kodwo-eshun-the-ghosts-of-songs-the-film-art-of-the-black-audio-film-collective
Kodwo Eshun/Texts/Books/Editor/kodwo-eshun-the-ghosts-of-songs-the-film-art-of-the-black-audio-film-collective.pdf
FOREWORD
5. Images of Naiiona¡it/,\9'e2-84
6, Photographic-Test, Expeditíons,l982-8^
1. Tmhght CUji, 1989
commissions and retrospectives;
I can think of recent exhibitions
lïy film makers as diverse as Chris
Marker, Chantai Akerman, Atom
Egoyan and Horace Ove. While never
denying or excluding the possibilities
of cinema exhibition, this relocation
opens up new territory and unlocks
contemporary reading.s.
debate around one of the most thoughtprovoking and creative collectives
oí talent in British film art. Painstakingly
documented and curated by Kodwo
Eshun and Anjalika Sagar ofThe Otolith
Group, The Ghosts of Songs foregrounds
BAFC's innovative practice, and the
exhibition and publication affirm FACT's
mission to present work by artists that
challenges perceived and prevailing
The Ghosts of Songs, this new publication views of media forms.
and exhibition, focuses upon BAFC's
formal vision and poetry as well as
the social and political questioning,
and celebrates the transcendence of the
films. To re-encounter the work once
again in this new context is exhilarating
and I hope will re-awaken interest and
^^^r
u
PREFACE
KODWO ESHUN
& ANJALIKA SAGAR
Years ago I was in London, looking for
tbe Black Audio Film Collective to whom
I intended to give back tbe two VHS cassettes
they bad lent me, and I could never find the
place, probahlf tbe address bad changed.
Tbe tapes are still somewbere in my mess,
as a remorse, but also tbe memory of a great
work accomplisbed, to tvbom I'd love to render
an botnage if...
(back to start)
Chris Marker, 2006'
13
8. Caroline Lee Johnson a.s Naomi
Who Needs A Heart. 1991
9, Haniliwonh Sonfp, 1986
IÜ. Edward George as The Data Thief,
77JÍ Last An0cl ofHinory. 199S
questions to image and sound by way
international context, a generation had
Watching audiences watching Black
of image and sound; questions that
emerged with no real sense ofthe group's
Audio Film Collective's 1986 essay-film
invited us to reconfigure the orthogonal
Handsworth Songs during the first afternoon achievements in tape-slide, film, video,
orthodoxies ofthe black box. In this light,
installation, no sense of their importance
of Documenta ! Í, replaying the attention
the risk entailed by our initial curatorial
people bestowed upon it later that evening, as inaugurators ofa cineculturai practice.
In the wake of Documenta 11, that amnesia proposition seemed one that was
a curatorial proposition slowly began
entirely worth taking.
began to change, rapidly; we witnessed
to emerge: could one invite audiences
into spatial scenarios that allowed for
distinctive kinds of encounter with
the entirety of the Black Audio I-ilm
Collective's oeuvre?That initial tentative
proposition was underwritten by the
realisation that the critical attention
bestowed upon Hand$worlh Songs had,
inadvertently, overshadowed the Collective's
body of work from 1983 to 1998.
Within a British, let alone an
the documentary turn spreading throughout
contemporary art practice; soon after, the
archival turn, announced by Hal Foster,
could be discerned in many of the most
intriguing works in today's artworld.
The work of BAFC seemed to us not
only to complement but to complicate
these notions of document, testimony,
witness and archive; indeed, in its richness
and its gravitas, their art posed fundamental
We spoke of our hypothesis w ith
architect David Adjaye; not only had
he always been intrigued by the work of
BAFC but the invitation to displace and
elude some of the norms of moving image
practice proved too challenging to resist.
The opportunity to collaborate with
David has proved every bit as important
as we hoped. His considerable experience
has enriched the spatial vocabulary
employed throughout The Ghosts of Songs;
his design allows all kinds of audiences
the possibility of encountering complex
works through a series of implied narratives.
Gill Henderson, Ceri Hand and the
staff and exhibition team at FACT have
been central to the success of this project.
Ceri has steered this project through its
multiple incarnations with enthusiasm,
tenacity and focus. Tom Trevor and Martin
Clark at Arnolfini, Iwona Blaswick
and Anthony Spira at the Whitechapel
and Gus Casely Hayford, Cary Sawhney
and Cylena Simonds at inlVA have been
immensely helpful throughout this project;
as partner institutions in this retrospective
exhibition their role has been invaluable.
14
Rashid Ali and Yohannes Bereket at Adjaye
Associates shepherded the design though
its inauguration with skill and care.
Andrew Kirk and Simon Bell
at Liverpool University Press have
been expert editors and stout partners.
We would like to take this opportunity
to thank Avni Patel for her thoughtful,
attentive design and her professionahsm
throughout a protracted production
process. This project would not have
been possible without the expertise
ofour exhibition organiser Kim Dhillon.
We wish to extend our heartfelt thanks
to Kim Evans, Sarah Wason, Juhe Lomax
and the staffat Visual Arts Office, ACE
PREFACE
for supporting this retrospective. Joan
Leese and Eleanor Stanway at VET have
provided invaluable expertise and we
would hke to extend our gratitude to
them. Gary Stewart and Mannick Govinda
have been staunch alhes from the outset.
Lyndsey Housden and Gabrielle Decamous
provided administrative support when it
was much needed. Tom Cabot provided
valuable service.
Chris Marker, Adrian Rifkin, Anne
Torregiani, Rose Eenton, Gillian Dickie,
Walid Raad, Esi E.shun, Anand Patwardhan,
John Seth, Coco Fusco, Greg Täte, Karen
Alexander, George Shire and Isaac Julien
offered advice and support. Rob la Frenáis,
Saer M. Ba, Keith Piper and Sheila J. Petty
Above all, we wish to extend our
provided precious archival materials at
deepest gratitude to all of the founding
short notice. Jennifer Higgie, Sukhdev
artists of BAFC, for their art which has
Sandhu, Rone Shavers, Niru Ratnam,
provoked and challenged us and for their
Jorella Andrews and Irit Rogofí
commitment to the future implied by
commissioned early versions of material
an exhibition such as this. Both of us
that features in this monograph. Arthur
have known the artists since the 1990s.
Jafa's 1992 writing on cinema inspired
John Akomfrah, gracious and formidably
much of the thinking here while Rich Biint
learned. Lina Gopaul, the principled
generously provided the Henry James
militant of the Collective. Reece Auguiste,
quotation. ChristineTomeh invited us to
the poet of the group. Avril Johnson,
programme a mini-retrospective of BAFC
always attuned to the ambiguities
at Cinema Empire Sofil, Beirut, in March
of collective practice. Trevor Mathison,
2006; Carole Squires invited us to screen
equally adept at drawing, photography,
Who Needs A Heart at the international Film animation, video and sculpture as
Centre, New York in August 2006.
composition and sound design.
1 1. Cassie Mcfarlane w Millie,
WboNeeJjÄ Heart, 1991
12. BUck Panthers, Gangsta Gangsia:
The Tragedy of Tupac Shakur, 1998
Kodwo Eshun & Anjalika Sagar
Edward George, the brilliant writer,
at home in fiction, criticism, statement
and intervention. David Lawson
whose marketing acumen and skill in
communication and distribution ensured
that the work of BAFC reached the
festivals, art centres, kunsthalles, galleries,
universities, newspapers and magazines
across the world.
To visit the Collective at their offices
in Ridley Road in Hackney throughout
the mid-1980s and early ! 990s, then at
Greenland Street in Camden in the mid1990s, was to be struck by the sense that
the group functioned as a hub, positioned
at the intersection of multiple avant-gardes
13, Donald Rodney, Diane Symons, Rothko Room,
Tare Britain, Three Songs on Pain. Light anJTime,
199S
t4. Edward George as The Dream Raider, Rotherhithe,
.Wfmon'Riwm-í5í, 1997
from India to Canada, USA to the
Caribbean, Ghana to Germany, located
at the heart of debates, arguments,
positions and perspectives. BAFC were
so bold; they were aesthetically fearless
and personally gracious, intellectually
formidable and singularly stylish. They
dared, always, to be complex, and for
this they were praised, rightly, and
criticised, inevitably.
To maintain a collective practice for
sixteen years is no easy task; behind the
continuous production ol films, videos,
slide-tapes, photography, scripts, posters,
flyers, courses, presentations, appearances,
talks, essays, statements, film programmes.
screenings and seminars lies a seriousness
of vision allied to an almost inconceivable
efïort. A vivid, vaulting ambition such
as theirs undoubtedly took its toll; since
the group dissolved in 1998, the seven
founding artists have gone on to work
separately, individually and in small unit.s.
The heroic days of collective practice
have passed, as they must.
It is the kinds of questions the work
made and continues to make possible
that compels us to turn towards their art.
To experience their work is to encounter
a project in which life, art, poetics and
politics were reformulated, moment
by moment, so as to allow paradox.
ambiguity, complexity and intimacy
their time and their place. It is this will
to experiment that has had, and continues
to have, a major impact, in numerous
ways, on the practice ofThe Otolith
Group. Think of The Ghosts oj Songs
as an initial inventory of the work
of the Collective, a first registration
of its effects; an opening encounter with
the seven affects, intensities, passions,
commitments, risks, gambles and demands
of the Black Audio Film Collective.
1. Chris Marker, fax communication to the editors,
27th July 2006.
16
IN LIVING MEMORY...
ARCHIVE AND TESTIMONY
IN THE FILMS OF THE BLACK
AUDIO FILM COLLECTIVE
JEAN FISHER
The tradition of tbe oppressed teaches us tbat
tbe 'state of emergency in which we live is not
tbe exception but the rule.
Walter Benjamin'
17
THERE
1 5. PhotographicTrst, Expeditions, I9S2
Kilburn Cemetery, London
16. Images ofNationoliiY, 1982 84
In his 'Theses on the Philosophy of
History', Walter Benjamin questioned
the ethic of history as a too! appropriated
hy powerful ideological torces and driven
by the concept of'progress'. However,
a more productive basis for thinking
history was not as linear progres.sion but
as intersecting constellations of the past
and the 'now'- the present as the chiasmus
of past and future. To borrow a Bergsonian
formula, the present is pure becoming;
it is not, but it dels. The past, on the other
hand, no longer acts but it has not ceased
to he.' Among the casualties of mediated
technology, as Benjamin related in an
earlier essay, is transmissible experience,
figured in the reciprocity of" storyteller
and listener. ' The violence of History
lies in its disavowal of this tradition, the
testimony of those subordinated peoples
without representation or political agency
whom Deleuze describes as 'missing'- no
longer existing, or not yet.*Testimonial
memory is the ghost that haunts the
interstices of historical discourse. The aim
of this essay is to explore how, through
a radical re-articulation of the historical
archive with testimonial memory, the
films of the Black Audio Film Collective
(BAFC) disclose the intersecting
constellations of the past and present,
where memory is to be understood not
as a dead past waiting to be excavated but
as a product of the present.^ What emerges
is the possibility of rethinking black
subjectivities through the reinvention
of storytelling whose passing Benjamin
had so lamented.
