul, to refine the spirit, to enrich the imagination of this very 20th century. Which will be ashamed, uh, perhaps, because it thought that it had nothing more to learn when so numerous were the discoveries yet to be made in the domain of beauty.

Speaker 3: Because of our Europeanized conventions, the key to the proper understanding and appreciation of it will, in all probability, come from our appreciation of its influence on contemporary French art. But we must believe that there still slumbers in the blood something which, when stirred, will move with a peculiar emotional intensity toward it.

Speaker 4: At a time when the Black race seems to give to the world only the spectacle of its own agony, and the men of that race seem doomed by the world to a contempt which nothing can appease. At the time when they seem to have renounced all hope of moral rehabilitation, and where their memory has broken so completely with the past that it seems that they would never be bold enough to pretend intellectual hereditary. At this moment, the veil is torn, the heavy veil of prejudice amassed by the centuries.

Speaker 3: By nothing more mystical than the, uh, sense of being ethnically related some of us will feel its influence, at least as keenly as those who have already made it recognized and famous. Nothing is more galvanizing than the sense of a cultural past.

(The sound of a camera shutter.)

Speaker 1: Captain George Le Clerc Egerton, chief of staff for the Benin Expedition, 1897, (the sound of a clock ticking repeatedly begins) wrote a to-do list in his diary. "Work to be done, Saturday 20th February, cots and stretchers to be prepared for sick. Juju houses to be blown up. Walls and houses to be knocked down. Queen Mother's house to be burnt." And what of the museums of which Europe is so proud? It would've been better, all things considered, if it had never been necessary to open them. Better if the Europeans had allowed the civilizations beyond the continent of Europe to live alongside them, dynamic and prosperous, whole and unmutilated. Better if they had let those civilizations develop and flourish, rather than offering up scattered limbs, these dead limbs duly labeled for us to admire. Here in the museum, the rapture of self-gratification rots our eyes. A secret contempt of others dries up our hearts. Racism, no matter if it is declared or undeclared, drains all empathy away. No, in the scales of knowledge, the mass of all the museums in the world could never outweigh a lone spark of human empathy.

(Soft piano music begins to play.)

Speaker 6: I loved my friend. He went away from me. There's nothing more to say. The poem ends soft as it began. I loved my friend.

(The soft whistle of wind. Soft piano music plays.)

Speaker 2: We cannot let the weather determine our fate. We emerge, shadowy figures, we see one another. One mystery is solved. We are the shadowy figures, looking for the door to a transgressive culture that will let us in. Growing up, dreaming of becoming an artist, I did not connect to makers of race with makers of art. In those days, I did not think about connections in culture, about racist agendas. Within the dream world of art, I am all that I want to be. It is transporting me outside time.

(Soft piano music continues.)

Through the snowy cold, everything stopped. I have left time behind, surrendered the solidness of our body to become snowflakes. Present, then dissolving. We are able to shed all the other pieces of our identities that bind and imprison us. We let go of race, class, sexuality, nationality. We let language go, we breathe. They represented the things of this world, separating and dividing, and creating unnatural barriers. We will keep the knowledge of how to use our imagination as a vehicle to let all the worldly things go. As we mature as artists, in the mythical diasporic dream space, a culture of infinite possibility is ready to receive us. This is artistic freedom as pure and unsullied as falling snow.

(The sound of slow footsteps echoing in a hallway as somber piano music plays.)

(A woman sings.)

♪Once again ♪
♪I defend ♪
♪My open heart ♪
♪No question ♪
♪And oh my old ways ♪
♪The old days ♪
♪Pass me by ♪
♪Like the weather ♪
♪I…I spend so many days ♪
♪And nights ♪
♪Trying in so many ways ♪
♪To change my situation ♪
♪Oh I…. ♪
♪Go beyond everything ♪
♪That I’ve ever seen ♪
♪Beyond everywhere ♪
♪I’ve ever been ♪
♪And I would apologize ♪
♪Cuz I’m…making a new way ♪
♪For us once again ♪


Isaac Julien, Iolaus/In the Life (Once Again. . . Statues Never Die), 2022. Inkjet print on Canson Platine Fibre Rag, 59 × 78 3/4 in. (150 × 200 cm). © Isaac Julien. Courtesy the artist and Victoria Miro, London

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