Whitney Biennial 2024

2024

A woman with red lipstick looks pensive, surrounded by people in a vintage setting.

Transcription: Madeleine Hunt-Ehrlich, Too Bright to See, 2023-24

Running Time: 00:27:40

(The soft sound of birds tweeting. Radio static that becomes increasingly louder.)

Speaker 1 (in French): The forest and more generally nature has been discussed in the work of Suzanne Césaire. The status of nature is ambivalent. It is dual.

It is not only positive contrary to what a superficial reading would suggest.

It is a great camouflage. Nature, for example, camouflages reality. This beautiful, lush island - well, what does it do? It camouflages the colonial reality of an economically exploited people. First of all, there is the condition of women for centuries, that is, to exist in the context of patriarchal domination. The second point is that it’s hard to be a very productive writer when you have six children. Suzanne had six children. 

Suzanne Césaire was someone who placed the work of writing very high in her regard, very high indeed, perhaps too high. The case of Suzanne Césaire. She is a great author with a work. 

(The baby coos.)

When we talked about Flaubert she used to tell me, “Yes, Flaubert was a talented freeloader”. 

(The baby cries in the background.)

It is true! Flaubert never worked in his life. Proust wrote his book in his parents’ house. But very sincerely, make Proust a farm worker from Martinique, I doubt he would have written “La Recherche Du Temps Perdu”. 

Don’t forget that she never stopped working. She taught and went to school every day, while raising her children and participating in social and political activities. I think there were some aborted works, drafts, yes, but some…she simply got rid of them in a very simple way, by putting it in the trash, by tearing it up, and putting it in the trash. My mother belonged to this family of people who were indeed not sure. 

(In English): She threw most of her writing away. So, we are making a film about an artist that didn’t want to be remembered. 

(The sound of a cigarette being lit by a lighter followed by a deep inhale and softer exhale.)

(Rapid hand drumming begins.) 

Speaker 2 (in English): For Suzanne Césaire, négritude is far more than an antidote to European exhaustion. It is hope for all humanity. Suzanne writes, "Our surrealism will enable us to finely transcend the present. Colonial idiocy will be purified in the welder's blue flame. During the war, whom do they send to the lieutenant's office to beg for paper to print on? Suzanne."

(A bell tolls in the background.)

“When the lieutenant finally figures out that they are not publishing the magazine he believed they were and accuses them of being traitors, who writes the rebuff?” If we're ingrates and traitors, then we're Zolas," writes Suzanne, "Expect from us neither plea nor vain recriminations, not even debate. We do not speak the same language."

It is in 1941 that Suzanne skips the school's morning La Marseillaise in protest of the tyranny of the Vichy state. She was repeatedly threatened with the loss of her job. Admiral Robert replaces Martinique's black mayors with white ones and uses hundreds of French soldiers to impose fascist purges, internments, and deportations to a Guyanese penal colony. 5,000 Martinican men sail to Dominica to escape. "Wherever we look, the shadow is advancing," writes Suzanne.

"Poets feel capsized in their head," Suzanne writes in 1945, the year Aimé goes into politics. He becomes deputy to the French Assembly and later leader of his own political party and then mayor of Fort-de-France, the capital of Martinique. Writes Suzanne, "Suddenly, the blues of the Haitian mountains, of the Martinican bays turn dull. Suddenly the most blazing reds go pale and the sun is no longer a crystal play of light. And if the public squares have chosen the laceworks of Jerusalem thorn as luxury fans against the fieriness of the sky, if the flowers have known how to find just the right colors to leave one dumbstruck. If the tree-like ferns have secreted golden saps for their white crooks rode up like a sex organ, if my Antilles are so beautiful, it is then because on that day, the weather is most certainly too blindingly bright and beautiful to see clearly."

(The sound of static and a gust of wind.) 

How important is it for us to understand their relationship anyway? I mean, first of all, it's impossible. The only two people who know the truth are gone. Are we just limited by the times we live in? Because they're a part of us that is somehow aware of the impact that we have on the people we are in struggle with.

I mean, here's a bigger question about struggle: does anyone get to be who they want to be completely to themselves or the people they love when they're struggling for their lives?

Speaker 1 (In English): I feel like we don't need to solve all of that.

Speaker 2: I'm just saying, is there a version of their lives where they're both remembered?

Speaker 1 (in French): Our little tropical observatories crackle with the news. The wireless telegraph services go crazy. The boats flee but to where? The sea swells, this way, that way, with an effort, a luscious leap, the sea stretches its limbs for a greater consciousness of its elemental power. 

At the center of the cyclone everything cracks, everything collapses, in the ripping sound of great manifestations. 

(The sound of radio static.)

Then the radios go silent. 

The great line of palm trees of cool wind unfurled somewhere in the stratosphere. 

There, where no one will go to follow, indescribable iridescences and waves of violet light. 

After the rain, the sun. 

Speaker 2 (in English): "There is no flour. Let them eat breadfruit," says the Vichy admiral. The war ends. Across the sea they say, "Well, let them eat sweet potato." We have not forgotten. We remember how they turned the soil into the land of one single crop. At night, the people are singing in the streets. We have no food, but we have no fear. The time has come for us to demand what's ours.

Speaker 1 (in English): “There is no flour. Let them eat breadfruit," said the Vichy admiral. The war ends. Across the sea they say, "Well, let them eat sweet potatoes." We have not forgotten. We remember how they turned the soil into the land of one single crop. At night, people are singing in the streets. We have no food, but we have no fear.

(In French) Dear Yassou, I no longer have this feeling of intimacy with external objects which used to be so familiar to me. That I would call sentiment du toc.

Sometimes the landscape slips away and lays aside.

The trees usually need help during a day of distress like today but instead they now appear to be sly and fake. 

And of course I feel stupid in front of these unstable disjointed objects. 

I have never experienced any bombing myself but I’m obsessed with images of war and at times the world really seems topsy turvy to me.

(Upbeat piano music begins to play.)

Don’t think I’m subjected to a melancholy. I’m not dreaming of a new myth, I want it to come and I’m looking for it. I am one of those who carry within themselves the idea of its necessary birth. 

Hello to the discoverers for whom this finding will replenish objects and beings with authenticity. 

I think that once you take the first step that being the desire for destroying the skin surface between you and the objects then you will also be able to take the next one putting yourself at the center of the poem.

One day when the pink marble clock will look especially unbearable to you.

But I realize that I’m the one who might be becoming unbearable. I’m thinking of your playful eyes sparkling behind your glasses.

Suzy. 

(The sound of a film roll reeling turns into upbeat music. Rapid hand drumming begins.)

Speaker 2 (in English): I think I’ve figured it out. 

Speaker 1 (in English): It's not just that we have played these roles or that love is so imperfect. It's that death is certain, but not final.

Speaker 2: What? 

Speaker 1: What? 

(Upbeat music with synths begins to play.) 


Madeleine Hunt-Ehrlich: Too Bright to See (Part I), Pérez Art Museum

0:00

0:00


On the Hour

A 30-second online art project:
Frank WANG Yefeng, The Levitating Perils #2

Learn more about this project

Learn more at whitney.org/artport

On the Hour projects can contain motion and sound. To respect your accessibility settings autoplay is disabled.