Giorgio Agamben's gloss on Benjamin's
essay specifies'state of emergency'
(or'exception') as the suspension of the
law." in the 'tradition of tlie oppressed',
dispossessed of belonging to place,
language, culture, the law is always
in suspension. Deprived of any ground
from which to speak and narrate itself
in the world, the dispossessed self, haunted
by the trauma of loss, is reduced to the
biological state of the 'inhuman', bereft
of the past and the will to imagine new
possibilities of the future. To reclaim will
and agency means negotiating a passage
out of the impasse of the traumatic effects
of separation and loss, between the
compulsion to remember and the need
to forget. It concerns re-founding a place
of dwelling and links tbe body intimately
to language: to be 'at home' is first to be
at home in a language capable of forging
a meaningful existence.
That the post-war British African and
Asian diasporas lived under an alienating
'state of emergency' is one of the primary
disclosures of BAFC's early films. A new
language was required, one capable of
imaginatively redrawing the discursive
contours of a society as yet un-reconciied
to the changes in its internal dynamics
produced by its diasporic communities.
This language was to come from the
18
young African, African Caribbean and
Asian artists emerging into the turmoil
of race politics in the early 1980s,
among them the founders of BAFC,
John Akomfrah, Lina Gopaul, Reece
Auguiste, Avril Johnson, Edward George
and Trevor Mathison, soon to be joined
by David Lawson. As BAFC's films
demonstrate, language had to divest
itself of the old rhetoric of lament and
recrimination, too easily pacified by a few
concessions, and invent a poetics of affect,
beyond the scope of documentary media,
that could penetrate beneath surface
symptoms to the deeply buried psychic
economy of race and belonging.
The challenge and the exhilaration
was to negotiate a new language from
— to borrow a phrase from Deleuze
— the impossibility of speaking, the
impossibility of not speaking, the
impossibility of speaking in the language
of dominance. BAFC understood that
what was required was a transformation
of traumatic memory, to listen to
its melancholic soundings and translate
them into a form of critical reflection
that could start the work of cultural
mourninp. More than most, the work
of BAFC demonstrates the insight,
acutely felt in trauma, that the present
'is not, but it acts', while the 'past
never ceases to be'.
IN LIVING MEMORY
BAFC emerged with Signs of Empire
(1983), an innovative slide-tape,
textual and sonic work whose elegant
typographical image overlays announced
the discursive space that their films were
to open up: 'In the beginning - the
archive — imperialism - the hinterlands
of narrative - the impossible fiction
of tradition - the treatise — in national
identity — the decentred autobiography
of Empire — the rhetoric of race... '
A slow dissolve of archival photographs
of colonisers and 'natives', many of them
more typical of intimate family albums
than offidal historical records, are sparingly
interrupted by short film clips — Asian tea
pickers, black industrial workers, the fires
of urban riots. Series of images cut to
o
details of public monuments in angled
shots that undermine the stability and
permanence that such sculptures are
intended to invoke.Throughout, repeated
extracts from two political speeches
expose the distance between myth and
reality: one eulogising the multiracial
unity ofthe British Commonwealth,
the other expressing anxiety at the
alienation of diasporic youth. In this way
Signs of Empire presents an extraordinary,
condensed soliloquy on a mythic British
national identity that, constructed
in the confidence of Empire, was now
fragmenting under the uncertainties
posed by the presence of diasporas
Jean Fisher
searching for their own sense of identity
tbe radical anti-narrative narrative
and belonging. The audio-track spatially
that was to characterise all BAEC's
extends this sombre trajectory, moving
films. By sampling the colonial archive,
between an intimacy and distance resonant the historical discourse derived from it is
with the emotional ambivalences between
dis-assembled, realigning the dismembered
whites and their black neighbours:
body of the past with the constellation
beginning with an electronic basso-profundo of the present to 'décentre the
that one might imaginatively locate
autobiography of Empire'. The work closes
in the bowels of a ship at sea, it segues
with a black field bracketed by bands
to the fragmentary refrains of a classical
of blue then red, which, we subsequently
orchestral piece and a melancholy chorale.
learn in Testament (1988), are the Gbanaian
colours of mourning, as if to announce
The work opens up a dialogical
a sbift away from the disabling melancholy
space of pure images and sounds through
of separation and loss.
a constant framing and de framing,
a structuring to which slide dissolve
The question posed by Signs of Empire.,
particularly lends itself. Slide projection,
and which emerges as a preoccupation
of BAEC's subsequent films, is: How
an artistic and pedagogical medium,
can the past and the present be made
rests ambiguously between an animated
to communicate with each otber?
still photograph and a decelerated film
BAEC's radical solution, exemplified
sequence, and relates to the more
by their acclaimed film Handswonb Songs
theatrically derived tableau vivant, which
(1986), was to put into play several
also privileges the image. In conventional
film it is precisely the image we 'lose sight incommensurate but complementary
discursive registers to produce an
of as it becomes sacrificed to a diegetic
innovative 'film essay' style that was
flow in which each successive shot cedes
both
poetic and political without being
to the logic oí' its predecessor and to the
didactic; a montage of imagery drawn
overall logic of dialogue or commentary.
By contrast, in Signs ojEmpire momentary from the still photograph, the staged
tableau vivant or dramatisation, filmed
arrest and periodic repetition pose the
and archival footage; a polyvocality
image as both a seduction and an opacity,
of recorded testimonies and intercessional
disclosing the impenetrability of both the
poetic voice-overs that, contrary to the
photographic referent and the historical
'explanatory' panoptical impulse of the
context from which it derives; while
documentary narrator, build an oblique
each image, autonomous from the next,
relation to the audiovisual track; and an
undermines spatial continuity to produce
19
1982-84
SYMBOLIC
IN LIVING MEMORY
20
20
immersive sonic space of sampled
music and original electronic or digital
composition, autonomous from the
image, but animating it with an extended
conceptual resonance. The result is a
narrative that is not 'given' through any
totalising or transcendental perspective,
but emerges as a virtuality in the interstices
between its different registers and in
engagement with the imagination of
the spectator. It Is what Deleuze calls
'fabulation' - creative storytelling, and
fulfils Fanon's ambition of an innovative
politicised art in which the storyteller
imaginatively transforms a people's
stories of the past through the realities
of the present.'
Handsnortb Songs circulates around
the 'race riots', which exposed to a
complacent and uncomprehending society
the traumatiscd 'state of emergency' in
which the diasporic communities existed.
The film begins with a black janitor in a
museum of machinery from the industrial
revolution, whose comphcity with slavery
is an undertone throughout the film,
relayed through the soundtrack's machinic
reverbs in concert with the refrains of
British national songs. Archival footage
of the disembarkation of fashionahly
dressed young black men and women
from the Empire Windrush, alongside the
film's repeated cuts to the innocent faces
of young black schoolchildren and to
cheerful dancehall scenes, testify to this
1 9 - 2 1 . tmages of Nauonahiy, 1982 - 84
I
22
generation's hopes of establishing a new
belonging. The poignancy of tbis bright
optimism emerges gradually as the
film simultaneously unfolds footage
of depressed neighbourhoods, populist
nationalist rhetoric, the riots and their
aftermath, to reveal aspiration crippled
by racism. Much of this emotional affect
is quietly transmitted through a spare
voice-over that poetically links past with
present: 'For those who have known the
cruelties of becoming... let them bear
witness to the process by which the
living transform tbe dead into partners
in struggle.'
The film opens up a landscape of
frustration, betrayal, disillusionment and
IN LIVING MEMORY
insecurity of a people in deadlock with
an indifferent dominant society, against
which violence becomes the only possible
act of enunciation. It is, alongside the
outpouring of speaking that accompanies
it, what Michel de Certeau calls a 'capture
of speech': an act of saying that is a 'freeing
of imprisoned speech', and which takes
the form of a refusal precisely because
its testimony finds no ground in any prior
discursive formation except as 'negation'.'
If tbe protests in the socio political sphere
circulate around the right to belong as
fully constituted citizens, its corollary
in the cultural field was the right not
to belong: to refuse the prescriptive
identities and conditions of belonging
imposed by a prejudicial society.
Handswortb Songs astutely understands vulnerability. Political pundits and
the significance of this 'capture of speech'
neighbourhood leaders assemble
through attentiveness to the sounds and
to 'explain' the causes of discontent
silences of language itself. From behind
- depressed housing, unemployment,
the police barricades, the camera observes
poor educational opportunities, lack
the press, gathering only for sensational
of political agency. But as the film makes
images and headlines, contrasting them
very clear this existing language of class
with eyewitness accounts that testify
struggle was inadequate to address a
to a systemic failure in the authorities'
much deeper malaise at the heart of
attitudes to immigrant neighbourhoods.
British society, one that was rooted in
Criminalisation of black youth and
the inner contradictions of its imperial
draconian policing strategies of
past. As one of the film's most quoted
containment and discrimination had
lines goes, 'there are no stories in the
culminated in the death of grandmother
riots, only the ghosts of other stories...'
o
Mrs Cynthia Jarrett in her home,
a violation of the boundaries between
public and private space through which
the black population realised their
If Handswortb Songs was an exploration
of the historical roots of a troubled British
Jean Fisher
post-imperial national identity as
it condensed around its diasporic
communities, other films addressed the
spatial complexities of cultural routes
through the geographies of the Black
Atlantic. In these films, BAFC increasingly
comes to combine archival material with
testimonial memory, problematising the
claims to 'truth' of the different registers
of documentary and fiction.
22. Handsworth Songs, 1986
23. British i»)ns tableau,
Hanàswotlh Songs, 1986
24. TwihgbtCiiy, 1989
25. Location photograph, Mohanda.-* CJandhi statue,
TavisiiK-k Square. London, Twilight Ctty, 1989
Twilight City (1989) presents an
imaginary epistolary narration of a young
woman's thoughts as she writes to her
o
mother in Dominica about the changing
face of London, then in the throes of the
new Docklands development. She fears
it is a dty that her mother would not now
recognise should she return. The film
cuts between this narrative voice and
interviewees bearing witness to their
youthful experience of the city as a
territory mapped by racial, cultural,
sexual, gender and class boundaries,
a place 'of people existing in close
proximity yet living in different worlds'
(Paul Gilroy).This polyvocal narrative
moves restlessly back and forth between
past and present, reflecting on the loss
oí roots and erasure of history caused
by the demolition of old established
neighbourhoods. The further displacement
of already marginalised communities falls
under the shadow ofthe film's recurrent
motif of the public monument to a heroic
British imperial history notable for its
effacement of its diasporic descendants.'
The camera scans the financial city's
façades by day and cruises its neon-lit
streets by night, returning repeatedly to
the image of water, registering changing
mood and time through shifting colours.
This is linked to archival footage of the
old Pool of London, where ships once
unloaded their carpo from the colonies
and where the lives of Africans and East
Indies merchant seamen were 'beached'
bv an indifferent society.'" In revisiting
these traces ofthe past, Twilight City
discloses the disavowed longevity of the
black British presence, 'deeply entangled
in the history ofthe dty' and with 'their
own investment in a city of their own
history and memories'. Long before
the dty became a subject of aesthetic
reflection. Twilight City explores the
metropolis as not only the focal point
of the circulation of production and
consumption but also of the hopes
and disappointments of people."
