Rum Retort
Boyle, Tiffany and Palombo, Natalia (2016) Rum Retort. Tobacco Warehouse, Greenock, 15-30th October 2016 [Show/Exhibition]
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Creators/Authors: | Boyle, Tiffany and Palombo, Natalia | ||||
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Abstract: | Alberta Whittle | Annnalee Davis | Ewan Atkinson | Graham Fagen | Katherine Kennedy | Nick Whittle | Rayanne Bushell | Rodell Warner | Ronald Williams | Stacey Tyrell With Writing from Cassie Ezeji and Nick Whittle Built of red brick with contrasting yellow brick dressings in 1896, the exhibition Rum Retort has been sited in the Tobacco Warehouse, Greenock. A listed building, it bears the remains of its former uses, as a warehouse for tobacco and whisky, and as a stationing point for American soldiers during the Second World War, to name two. Looking out of the windows onto Clarence Street, the view is crowded by shipping containers at the water front terminal. At the height of the triangular trade, as many as 400 ships arrived annually into Scotland through Greenock, arriving with sugar and tobacco . Like the Tobacco Warehouse, the local visibility of the Sugar Sheds testifies to the extensive links between Scotland and the Caribbean. Abram Lyle, born in Greenock in 1820 and a former Provost of the town, founded a sugar refinery in his own name, which was later to merge with a rival company, to become Tate & Lyle. The linking of Scotland to the Caribbean and vice-versa through sugar is visualised in the rusting Scottish-produced sugar refining machinery shown in-situ in the Nevisian landscape of artist Stacey Tyrell's ancestry. Slowly rusting, the images as documentation in the Chattel series take on a new resonance within the condition of the Tobacco Warehouse building. The links to Greenock and sugar are also acknowledged in the work of Barbadian-based artist Nick Whittle, Return, Returning, Returned. The corner of each edge of the plinth upon which his newspaper boats sit are marked by a tin of Lyle & Sons Treacle, crowned by a Sansevieria Trifasciata plant. Known as the snake plant, they are often used during Caribbean funerals to mark the grave. Rayanne Bushell's sound work, How to Limbo similarly departs from funeral rites, in this work focusing on dance. Whilst we often think of the limbo as working our way down towards the ground, it is said that previously the dance worked in the opposite direction, from the ground level upwards as part of funeral processions, representing a coming-back-to-life and originating in the slave ships. Graham Fagen's print series depict the three ships, the Bell, Nancy and Roselle, on which Scotland's National Bard Robert Burns The works from Barbadian artist Annalee Davis Sweeping the Fields and Queen Anne's Lace make a similar gesture to the remembrance of colonialism, and especially that of the site of the sugarcane plantation. The action of sweeping and cleansing, documented through a suite of photographs, developed out of her walking the fields of Walkers dairy farm in Barbados, where the artist lives and works, the site of a former plantation. Alberta Whittle's video work Mammmmmyyyyywaaaata Presents Life Solutions International: Go Home/ No Home also looks to restorative post-colonial acts, focusing on the lack of reparations from the colonial administrators to the former colonies, despite the compensation made to the slaveholders as a consequence of the abolition of slavery in Great Britain . In this work Whittle takes on the role of the Mamy-Wata spiritual mermaid-like figure, the veneration of whom travelled with enslaved peoples from West Africa to the Caribbean. Likewise Barbadian artist Ronald Williams appropriates the mythology of the Greek Gods in his series Alpha, re-imagining and combining these with imagery and references from contemporary black culture through digital collage. The individual works each represent a character: the "bad" boy, the "party" animal, the trickster, etc. While Whittle paints her body electric blue to take on the role of Mamy-Wata, artist Stacey Tyrell uses make-up to assume various identifies. In the case of Mara (77 years) and lnghinn (20 years) both from the series Backra Bluid, Tyrell uses make-up and Photoshop augmentations to whiten her skin, whilst wearing costumes considered specific to Scottish and Irish traditions. In doing so, Tyrell wishes to highlight her often unacknowledged Scottish DNA as a result of the owners and employees on the Caribbean plantations. Correspondingly, Ewan Atkinson in his diptych Bubalups/Mother Sally: Private Audition uses his own body, costume, make-up and props to take on the Mother Sally character, usually performed at Crop-Over, Barbados' version of carnival. Although traditionally performed by men, the tradition has become sanitised over time and with the tourist market in mind, and is now usually performed by women. Tourism marketing from the mid-20th century, stereotypical images and issues around authenticity are all of influence and at play in Atkinson's poster series Only in Our Imagination, in which the eight works selected promote the artists' semi-fictional alias, The Neighbourhood. Rum Retort was curated by Tiffany Boyle and Natalia Palombo for Mother Tongue and brings together the work of 10 artists based in the Caribbean and Scotland. The project had its roots in a curatorial research residency undertaken by Mother Tongue with Fresh Milk Barbados in early 2015. The exhibition sought to re-trace and activate the connections between Greenock, Scotland and the Caribbean, but not to be contained solely by these. More than this, the exhibition through its process and journeys seeks to establish new artistic dialogues and future possibilities. | ||||
Official URL: | https://mothertonguecurating.com/projects#/rum-retort | ||||
Output Type: | Show/Exhibition | ||||
Uncontrolled Keywords: | Caribbean, post-colonialism, contemporary art, literature, performance, dance, rum, sugar, tobacco, curating, exhibition-making | ||||
Schools and Departments: | School of Design > Design History and Theory | ||||
Dates: |
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Funders: | Davidoff Art Initiative, British Council, MANY Studios, Inverclyde Place Partnership | ||||
Event Title: | Rum Retort | ||||
Event Location: | Tobacco Warehouse, Greenock | ||||
Event Dates: | 15-30th October 2016 | ||||
Projects: | Mother Tongue | ||||
Output ID: | 6792 | ||||
Deposited By: | Tiffany Boyle | ||||
Deposited On: | 11 Apr 2019 08:12 | ||||
Last Modified: | 11 Apr 2019 08:12 |