Water, a recurrent motif in BAFC's
films, links Twilight City to Testament, an
elegiac dramatisation of the painful return
ofa successful diasporic subject (a TV
presenter) to a Ghana she left following
the fall of Nkrumah's government.
The film is bracketed by two key scenes:
at the outset we see a man deliberately
drowning in a river; at the end we see the
protagonist standing over an open earthen
grave. There is a world of difference
24
IN LIVING MEMORY
between these two references to death:
in the former the water suggests the
DO
fluidity of continuity (and the film tells
us that in Ghana, rivers are the deities
of memory); in the latter there is a dry
finality to death, an irrevocable burial
ot the traces of the past. River or ocean,
both imaginatively evoke a space of
impenetrable depth like history itself,
of ebbs and flows that figure both the
separation and unity of space and time
in a recurrence that, like the writing
of the letter in Twilight City, attempts
to grasp a lleeting memory as it 'flashes
up in a moment of danger'.
On a formal level, the shots of water
signal a 'cut' or interval that separates
series of images and renders them what
Deieuze calls time- or 'memory-images'
that work inside the film against narrative
continuity and outside as métonymie sign
of the continuities and discontinuities
of dicLsporic experience. The 'cut' as a
rhythmic interval has been proposed as
the primary structural element of a black
aesthetic rooted in the drum. However,
what receives less attention is the nonEuropean, complex 'vertical' chord
structure and progression of jazz
composition that may find an equivalent
in the equally complex serialisation and
recombinant image-sonic structure of
BAFC's films.''Time bere is not spadalised
into a conventional narrative logic; instead,
it is dislocated and temporalised as a folding
and refolding of disparate times, locations
and points of view. As a consequence,
the affect of the films functions obliquely,
at the periphery of vision audition, in the
interstices of ¡mage and image, image
and sound, to problemaüse and décentre
the gaze, such that meaning shimmers
elusively between the knowable and the
ungraspable, the legible and the illegible,
like a dreamscape.
In the dreamscape, there is no direct
equivalence between its manifest and
latent contents, between its representations
and those unconscious workings of desire
o
tbat produce them. To disclose the
repressed meaning buried in memory's
'forgotten' archive of traumatic events
as it returns in the obscurity of lapsus
or dream demands, according to Freud's
psychoanalytic schema, the work of
analysis-translation - or'archaeology'.'*
If the psychoanal)tic scenario was to enable
the self-alienated individual to understand
himself as the mutual inscription of present
and past through his own testimony,
analogously BAFC films work within the
aporias between the historical archive
and testimonial memory as a path to
reconfiguring disaporic subjectivities,
producing a powerfully poetic and
political enunciative voice, remarkable
in that a cohesive aesthetic is developed
collectively rather than individually.
Deieuze calls tbis procedure 'putting
everything into a trance', meaning
25
Jean Fisher
36 - 28. Tañía Ropera as Abena.
Testament, 1988
29.ATot,chofihtTarbruíh, 1991
30 - Î 1 , Edward George AS The Data Thief,
The Usf .inget of History, 1995
a kind of agitation - a transition
or becoming in which the sf>eech-act is
made possihle through the 'ideology of the
coloniser, the myths of the coioni.sed, and
the discourse of the intellectual... in such
a way that story-telling is itself memory,
and memory is the invention of a people...
not the myth of a past people, but the
story-telling of a people to come.''*
Tbe concept of archive shelters the memory
ofarkhe — but also forgets it,
Jacques Derrida'^
BAFC's creative storytelling makes it clear
which obliterates transmissible experience.
that there can be no simple excavation
For the diasporic artist to disarticulate
of the historical archive that would reveal
this archive is, then, a subversive act
some indelible truth. Dcrrida traces the
insofar as it usurps the power of authority
word archive to the ancient Greek arkbe,
to control meaning.
meaning 'at the origin ' ; but also to arcbaeion
Interpretation and translation are
- meaning the house of the magistrate
central to the archive since it is not some
who makes the law, holds the official
ready-to-hand body of knowledge but
documents, and who thus holds the
a labyrinth of fragments from the past,
power ot interpretation. In our time,
made up of gaps and inconsistencies as
it is hegemonic culture — government
well as thematic coincidences: according
and media that assembles the historical
to Agamben, it is the 'system of relations
archive, withholds or releases its contents
between
the said and the unsaid'."'
and authorises its interpretative discourses.
As such the archive is always in process,
These are all too subject to ideological
manipulation: as BAFC suggest in Mysteries subject to additions, subtractions and
reconfigurations, which arc interventions
ofjuly (1991), people's lives are subject
of the present, conditioned by new
to an 'ongoing political reconstruction',
experiences and perspectives: the mute
voices of the dead speak only through
the desires of the present. Thus, as Derrida
says, 'the question ot the archive is not I... |
the question of a concept dealing with the
past that might already be at our disposal
or not [...], it is a question ol the
future itself, the question of a response,
of a promise and of a responsihility
for tomorrow.''^
It is this promise and responsibility
— both to those dispossessed ghosts of the
past and to the generations yet to come
— that renders BAFC's use of the archive
an act of witnessing and of remembering
and by extension an ethical challenge
to dominant society. It is never simply
-à».
27
lean Fisher
,4
U.rUtDreamRúAcr,
Memory Room 4SI, 1997
33. Delà Williams as Man in River, Testament, 1988
34. Mo Sesay as Clifford, Laura Samprctlo,
Daniela Wol as Dream Raiders, Memory Hootn 4ÍI. 1997
35. Octavia Bullir, The ¡.M Ángel of History, 1995
a question of constructing a counternarrative to the dominant one, which
is still to acknowledge its prior authority,
but of undermining its very structure
ihrough exposing its aporias and
contradictions; by, as Kobena Mercer
points out in reference to Handswortb
Songs, disarticulating and rearticulating its
language to create a polyphonic resonance
'in which the possibility of social change
is prefigured in collective consciousness
by the multiplication of cTitical dialogues'."
The radical nature of BAFC's films lies
in their attentiveness not only to what
is said in the archive but also to what
is unsaid - to the imprint or trace
of memory in witness testimony that
the official account seeks to obliterate.
Testimonial memory disturbs the
official narratives of the archive because,
like poetics, it is a form of enunciation
not yet positioned in and by discourse.
And yet, as Stuart Hall says, it tells a story
that inevitably speaks from a 'position',
an experience inscribed politically
and geographically." Witness testimony,
beyond scientific authentication,
nevertheless puts under erasure the
'truth' of historical narrative and its
system of judgement since, as Agamben
states, the aporia figured by it is tbe very
apoda of historical knowledge: 'a noncoincidence between facts and truth,
verification and comprehension'.^"
Agamben's analysis is drawn from the
accounts of Auschwitz, where, he points
out, the actual object of the witness
testimony is not the gas chambers,
but those traumatised prisoners known
as 'walking corpses', who represented
a 'limit situation' in which the human
crossed a tbreshold into the inhuman,
no longer capable of witne.ssing anything,
even tbeir own death. The survivor,
by definition outside the experience,
much like our relation to the past,
could only witness the absence of witness.
But for Agamben this signalled an insoluble
bond between the human and the inhuman
- speaking and its lack are predicated
upon each another. Testimony is the
'svstem of relations between the sayable
and unsayable, the possibility and
impossibility of speech', by which
the subject itself is constituted."
Perhaps here we can begin to see
the .significance of BAFC's attentiveness
to the sounds and silences of language,
and how the development of a new
aesthetic language from the mute voices
of the past was central to the renewal
of black subjectivities. Agamben's 'limit
situation' might equally describe the
dehumanising of the black self to an
(expendable) body of labour under
slavery that the British post-war use of an
immigrant workforce did little to dispel,
if for the postmodern West the crisis of
History is that time could no longer be
measured against the escbatological
destiny of the Apocalypse, for Africa and
its diaspora the Apocalypse had already
28
IN LIVING MEMORY
happened, the future was already the past.
In two late films. The Last Angel
no connectedness, to home, elsewhere
dreams for 'TV 3000' by reading their
human interactions that give meaning
or here'."The mutant i.s traced to the
hair: 'dead material from the graveyard
to people's lives. Throughout modernity,
'limit situation' of slavery's Afi-ican body
of time'. The ghosts are staged
fashion has been one of the primary
(1997), BAFC plays elllptically across this
as labour/machine, re-figured as popular
dramatisations - in screen duration
signiiiers ofthe search for identity
apocalyptic, transgressive (as opposed
culture's anxious image ofthe alien, robot
but referring to other temporalities
articulated through masquerade and
to progressive) temporality. The Last Angel
or cyborg. Blacks, as Eshun points out,
— of first-person reminiscences of
identification, and the aesthetic realm
of History is an essay 'about' the relation
'lived the estrangement that sci-fi writers
everyday conversations that circulate
of freedom in the becoming subject
between the African diaspora and sdence
talk about': alien abduction, spaceships,
around changing fashions and ambivalent
of diasporic biack selfhood. Towards
fiction genres, focusing initially on
genetic transformation. For Eshun,
attitudes to black hairstyles: a man speaks
the end ofthe film, however, the Narrator
the music of George Clinton's funk
black subjects enacted the man—machine
of relocating from Alabama to New York
describes how an apocalyptic event in the
'Mothership Connection', Sun Ra's
interface in order 'to explore the mutations
where he can more safely express his
dream raiders' future has severed them
Afrofuturist jazz. Lee Perrv's reggae
that have already happened to them'.
dandyism; a wom;in speaks ofthe erotic
from the ghosts ofthe past; now bereft
and Derrick May's Detroit techno, and
As the film repeatedly states: 'The line
charge of the Afro wig. The anecdotes
of listeners, tbe ghosts can only tell
constructed in part through interviews
between social reality and science fiction
recur episodically, multiplying the temporal
their stories to one another. 'Every image
with black musicians and novelists. The
is an optical illusion'." We could not have
and spatial strata ofa black socio political
of the past that is not recognized by the
radicality of Afrofuturist music, as Kodwo
a dearer demonstration of the philosophical
history of desire and aspiration drawn
present as one of its own concerns,'
Eshun says in the film, lies in the fact that
conundrum of the human as historical
through the sensuality of touch, body
as Benjamin comments, 'threatens
it had nothing in common with black
beinp
o -r that the past is not something
o
that has happened to us, but is what
and gesture — those everyday social
to disappear irretrievably.''*
of History (1995) and Memory Room 4SI
music of tbe street or stage; created
electronically or digitally in the studio,
afflicts us as a haunting from the future.
this was 'impossible, imaginary music'
o
ail the more powerful because it 'didn't
The Last Angel of History is narrated
reflect the past but imagined a future'.
from the point of view ofa Data Thief
The instrument of liberation was the
from the future looking for 'technofossils'
electronic synthesizer which, with the
that would provide the key to his future,
advent of digitalisation, opened up the
a critical meditation perhaps on BAFC's
possibility of'digitalised race memory...
own role as pirates of the obscure seas
black music condensed on a chip'
of the past. The Afrofuturist theme
(GregTate) - a sonic archive that
continues in Memory Roam 431, in which
'made chronological time irrelevant'.
the film plays on the paradox of
reminiscence, between the necessity
Afrofuturism has nonetheless a deeper
to remember and to forget, between
resonance. The film elaborates on a
nostalgia and renewal. The intercessor
comment made earlier by Akomfrah that
or Narrator tells of alien 'dream raiders'
Britain 'feared it had produced a surplus
returning from the future to abduct
mutant population that had no roots.
twentieth-century ghosts to record their
36. Edward George and Lina Gopaul,
Handiiworth, Birmingham, 1985
Î7, Avril Johnson. Lina Copaul
Ridley Road, London 198S
If
IN LIVING MEMORY
Benjamin could not have predicted
that the very technology that had dismissed
the storyteller and listener was, in the
hands of BAFC, to become the instrument
of their return, and in epic scale but
lyric form. In an intense conversation
between sound and imagescape, narrative
is reclaimed to the realm of experience,
transmitted to the films' audience through
o
recorded living speech and imaginative
invocations of the archive. True to the
function of the storyteller as the bearer
of collective enunciations, BAFC
circumvents the single authorial voice
of conventional documentary, opening
a performative and hermeneutic space
for the listener. Hence, against the
totalising space of information, we are
given an aesthetic space of reflection on
a 'state of emergency' that is now visihly
our world historical situation. As such,
this is a poetics that eloquently bears
witness to the fragile interval between
speaking and not being able to speak,
an act of testifying that, as Agamben insists,
is itself the visible trace that unites the
inhuman and the human, the past to the
future. Moreover, language is both
a speaking and a listening: the witness
needs a listener to bear witness to, so that
stories can be retold, and the archive
be available to the transformative needs
of the future. This is the ethical demand
BAFC's films place on us: that we
be attentive to a languape
that speaks
DO
r
not only to the traumatic trajectory
of diasporic history but also to the aporia
that is the essence of a shared human
origin and destiny. As such, while
responding to a particular historical
moment, BAFC's films are timeless.
Notes
1. Walter Benjamin, 'Theses <in the Philosophy
of History', in ttlummatiotv, trans. Harry Zohn,
NewYorit: Schocken Books, 1968, p. 357.
2. Gillci l)p!i'U7e, Bcrgsonistn, trans. Hugh Tom I in son and
Barbara Habberjam, New York: Zone Books, 1988, p. 55.
Î, Walter Benjamin, 'Tlie Storvteller', in tllutnmaiions,
p-89,
4. (îillcs Deleuze, Cinema 2:TheTime-lmage, trans. Hugh
Tomiinson and Robert Galeta, Limdon;The Athlone
Press. 1989, p. 316.
5. See Stuart Hall, 'Constitutine an Archive', ThirJTexl,
S4, Spring 2001, pp. 89-100.
6. Giorgio Agamben, Stale of Exception, Irans. Kevin Attell,
Chicago and London: University of Chicapo Press, 2005
pp. 1-10.
7. Frantz Fanon, The Wretched oftht Earth (1961), trans.
Constance Farringdim, H arm ond s worth: Penguin, 1985,
p. 193,
8. Michel de Certeau, The Capture of Speech and (hher
Political Wrniiifjs, trans. Tom Conley, Minneapolis and
London: Minnesota university Press, 1997, pp. 11-12.
9. See also Kodwo Eshun, 'Twilight City: Outline for an
Archaeop.flychic Get^raphy of New London', Hiisa/îri,
2004. pp. 7-13.
structure, another analogy with music presents itself,
namely the complex chord structure and progression
of jazz.
1 i. Sigmund Vreud.'Delu.'iion.'i and Dreams in Jeasen's
Gradiva' [1906], in iirt anJ ¿Jííraiure, trans James Strachey,
Harmond.sworth: Penguin Books, 1990, pp. 27-118.
Freud persistently drew an analogy between archaeology
and the psychoanalytic process of recollection: 'Burial
by repression, excavation by analysis'.
14. Deleuze, Cinema 2:T}KTime-¡niúge,p. 233.
! 5. Jacques Derrida, Archive FeverA Freudian impression,
trans. Eric Prenowitz, Chicago and London: University
of Chicago Press, 1996, p, 3.
16. Giorgio Agamben, Remnants ofAuschmtz: The Witness
and the Archive, trans. Daniel Heller-Roazen, New York:
Zone Books, 3003, p. 145.
17. Derrida, ^fc/iire ftrer. p. 36.
18. Kobena Mercer, 'Diaspora Culture and the Dialogic
Imagination: Tlie Aesthetics of Black Independent Film
in Britain', in Welcome lo the jangle. New York and London:
Routleitge, 1994, pp. 53-66.
19. Stuart Hall, 'Old and New Identities, Old and New
Ethnicities', in Culture, Giobaluation and the World-Syitem,
ed. Anthony D. King, Minneapolis: University
of Minnesota Press, 1997, p. 58.
30. Agamben, Rimnonli ofAuschmtz, p. 13.
10. A Touch oJtheTar Brush (1991) picks Up thb history
of abandonment and relocate.'! it in present-day Liverpool,
another colonial slave port that has been home to
a 'forgotten' cc)nimunity of'mixed race' families
for more than 200 vears.
21. ll>id,p. !4S.
23. Quoted in Banning, 'f-eedinp oH the Dead', p, Î6.
33. A sentence borrowed from Donna Harawav, Simians,
Cyborgs and WomcniTbe tUinirnrion qf Nature, NewYork:
11 .TTie city in the age of post industrial globalisation
was a thematic focus i>{ Documenta 11, Kassel. 2003,
and Handiworth S.ongs was lnt:luded in Ooíumcnraí í_
Platformfi: Exhibition. See the notes on the film by Mark
Nash in the exhibition s Short Guide, Ostfildern-Ruit:
Hatje Cantz, 3002, pp. Ï 6 - Î 7 ,
12. In discus.sing what might constitute an 'es.Sfntial black
cinema', John .^komlVali states that, rather than it residing
in rhythm or the cut as su^estcd by the dnematographer
Arthur Jafi'a, it may be in the frame. See Kass Banning,
'Feeding off the Dead: Ne(Tophilia and die Black Imaginary:
An Interview with John Akomfrah', Border/t.ines, 39''ÎO,
1993, pp. 28-38.Given the Lomplexil) of BAFC's image
Routledgp, 1991.
24. Benjamin, Theses on the Philosophy of History',
p. 3SS.
38.Sebastian Shah, Director of Photography
Handsworlh Songs. I98S
Î9. John Akomfrah, Handsworth, 1985
I
I
I
»I
•
/
K?5
f l '-AU- ,
11 IrV.
9A
HP5
S.«*FÉ1 Y
10A
40. Lina Gopaul, David Lawson, Handsworth, 1985
41. Edward George, Trevor Mathison,
Handsworth. 1985
4 2 - 4 4 . ContoCt sheet, Testament, 1988
HP5
SMFÊI Y
14A
HP5
15A
SAFETY
KILM
10A
I
1
21A
ILFO.
11A
-!2A
13A
I
f
17A
HP5
23A
19A
24A
25A
45. Avril Johnson, Reece Auguiste,7ivííyftt City, 1989
46. Jonathan Coliinson, director of photography,
Edward George, Avril Johnson, Twilight City, 1989
47. Reece AuguLste, Mysteries of July, 1991
48. Seamus McGarvey, camera assistant, Reece Auguiste,
Christopher Hughes, lighting cameraman, Bethnal Green
Hospital, London, Mysteries ofJuly, 1991
43
POST-COLONIAL TRAUERSPIEL
KOBENA MERCER
49. Arthur Jafa, director of photography, Senn Songa
fir Malcolm X, 199Ï
50. Hans Holhein, The Amhossatiurs, 15ÎÎ
51. Cemetery of Abena's parents, Taumeni, 1988
The very last scene in Testament ( 1988)
consists ofa shot/reverse-shot
sequence in which Abena, the story's
protagonist, is stopped in her tracks
by the sight of an opened grave. The
skull she sees within the broken crypt
appears to look back at her and we
hear her catch her breath as the film
fades to black. The encounter elicits
an uncanny moment of delayed
recognition, for Abena has been
wandering the landscape throughout
the eighty-minute length ofthe film
as if she were a ghost herself: she has
been gripped and possessed by the
force of enigmatic pressures that
resist her conscious remembrance.
By virtue of its temporal placement
at the film's ending, the uncamiy effect
of delayed recognition is not unlike the
perceptual disturbance exerted by Hans
Holbein's The Ambassadors (1533). It is
only when leaving the geometral position
ofthe painting's monocular viewing plane
that the spectator can begin to 'see' the
peculiar squiggle of shapes and lines
in the foreground as a readable mark
of signification. 'What is this strange,
suspended, oblique object in the
foreground in the front of these two
figures?' asked Lacan. 'Begin by walking
out oí the room in which no doubt it has
long held your attention. It is then that,
turning round as you leave - as the author
of the Anamorphoses describes it — you
apprehend in this form ...What?A skull.''
John Akomfrah's mode of film direction
brings the contemporary viewer into an
encounter with something in the dnemadc
image that is equally inexplicable, for the
final shot in 7¿ii£imení has a matter-of-fact
quality that belies its narratological
significance as the concluding moment
that confers retroactive cohesion upon
the storytelling process ofthe film.
Abena is a television reporter who
has returned to Ghana after years of exile
in Britain following the 1966 military
coup that overthrew the country's first
independent government led by Kwame
Nkrumah. Ostensibly, she has travelled
to Ghana to report a story about Werner
Herzog, who is filming Cobra Verde
(1989) on location. Attempts to obtain
an interview break down and in any case
this plotline is something ofa 'McGuffin'
- a red herring of meta cinematic
referencing that nonetheless drives
Abena's story forward. As she journeys
through the country, she visits friends
who were also fellow activists in the
Convention Peoples Party that rose to
power when Ghana became independent
in 1957. However, no one wants to
know: Danso refuses to speak to her
and Mr Parkes talks in the esoteric idiom
of lotto numbers. Rashid, who has also
converted to Islam, is the one former
friend most sympathetic to Abena's
musings as she is driven forward
POST-COLONIAL TRAUERSPIEL
44
beyond this wall of silence by a quest
for something she cannot quite name.
Cross-cutting alternations between
archival and diegetic segments deliver
Abena into a 'war zone of memories'
(the film's subtitle): flash backs reveal that
she was forced to betray her friends when
the Nkrumah Ideological Institute was
shut down by the coup, while archive
newsreels document the tumultuous rise
and fall of Pan-African socialism. Torn
apart at the crux of public history and
private memory, the character of Abena
inhabits the terrain of the 'unknowable'
that each of BAFC's films address as a
body of work that patiently explores the
slow time it takes to come to terms with
post colonial trauma. Handswortb Songs
(1986) paid witness to the conflicted
relationship between past and present
in post war Britain by revealing an epic
disphasure between the private memories
of black life contained In family
photographs, as documents that testify
to diaspora experiences of immigration,
and the official public records of the
archive, as an institution of social memory
to be found in yesterday's monumental
statues and today's television reportage.
'Somethinp has gone terribly wrong,'
cried a voice on the soundtrack: rather
than resolve the crisis of knowledge by
appealing to a consensus among different
points of view, BAFC's mode of enquiry
opens a space of poetic reflection in which
the limitations of all of cinema's available
representational systems are put into
question. In.stead of a s\Tithesis of memory
and history, their films underscore an
irreconcilable agonism, for gaps, absences,
distortions, fabrications and contradictions
arise on all sides: the forces of erasure,
forgetting and denial are as active in
shaping family mythologies contained
in snapshots and home movies as they
are in shaping national mythologies that
are based on the selective filtering
of the collective past.
'We went to Ghana to try to make
a film about Kwame Nkrumah, but also
about a movement and a body of ideas
that simply don't exist any more,' explains
Kobena Mercer
of positivist knowledge in situations where
the colonial archive is structured by gaps,
compactions and distortion.s that
are ordinarily covered over by myth
and ideologv, one might say that the
'subjectivity' of formerly colonial peoples
cannot be recovered or represented
as a lost plenitude of former wholeness,
for knowledge uf the past is made equally
unavailahle to memory when events have
Where historical events are 'huried'
been 'buried' in tbe unconscious on account
in the gaps andfissuresof the state archive
of their overwhclmintr pain. As 'a film
as a result of political repression, Testament about the search for the emotional core
reveáis that individual memories are also
that binds a person to place', Testament
irretrievable when normative patterns of
is about Abena's radical un-binding, for
o'
psychical repression are reconfigured by
the emotional ties that suture psyche
colonial trauma.To the extent that 'history'
and history are unravelled by wbat is
cannot be reconstructed as an object
repressed and unsaid in the colonial
Akomfrah. 'They'd heen swept away not
just by the force of historical events hut
also hv attempts on the part of successive
governments after Nkrumah's to basically
hury the man and all that he stood for.
There is something metaphorically
significant in that act because so much
of diasporic history rests precisely in
that gap between history and myth.''
4S
scene. As an exile who returns home
only to be thrown into a condition of
transcendental homelessness, .she discovers
'the effect of the lack of an archive
on the diaspora persona'.' Abena's tale
is not actually a 'testament' at all, for what
the film portrays is the impossibility
of producing testimony in the historical
context of the post-colonial realities
that have traumatised her inner world.
Like each of BAFC'sfilms,Testament
¡Jenerates narrative out of a structural
'combinatory' of five basic elements:
original pro-filmic material, archive
footage, synch-sound, voice-over narration
and ambient sound design. To grasp the
affective agency that the archival element
52, Open grave of Abena's father, Testament, 1988
51. Tania Rogers as Abena. BBC Iie|Kirter,
Testament, 1988
54.Taiiia Rogers as Abena, l-vans l-rancis js Rjiihid
Testament, 1988
55. Mr. Parkes waits for .Abena, Testament, 1988
46
exerts as the jewel in the crown of the
Black Audio combinatory close attention
must be given to its role in the
structuration of the montage. Far from
playing an anchoring or fixative role,
as it does in documentary realism,
BAFC's aestheticised handling of the
archive imparts a dynamic and liberating
energj' to these 'unknowable' fragments.
The multiple voice-over does not caption
the image into denotative closure hut
teases out the connotative potential
of anonymous visual data to maximise
its polysémie qualities. Faced with
unclas.sified scraps from public and
private sources (accessed through the
extensive research process that initiates
each film), scriptwriter Edward George
POST-COLONIAL TRAUERSPIEL
has crafted a lyric form of métonymie
proliferation in which a surplus of
aphorisms and little stories are coaxed
out of the multi-accentual properties
of the 'found image'. Above all, sound
designer and composer Trevor Mathison
has engineered an ambient realm in which
loops, drones, sirens and sustained tonal
notes encourage the viewer's attention
to wander into a state of drift. Mathison's
compositions play an important 'binding'
role in melding the disparate visual
materials, and in this sense his sound
design acts as an acoustic mirror or semiotic
chora that provides what Winnicott calls
a 'holding environment'.'' Black Audio
arrangements induce a becalmed space
of critical reverie that allows the viewer
to be touched by the strange emotions
evoked by the archival material without
being overwhelmed by their 'unknowahle'
quality as orphaned images.
Black Audio were the first group
of British film artists to address the
uncertainties of the colonial archive as
starting point for a critical cinema of
cross-cultural dialogue. African American
documentarist Loui.s Massiah succinctly
distilled the singularity oftheir
achievement when he observed that:
It makes sense that there is a fetishised
use of archival material in a growing
number of historical documentaries
- celluloid or magnetic tape holds
images of light reflected off the faces
of our cultural, political and hlood
ancestors. One of the great gifts of the
films made by Sankofa, Ceddo and
Black Audio is to free such documents
from the realm of mere images that
support a narrative and to use them
as ohjects with the potency of fetish:
lovingly, respectfully, and, at times,
fearfully, displayed.^
Film scholar Laura Marks concurs vdth
this counter-definition of fetishism for
she places BAFC at the leading edge of
a global trend that created the new genre
of'inter-cultural cinema'. Where 'intercultural cinema is not sanguine about
finding the truth of a historical event
so much as making history reveal what
u 11.1 Mercer
47
56. Emma Francis Wilson as Dan.u>,T*nia Rogers
Ai Ahcna,, Testament, 1988
57. Kwame Nkrumah. 1960, Testament, 1988
58. The Autobiography of Kwame Nkrumah. 1959
59. Tbe Harlem Book ojihe Dead, 1978
it has not been able to say',* BAFC's
poetic handling of the archival element
performs a radical transvaluation of
the ontology of tbe image. A diaspora's
ancestors are always 'unknown, for
diasporas are inaugurated by the primal
catastrophe of involuntary separation and
an abiding attachment to the enigma of
'origins' becomes a constitutive feature
of their cultural formation. Ordinarily a
fetish is a substitute for something tbat is
not actually there — a lack. By bringing
a range of formalist procedures (such
as colour tinting, differential film speeds
and reprinting) to the tender handling
of orphaned 'unknowns' from the archive,
BAFC's bricola^e-epistemology works
through the chains of substitutions.
condensations and displacements that
encircle the void of such a 'lack' as the
objet-petit of the post-colonial subject's
desire-to-know.
Observing the iconography of the
corpse as 'a contemporary corollary
to the bones of the ancestors', the critic
Kass Banning identified a key marker
of post-colonial consciousness, for the
corpses found in tableaux moments
in Seven Songs for Malcolm X (1993)
also appear in the Sankofa productions.
Dreaming Rivers {\9SS) by Martina Attilie
and Isaac Julien's Looking for Langston
(1989).'AU of these films are imbued
with a mournful structure of feeling,
but the inexplicable trope of the
'missing corpse' is an important marker
of a struggle over the representation,
retrieval and preservation of collective
memories; it implies both a responsibility
towards the past and a promise made
towards the future.
necrophilia not in a literal sense, but in
a post-modern sense in which people are
invoking figures, there is an act of feeding
off tbe dead', Akomfrah's reference
to Tbe Harlem Book oj tbe Dead — an album
of mortuary portraits by tbe studio
photographer James VanDerZee (which
was an iconographie source for both
When Akomfrah says, 'I think
necrophilia is at the heart of black filmSeven Songs and for Looking for Langston)
making', his phrase immediately arrests
— touches on tbe protective aspects
our attention: 'it has to do with getting
of fetishism in diaspora culture's abiding
to the heart of something that is intangible,
attachment to the enigma of unknown
a memory of ourselves'."* Considering
ancestors. 'When you seize hold of these
that Testament originated with 'the question figures,' he says, 'they literally turn
of whether you could make films about
to masks and statues in your hand,
intangible things',' how might the idea of
but when you get over it ... when you're
'black necrophilia' illuminate the formal
comfortable with that mask, then
structure of the film? Adding that 'I mean
the desire shifts from melancholia
Kobena Mercer
60. Marxist Leninist pamphlets, Jcstameni. 1988
61. Abena betrays her comrades to the Sergeant,
Errol Shaker, Jenamem. 1988
to necrophilia almost. You almost begin
to desire these figures precisely because
they are irretrievable, impossible
to capture, therefore dead.'"*
Read in light of Freud's 1917
distinction, the phenomenon of'black
necrophilia' corrupts the clarity of the
categories of mourning and melancholia.
Both are responses to loss, but where
'mourning is regularly the reaction
to the loss of a loved person, or to the
loss of some abstraction which has taken
the place of one, such as one's country,
liberty, an ideal and so on'," melancholia,
in contrast, defines an internal obstacle to
the initiation of grief. Whereas mourning
begins when the ego accepts its absolute
separation from the lost loved one as a
result of death, melanchoUa involves the
ego's refusal to accept the reality of loss,
such that the subject remains inwardly
attached to the lost loved object and the
initiation of grief-work is delayed. Grieving
is painful because cherished memories
are called up into consciousness and
hypercathected by the desire to hold on
to what one has lost, while at the same
time memories are decathected in light
of the demands of reality-testing, which
counsels the necessity of letting go.
To understand Abena's journey
is to accompany her through the eddies
and rapids of this abyssal contraflow.
Close attention to three factors — acting,
intertextuality and authorial voice
beginning o(Testament, a wish- shows how the montage structure
fulfillment of death, a drowning-wisb
of Testament discloses a 'diagnostic
going on there. There is a level of
understanding' of the strange phenomenon
morbidity which I think people have
Freud named as nacbtraglicbkeit, or 'deferred
to realise in the quest for identity.
action', which lies at the heart of trauma.
It is a morbid business."
Akomfrah's thoughts on the fetish-like
Obeying the laws of narratology — that
qualities of the masks and statues that
the ending should always reply to the
feed off the dead revealingly prompted
beginning - Testament also disobeys by
him to say:
starting off with a pre-diegetic'legend'.
Indicating that Nkrumah's C.P.P led
The most powerful moments actually
in Testament, for me, are the very end the world's first experiment in African
socialism, that red, black and blue are
and the very bepinninp, both imaees
J a b '
o
colours of mourning, and that rivers
really of death, a kind of stultification,
are Ga gods of memory, a section of
atrophy, when she goes to the graveyard
Zbigniew Herbert's poem Report from
at the end and buries her father,
the Besieged City — 'if we lose the ruins.
or when the man walks in the very
Kobena Mercer
nothing will be left' — establishes an
elcgaic tone. An echoing pulse heightens
the first pro filmic image: a fully clothed
man, with pipe and straw hat, wades into
theVolta River; he suhmerges, surfaces
for air, his hat floats off, he sinks again.
In all its sublime surrealitv, it works
emblematically as an image that announces
what the next eighty minutes are going
to do - the film will plunge viewers
and characters alike into the turbulent
rivers of memory, an unmasterable realm
that offers the promise of renewal as well
as the danger of drowning.
Testamerit's opening sections clearly
signal a departure from the conventions
of the classical realist text and the principled
refusal of'psychological depth' is directly
related to the theme of memory as trauma,
which has the potential to flood the
narrative with excessive emotionality
when encoded in realist or naturalist
modes. To understand the formal
structuration of the montage, two key
factors must be taken into account.
The first concerns official archives in
a state of ruin and the 'wall of silence'
Akomfrah met in the pre-production
process. He recalls: 'when I realised
that we couldn't do a straightforward
historical account of what happened
because of the lack of testimonies,
or archives, it became clear to me
that we needed a guide'. Describing
the improvised genesis of the script.
51
and the construction of Abena's character
as 'a bystander, someone on the sidelines
who got swept up by the force of history',
he points out that 'the bulk of support for
the IC.P.R] party were women'. 'Another
reason I chose a woman character,' he adds,
is because it fits my sense of connection
with the country. There is a kind
of over-identification with feminine
figures in the ideas I come up with.
If you ask me whether there's a degree
of transference onto a feminine figure
of what are basically the concerns of
a black male film-maker - yes, that's
clearly going on."
While an autobiographical voice neither
explains the ultimate meaning of the text
nor guarantees a psychoanalytic reading,
the following words illuminate a strategy
of authorship that is all too keenly aware
of the potentially 'uncontainahle' force of
the psychical flows of transference and
identification that circulate in the wake
of traumatic remembrance:
The film was very much improvised.
I'd written out a sketchy scenario:
Abena would arrive and try to get in
touch with people, but people would
not want to know her. She'd he
confused, and as a consequence, people
watcbing tbeßltn would be confused.
As the film went on, it would become
clear that she had left ... because she
had betrayed a numher of friends.
She was a squealer. And as a
62. A bonfire of Marxist Leninist literature
Testament. 1988
6i. Nkrumah sUtue topplMl, Testament. 1988
POST-COLONIAL TRAUERSPIEL
53
consequence of this ber parents died.
So Abena had to come back not just
to do a report for television, but to
see where her parents were buried.
That crude schema more or less fit
a number of dilemmas I wanted
to deal with."
In reaching the cause of Abena's
guilt - the betrayal of her comrades the diegetic schema redoubles it, for the
consequences of her actions have caused
her own bereavement. TTie sub-diegetic
flash back sequence revealing her
humiliation at the hands of the sergeant
who forced her to 'squeal' functions
as a screen-memory, for 'behind' that
trauma lies the even greater trauma of
the death of her parents, which makes
Abena not only an exile but an orphan.
When we factor in the sell analytical
(rather than autobiographical) impetus
that Akomfrah reveals in the following
passage, we begin to imderstand how
Black Audio Film Collective have
responded artistically to the crisis of
'unknowing' that results when mourning
cannot be initiated as a consequence
of post-colonial trauma:
A lot of what the film addresses is
based on my family's history ... Both
my parents were involved in politics at
the time. They had both been studying
in Britain and went back because
of the independence movement.
In a sense, it became their lives.
When the coup happened in 1966 —
my father had died the year before —
we basically had nothing. My mother
had nothing. Politics was her life and
so she decided that the best thing to
do was to leave with her four sons.
She knew that what usually follows
these coups is a period of acrimony
and revenge, in which people who
were members of the outgoing
government are made to pay for their
involvement. She suspected that that
would happen to her.'*
Trauma is not a memory but an
overwhelming event that was never
'experienced' during its occurrence
because the force of the 'shock'
incapacitated ego-consciousness. As Cathy
Caruth suggests, the survivor's memory
is compromised by the deferred action that
carries the psyche beyond the violence
of the traumatic event. The survivor
of a car-crash cannot recall what actually
happened because during the crash
psychical mechanisms of withdrawal,
numbing or hypnotic immersion were
mobihsed to carry the subject through
the force of the event as an epo-sbattering
o
'wound'. In turn, because the event has
not been 'recorded' in memory's storage
system, it roams the unconscioiK with
no fixed abode — trauma literally takes
possession of the psyche 'against the
will of the one it inhabits'.'*
c
Kobena Mercer
53
64. Scene of Eden No. 3, Danny Carter a.i
Elijah Miihammud. Darrick Harris a.s Malcolm X.
TTieodorf L, Cash a.s Makoim X's father,
Tricia Rose as Maii-olm X's mutiler, Seren Sunm
ßr Malcolm X, 1993
Awarefi-omthe outset that Aristotelian
rules of tragedy, mimesis and catharsis
were ill-equipped to deal with the
twentieth century's traumatic modernities,
BAFC examined tbe 'crisis of unknowing'
in Mysteries of July (1991), which
investigated deaths in police custody
to reveal the agony of blocked mourning
among bereaved survivors when the factual
cause of death is 'buried' and repressed
as a state secret. Testament, on the other
hand, explores the psychic terrain of
Abena's repressed grief by way of a 'blank'
acting style that provides a necessary
alternative to realism by thwarting
the possibility ofthe viewer's overidentification with its protagonist.
With her .spaccd-out demeanour
and slouchy body language. Abena is not
a very endearing character: in point of fact,
she is not actually a 'character' at all,
for the affective disposition thatTania
Rodgers communicates through her
superb performance - head sinking while
she speaks, arms folded on hips, hands
clenched as she walks towards camera —
subtly redistributes the potential overflow
of emotion.s unleashed by the 'river of
memory'. In channelling the viewer's
thoughts and feelings away from the
narcissistic stasis of over-identification,
it gradually becomes clear that the acting
is merely one more formal element
in the overall montage-combinatory.
The depopulated landscape acquires
an increasingly dominant role in the film
Kobena Mercer
in proportion to the expressive 'depletion'
of Abena's character: rather than reflect
or absorb her emotions, the landscape
becomes just as much a 'character' as she
is. A cut-away sequence showing a man
canoeinp on the Volta River, as he recites
a Ga parable, implies that 'the river
of memory' is an agent of narrative
flow in its own right.
a dead ringer for Durer's MelencoHa
(1514). It is in the Elmina sequence,
however, where we see Akomfrah directing
o
Abena's television crew — in a Godardian
moment of self-reflexivity that calls
to mind the coastal setting of Le Mépris
(1965) - that Testament discloses its
architecture of intertextual quotation as
an alternative to realism that also employs
allegory as an alternative to symbolism.
Discussing his chosen authorial
When the camera soars and glides above
iniluences - Ritwik Ghatak, Robert
the spaces of the castle's fifteenth-century
Bresson, AndreiTarkovsky and 'English
architecture, its apparent weightlessness
Brcchtian cinema of the 70s' -Akomfrab
inscribes a contrapuntal difference from
has said, 'it was very much a conception
the sheer gravitas of this 'historical'
of cinema as a machinery of movement
site, which was built in the era of the
through which you could explore questions
Portuguese maritime haroque, initially as
of rhythm, tempo, colour, and so on a
way-station in the quest for Préster John
very formal questions ... As a method,
(who was believed to govern a Christian
it is very rigorous and very anti-humanist
kingdom
in Central Africa), before it was
in a way.'" Indeed, when Abena reports
adapted for the Atlantic slave trade. Based
that negotiations to interview Herzog
on TbeViceroy oJOuidab (1980), Bruce
have broken down - on the steps of
Chat win's novel about a Latin American
Elmina Castle — Testament reveals an
slave trader in Dabomey, Cobra Verde is an
unprecedented formal solution to the
object of critique here, for cut-aways to
question of how the 'intangible' realities
Herzog's film-set show mass-produced
of post-colonial trauma might be brought
skulls serially arranged on a mud wall, as
into cinematic representation for the
if to recycle primitivi.st myths of Europe's
first time - by employing intertextuality
so-called 'other'.The 'fake testimonies'
as a holding environment for the river
implied by these predictable simulacra
of memories.
produce a striking contrast with the actual
A.S Abena sits down to talk to Danso
skull that disquiets Abena at the end,
in the opening scenes of the diegesis,
where, in Walter Benjamin's words,
the parched landscajie evokes Antonioni's
she has become a woman who has
Red Desert (1967) even as the air of lassitude discovered that 'everything about history,
surrounding her flouncy skirt makes her
that frijm the beginning, bas been untimely,
65.Tania Refers as Abena, Testament, 1988
66.Tania Rogers as Abena, at Elmina Castle,
Jestatnent, 1988
POST-COLONIAL TRAUERSPIEL
56
sorrowful, unsuccessful, is expressed
in a face - or rather in a death's head'.'"
The differentiation produced by the
visual contrast hetween two sorts of skulls
is crucial because it cuts between allegory
and symbol as distinct registers of
inscription. Lacan might say the skull
that Abena encounters in the graveyard
is neither imaginary nor symbolic but
a piece o f the real' which shows the
material remnants of subjectivity's
traumatic core. For Benjamin, on the
other hand, 'whcrt-as in the symbol
destruction is idealised and the
transfigured face of nature is fleetingly
revealed in the light of redemption,
in allegory the observer is confronted
with the fades hippocratica of history
as a petrified, primordial landscape'
- which accurately describes Testatnent's
opening scenes. The skull that inexplicably
looks back at Abena at the end of the film
'lacks all "symbolic" freedom of expression,
all classical proportion, all humanity
— nevertheless, this. ..is at the hean of the
aHegorica! way of seeing, of the baroque,
secular explanation of history as the
Passion of the world; its importance
resides solely in the stations of its decline'."
Perhaps Ahena's 'blankness' is fitting
for a ghost, that is to say, a survivor
of post-colonial trauma who is both ghost
and ghosted, agent and patient, whose
subjectivity has been split between first
67 68.Tania Rogers at. Abena, 7ëwjinem, 1988
69. tûfcraÎÈrJf, Werner Hprzog, 1987
70. Film set of Cobra Verde, Tístameni, 1988
71. Bruce Chatwin, ThcViceroy o¡ OiiiJah. 1980
72. NDítai^híci, Andrei Tarkovsky, 198)
73. Kryslyna Janda os Agnicszka,
Kobena Mercer
57
aWJCTCHATWfJ
THEVlCERDl'
OFOUIDAH
and third person from the start.
As the voice-over narrator (Sally Sagoe)
introduces Abena through different
pronouns - 'twenty years ago 1 started
running ... Abena was a student at the
Nkrumah Ideological Institute' - the
fragments of her psyche, crucified by
irreconcilable gaps between past and
present, are cradled and 'held' by the
threnodic beauty of the compositions
extracted from Arvo Part's Fratres and
Cantus in Memory of Benjamin Britten and
Krysztof Penderecki's Magnißcat that
we hear on the soundtrack. Immersed
in the rivers of memory, as newsreeis
tinted yellow and oranpe show the ebb
and flow of political arrests and detentions
'like the tide', the Jamestown Dirge Singers
(who are professional mourners, as in
Shakespearean Europe) form a semiotic
chora to Abena's remorseful utterance,
'in 1966 I believed two bodies could be
one', which accompanies an inexplicable
super-8 image of conjoined twins.
Portrayed in traditional funeral attire
on the prow of a boat. Abena reveals
herself as a 'quantum ghost', in the words
ofWilson Harris.'" Her journey crosses
the 'living cross-culturalities' of an aquatic
realm in which 'Afi-ica' and 'Europe' are
not opposed (as in Herzog's plastic cliches)
but intermesh within an intertextual
space of allegory that Christine BuciGlucksmann refers to as 'post-modern
baroque',^' 7ësxamcnr's purposively de-
saturated rendition of the Ghanaian
landscape alludes toTarkovsky's Nostalgbia
(1983), in which variations in 'colour
temperature' correspond to emotional
motivation rather than realist logic, and
in which elements such as fire and water
are as much 'characters' as the actors.
Above all, whereTarkovsky explored the
dilemma of a Russian translator exiled
in Italy, Testament's píotline also alludes
to the 'revolutionary nostalgia' of Andrzej
Wadja's Man of Marble (1977) for Abena is
twin-sister-in-reverse to Agnieszka, the
chain-smoking film student protagonist
who uncovers archival material of a 1950s
propaganda hero and is pressured to
'revise' her story by the communist state.
Although Wadja's hectic vérité style
could not be more different, the baroque
intertextual architecture that enriches
Testament's elliptical form produces
a universalist understanding of traumatic
modernity not by a frontal equivalence
with the repressions wrought upon
Central Europe by Soviet imperialism,
but by making the 'unspeakable' aspects
ot Africa's traumatised post-colonial
condition tangible through a lattice-work
of métonymie implication.
Where Abena'sflash-backsform a silver
thread in the diegetic binding, they reveal
that'the phantom is ... a metapsychological
fact', for 'what haunts are not the dead,
but the gaps left within us by the secrets
POST-COLONIAL TRAUERSPIEL
74. Abi^na approaches ruins of Nkrumah Ideological
In.stitutc, Testamem, 1988
75. Albrecht Durer, .MtUocolla, 1S14
76.Tania Rogers, tdward George, Evans Francis,
)(ihii Akumirah, un set, Testameni, 1988
shadowy figures throwing rocks into
of others'."Tinted by an indigo filter that
a hole in the ground (in the film's sole
converts day to night, this thread reveals
the sergeant as Abena's 'bad fatber' - like
utilisation of point-of-view).
a screen-memory, he is the phantom who
When John Akomfrah says, 'My father
blocks her recognition ofthe 'lost parent'
was buried in Ghana. I hadn't seen
who lies behind the public shame she felt
his grave but I wanted t o ' , " we must
as a squealer. However, when Abena
understand that the manifest film strip
returns to the amber twilight ofthe
does not actually contain a scene in which
densely wooded graveyard at the end
'she goes to the graveyard and buries her
— having recounted to Danso the childhood
father'" because all we actually see is Abena
terror provoked by a hole in the grounds
of her family home — Testament reveals the looking at a skull as sbe catches her breath
at the end. Giving us the diegetic signified
golden thread through which the film
that is produced as a result of the
bares its soul as post-colonial iraucrspiel,
nachtmglichkiet ofthe montage's signifying
or sorrow song. This concluding image
'work', and not otherwise shown or
of the skull retroactively codifies her earlier
made visible, these words crystallise the
graveyard visit as a hallucinatory wishdread power of BAFC's tender handling
fulfilment - where Abena 'saw' two
of métonymie implication. Immersed
in ego-shattering memories that must
o
o
be simultaneously hypercathected
and decathected, held onto and let go
of. Abena survives the travails of the river
of memory for almost eighty minutes only
to find that she must now initiate her grief
and begin mourningjor the veryßrst time.
Once the tag-line from Handsworth
Song.'i is abbreviated slightly - 'there are
no stories ... only the ghosts of other
stories' - we find the hermeneutic key
to the practice of intertextuality that
informs the Black Audio montageprinciple as a whole. Just as the central
'character' of Who Needs a Heart (1993) Michael X - is visually absent, and made
present only through his effects on others,
this latdce-work of métonymie implication
moves towards the 'unrepresentable' by
evoking the cyclical forms of the sorrow
song that provides a holding environment
in which unbearably painful stories
can be made socially sharable for
the very first time.
Kobena Mercer
S9
Notes
I 3. Harris, 'Searching the Diaspora', p. 1 1.
1 j.ii <\¡w\ Lacan, Tht Four Fundiimenial Concepts of
14. Ibid.
/Vi J^MI1J/VI1I|1973), London: Ponguin B<K>ks, 1977, p. 88.
2. John Akomlrah in Thomas Allen Harris, 'Searching the
Diaspora: An Interview wilh John Akomfrah', Afterimage.
April 1993, p. 10.
i. Ibid.
4. D.W.Winnicot, Holding and ¡nterprttaiion: Fragment
oJ an Analysis \i972l New York: Grove Press, 1986.
5. Louis Musiah,'Using Archives', Black Film Bulletin.
î/4,aummn/winter 1993/94, p. 27.
6. Laura U. Marks, The Skin ^the film: tniercukumi
Cinema, Emhodiment. and tbt Senses, Durham, NC: Duke
University Press, 2000.
7. Kass Banning, 'Feeding Off the Dead: Necrophilia
and the Black Imaginary - An Interview with JcJm
15. Ibid
16. Cathy Carulh, Trauma: Explotations in Memory, Baltimore,
MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 199S, p. 5.
17. Harris, 'Searching the Diaspora', p. 11.
18. Walter Benjamin, The Origin of German Tragic Drama
11928], London: Verso, 1998, p. 166.
19. Ibid.
20. See Nathaniel Mackey, 'Quantum Ghostii: An
Interview with Wilson Harris', in Kobena Mercer, ed..
Discrepant Ahítiaaion, London and Massât husetts:
INIVA/MIT, 2006, pp. 206-201.
21. Christine Buci-Gluiksmann, Baroque Reown.'TTie
Aesfbaia oj'Modernity {I'iS'i], London; Sage/Theory,
Culture & Society, 1994.
Aki>mfrah',BorJif//jne<, 29/Î0, I99î,pp. 28-33.
8. Ibid., p. JÎ.
9. Harris, 'Searching the Diaspora', p. 11,
10. Banning, •FcedingOfT the Dead", p. 3Î,
I 1. Sigmund Freud,'Mourning and Melanchulia' [19171,
in On .Metapsycbology (Pelican Freud Library vol. 1 1 ),
London: Penguin, 1984, p, 2S3,
1 2. Banning, ' Heeding Off tht' Dead", p, 33.
22. Nicholas Abraham and Maria Torok,'Notes on the
Phantom - A Complement to Freud's Metapsythology'
[1975], in The Shell and the Kernel, Chicago: University
of Chicago Press, 1994, p. 171.
2Î. Harris,'Searching the Diaspora", p. 11.
24. Banning, 'Feeding Off the Dead', p. 33.
w
f^
m
'
•*'
\
r.jn tuL
I scon
y.T BRAMO T H W W
Od
WWL JOHMSONSUNAGOWa
OMiyJOHNAKOIIFRAH
77. Lmnij Vranris Wilson,Tania Rogers,
ïestamctit, 1988
78. Edward.Goorgc. 7¿.«Linjeiii. 1988
79.Tri.'vor Mathison, fotumcnf, 1988
SO, Lina Gopaul, ffitürnfn/, 1988
81. Avril Johnson, Tciiumem, 1988
82. John Akomirah, Tesrainent, 1988
83. Tenamem, Ril/y Cinema, Brixton, London, 1989
84. üavid Lawson. Ridley Road, 1989
85. RccLv AuguisU. Ridley R<íad, 1980
74
Tbey strike one above aU as giving no account
of tbemselves in any terms already consecrated
by human use; to this inarticulate
state
they probably form, coHectively, the most
unprecedented of monuments...
Henry James'
I. In the beginning, a rupture...
the archive.,,
begins with the outside
of our own language...
it deprives us of our
continuities; it dissipates that temporal idetitity
in wbicb we are pleased to look at ourselves
when we wish to exorcise the discontinuities
of history.
Michel Foucault'
DRAWING THE FORMS
OF THINGS UNKNOWN
KODWO ESHUN
for representation. Black Audio certainly
made such demands but their singularity
lies, this essay argues, in the related but
distinctive decision to inaugurate themselves
as an artist-group. By doing so, the
Collective bestowed an authority upon
themselves that resided precisely in laying
claim to the right to theorise tbe forms
an aesthetic might take in the future.
What account of the artistic practice of
the Black Audio Film Collective (BAFC)
founded in 1982 and dissolved in 1998
by John Akomfrah, Una Gopaul, Reece
Auguiste, Avril Johnson,Trevor Mathison,
Edward George, David Lawson' and
Clare Joseph might emerge if the group
were understood to be engaged in the
inauguration of an aesthetic project? Such
an account implies but exceeds the desire
to restore agency to their practice;
it emphasises the Collective's art as
a reflexive inquiry into the potentiality
of the aesthetic as such. This essay argues
that the Collective's project can be
rethought as just such an inquiry;
it argues further that this kind of
investigation into the potential forms of
the aesthetic is distinct from the demand
for access to media and from demands
It is this insistence upon invention
in the name of a community to come
that this essay explores by tracing the
implications of self-inauguration. It
therefore distinguishes itself from critical
accounts that understand the group's
work entirely as a response to mediations
of social crisis. Such interpretations
inadvertently contain art as a reaction
to hegemonic media; more sophisticated
readings see the work as a retort to the
counter hegemonic media of activist
documentary as much as to the genres
of television documentary.* Both versions
nonetheless understood the art of BAFC
as a restitutional project that is valuable
in so far as it corrects a false consensus.
These well-meaning analyses find
themselves unable to account for the will
to aestheüdse that is central to any artistic
project; in the case of the Collective, this
imperative was more radical still in that
the project of inauguration cannot be
entirely explained as an act of resistance.
On the contrary, inauguration is a sovereign
practice; it is unreasonable and necessarily
7S
so. BAFC saw themselves, and were
received, internationally, as Baudelairian
figures, fully immersed within a
contemporary milieu stripped of
consolation and security. They accepted
and engaged with the multiple collapses
of industrialism, Lahourism and
modernism, with the end of political
automatism and racial collectivity
outlined by Andre Gorz^ and Stuart Hall.
To view their images and listen to their
sounds was to encounter a thrilling
ontological insecurity. Akomfrah summed
up the mood when he declared that
'We're not in church anymore. Sunday
is over.''^This was BAFC code for New
Times, for an art in which post-colonial
.subjectivities could no longer be framed
as a minority in need of protection from
the death of God through theology,
in need of shelterfi-omEuropean thought
by recourse to an ancestral Africanity,
in need of sanctuary from the
disenchantments of modernity.
In interviews, photographs and in
person, the group projected a stance
of high seriousness combined with
a seductive stylishness. Their attitude
was a statement of British Afrodiasporic
internationalism, enacted throuph
o
a specific sense of generational selfentitlement. Akomfrah's family
background was Ghanaian and Nigerian,
Lawson's was Ghanaian, Togolese
andTrinidadian, Gopaul, Johnson
and Mathison's was Jamaican, while
Auguiste and George's was Dominican.
Tbis biographical heterogeneity informed
the Collective's consciousness in complex
ways. It fed into the self-awareness of the
group as a neo-Gramsdan project in itself.
At the core of this project was the desire
to enquire into the condition of the
present that each artist inhahited 'as the
sum of the historical process to date'.'
Unlike Donald Rodney, Keith Piper,
Eddie Chambers and Marlene Smith
of the BLK Art Group, whom they knew
well,** the Collective's work evoked a
persistent agnosticism towards the forms
of certainty that audiences and artists
felt about the racialisation oftheir lives.
The 'Black' in Black Audio Film Collective
was not informed by the kinds of
identification with post-war Pan-Afi-icanism
and the 1960s Black Arts Movement
favoured by the BLK Art Group;'
the Collective distanced itself from
the ancestralist imperative invoked by
film-makers such as Menelik Shabazz;
it remained unconvinced and sceptical
of the leftist faith in working class black
youth as a potential agent of revolution.
Nonetheless, it would not be accurate
to say that BAFC prefigured the artistic
belief in post-blackness articulated bv
Thelma Golden.'" Instead, the condition
of raciality invoked by their name might
be profitably understood as a question
of tbe unthought, as a dimension
of potentiality.
it..
Rtoan
tin*
hou
DRAWING THE FORMS OF THINGS UNKNOWN
78
' What I always liked about the term
black film-maker was... the way it gave
you the impression of a terra incognita,
unknown territory, unknown quantity,'
declared Akomfrah." Given this sen.se
of potentiality, the concept metaphor
of blackness could be understood in a
Gramscian sense as 'an infinity of traces
without... an inventory'.The work of
BAFC, across sixteen years, constituted
just such an inventory'^ of engagements
with race as a 'figure of cinematic speech'. ' '
Through this complex notion of
cincacsthetics, the group were able
to navigate and negotiate questions
of culture and politics in the context
of an English political landscape convulsed
by civil disturbances throughout 1978,
1980. 1981 and 1985.'*
2. An infinity of traces
The crisis consists precisely in the fact tbat
the old is dying and the new cannot be born;
in this interregnum a great variety of morbid
symptoms appear.
Antonio Gramsci'^
\Vbat else is the history of a country but tbe
vastest narrative surface of all? Not one story
but many stories.
GabiTeichert, The Patriot^''
Unlike previous generations of
Afrodiasporic film-makers, Akomfrah
noted that it was 'theory' that provided
an entry point into film-making for
the Collective.'^The group's sense
of entitlement to and familiarity with
the fields of Althusserian Marxism,
Foucauldian archaeology and Lacanian
psychoanalysis as formulated in film
journals such as Screen, Camera Obscura and
Framework informed their formulation of
a dnema of ideas whose high seriousness
disconcerted multiple demands for a
vernacular mode of address. The group
displaced such prescriptive expectations
via the Foucauldian concept of the 'regime
of truth' which they linked to the notion
of the 'absence of ruins' drawn from the
poetry of Derek Walcott and Zbigniew
Herbert'" and the criticism of novelist
Wilson Harris. These ideas fed into the
master concept of'representation'.
Aesthetically speaking, representation
allowed an interruption and suspension
of the inherited conventions of the
autonomous image, thereby opening
a space for the emergence of what Laura
Mulvey called 'an alternative aesthetic'."
What the Collective brought to this
context was an interest in the formal
implications of race as figuration and
as knowledge production that would,
as Akomfrah put it, 'simultaneously call
upon and fiercely rebuke notions of
location, ethnicity and identity as a priori
certainties'"'and retrace the 'meanings
and minutiae' by which, in George's
words, 'the violent nonsensicality
of race was maide
»ble'.'
H6, Photographic Test, Expeditions, 1982
World War I Memoria!, Euston Station
87. Photographic Test, Expeditions, 1982
88 89. Images of Nationality, 1982-84
90. Aimé Césaire, Notebook oj a Return
to My Nútive Land. 1947
91. Hannclorc Hopcr as GabiTeichert,
ríic Palfioi, Alexander Kluoc, 1979
92. Clare Joseph, Notebook of a Keturn to My Native Land,
.Audiovisual presentation, Portsmouth Polytechnic, 1982
93. Jah Shaka, Handworfh !ioags,)9S6
Kodwo Eshun
In 1982, BAFC, then undergraduates
at Portsmouth Polytechnic, presented
their first work: a tape-slide performance
developed from an engagement with
anticolonial surrealist Aimé Césaire's
prose poem Notebook of a Return to My
Native Land (1947) in the Student Union
Refectory."The space was demarcated
by eight muslin sheets .suspended from
the ceiling; Trevor Mathison operated the
Kodak carousel and the projector which
beamed 35mm slide images'* onto and
through the muslin sheets while George,
Joseph and Akomfrah recited sections
from Notebook of a Return to My Native
Land into microphones; these readings
were amplified through three sets of
loudspeakers. In this first project, the
79
concerns of the group were already
apparent: the interest in the projected
image, in the archival image, in the
aesthetic of the palimpsest, in immersion
within the aural dimension of amplification
and modulation, it is important to note
that by 1982, the group had already
constituted itself a.s a cooperative under
the rules of the Industrial Common
Ownership Movement (ICOM), a full
four and a half years before they became
fully franchised as a film workshop in
1986.'^ Their formation in the British
cooperative movement offers a bint
as to their longevity and indicates their
distinctiveness from the workshop groups
of the era with which they are habitually
associated. The formal preoccupations
of Notebook of a Return to my Native Land
were elaborated in their second project.
Expeditions, the group's monumental twopart 60-minute slide-tape text. Expeditions
One, initially entitled Empire qf Signs, after
Roland Barthes' Empire of Signs (1970),
eventually became Signs of Empire while
Expeditions Two was entitled Images of
Nationality. Produced between 1982
and 1984, Expeditions was presented as
an audiovisual performance choreographed
on Kodak tape-slide dissolve units
throughout November 1984 to June 1985.
3. Towards an epic constructionism
The exterior spectacle beïps intimate
grandeur unfold.
Ga.ston Bachelard"
In order to educate man to a new longing,
everyday familiar objeas must be sbown
to him witb totally unexpected perspectives
and in unexpected situations.
Alexsandr
Expeditiom deliberately heightened
contemporary fears that Britain had
produced a 'surplus mutant population'
which had 'no roots, no connectedness,
to home, elsewhere or here'." It looped
a recording of the conservative British
lawyer Sir Ronald Bell, QC, admitting
on Panorama'"^ tbat 'If you look at their
faces... 1 think they don't know who they
are or what they are. And really, what
you're a.sking me is how the hell one gives
them the sense of belonging' into a mantra
80
DRAWING THE FORMS OF THINGS UNKNOWN
94. Cabaret Voltaire. Seconils too Lau, 1982
95.Test Depi.. Total State Machwe. 1984
9b. Karen KnoTT,TbeAri of Living at the Cost of Others, 1984
that amplified the incapacity of authority
to locate subjects whose very presence
constituted an irksome reminder of postimperial malaise. In the law's unease
at these all too visible yet somehow
unaccountable not-quite citizens, BAFC
heard an echo, replayed across the
decades, of Lord Frederick Lugard's
statement that his subjects 'cannot know
who they are or what they are'.-''
'We had sat through minimal, repetitive
music', said Mathison, 'and we wanted
that pressure, that grinding relentlessncss
for our work,'"'Within the spectral
temporality of the tape loop, the imperial
anxieties of the early twentieth century
resonated with the multiple fears of the
present. Expeditions experimented with
ways in which sonic process might offer
alternative aesthetics for the art space.
Its mood of dread stemmed from the
group's combination of three distinct
methods of musical composition:
'roots' reggae epitomised in the work
of Rastafarian selector and producer
Jah Shaka," the 'reverberant yet
claustrophobic' industrial mantras
of Sheffield trio Cabaret Voltaire and
the neo-Constructivist anthems of South
London's Test Department. During his
soundsystem dances, Shaka reworked
reggae records into musical prayers
of eschatological dread while Caharet
Voltaire and Test Department staged their
music in multimedia performances that
hymned the discomforting interregnum
between the end of the industrial
age and the dawn of a post industrial
society of control. "
Like Karen Knorr's photowork
The Art of Living at the Cost of Others
(1984), Expeditions belonged to the
postmodernist moment of appropriation
of neoclassical imagery and text; the
latter was used to 'denaturalise' the
transparency"of the image. At the
hands of British appropriationists such
as Victor Bürgin, Marv Kclley, Karen
Knorr, Olivier Richon and MitraTabrizian,
semiotic and psychoanalytic writing
translated into an aesthetic of refined
scriptovisuality.The Collective's approach,
bv contrast, was not reductive as much
as it was palimpsestual. Each slide in
Expeditions consisted of transparent gels
layered by hand during all-night sessions.
Standing at long tables, each artist would
layer a gel, then pass it on to the next
person who would add or subtract another
gel until all were sati.sfied with the result.
What emerged were images of photographs
of imperial maps and statues projected
upon drapery or onto hands or arms that
were then rephotographed and combined
with details from high colonial portraiture,
children's books, colonial postcards and
imperial statuary. Each slide was complete
when Letraset letters in cursive fonts
were overlaid to construct sequences
of text that read as narrative blocks.
Kodwo Eshun
SI
97. Victor Burgin, Today ¡s the Tomorrow Vu u Vife« Promised
Yesterday, 1976
98. Alexsandr Rodchcnko, Pioneer Girl, 1930
99. Anti-Racist Film Programme. 1984
100. Looking Black, Poster, 198S
Design: Edward George
: AHTI RACIST n t i n PROGRAMME
:CirjEMA CIRCUIT MARCH/APRIL « 5
99
Most appropriationists preferred
to use frontal framing; the Collective,
by contrast, worked with angular kinds
of Iraming that harked back to the 1920s
photography of Alexsandr Rodchenko.
In Rodchenko's series of Pioneer
photographs such as Pioneer Girl (1930)
the 'steep low viewpoint' of the frame
abstracted the face of Communist youth
into 'a group of foreshortened masses' that
lent the figure 'a certain monumentality'.'^
BAFC were fascinated hy what Mathison
tailed the 'dvnamism' of Rodchenko's
frame. The sense of'sky and space'
in Constructivist photography offered
one source for the aesthetic o f epic
construction' discernible throughout
the Collective's work. At the core
of what Akomfrah called epic construction
lay the desire to elevate Afrodiasporic
subjectivity by imbuing figuration with
a gravitas hitherto unimaginable in
cultural production. To produce a formal
language that could monumentalise
Afrodiasporic presence within the frame,
the Collective embarked upon a sustained
engagement with privileged instances
from the archives of still photography
from Rodchenko in Expeditions toVanley
Burke in Handswortb Songs (1986), from
Rotimi Fani-Kayode in Twiligbt City
(1989) to James VanDerZee in Seven
SongsJoT Malcolm X (1993).Their
encounters with the still image were
mediated by what George called
'moments of stolen .solitude and hard
won reflection'.'^ During interviews
Akomfrah, Auguiste and George reiterated
the importance of spaces of intimacy and
quietness for their work. What emerged
was a paradoxical condition of intimate
immensity" that was deemed capable
of evoking the elusiveness, opacity and
complexity of Afrodiasporic becoming.
4. A community to come
l-den-ti-ty, is tbe crisis. Can't you lec?"
X-Ray Spex, 'Identity'
The Collective considered Expeditions
an artwork for exhibition within art schools
such as St Martins and art spaces such
as the Whitechapel Gallery; at the same
time, it was presented within a cineculturaJ
milieu that shared the ambitions of the
post-punk music .scene. Independent
cinemas and workshops such as the
London Film Makers Co-operative
in Gloucester Avenue, the Rio Cinema in
Dalston, the Four Comers Film and Video
Workshop in Mile End and the Other
Cinema in Wardour Street functioned as
'political spaces for the showing of radical
films and discussion''" and 'socially
conceptualised audio-visual work'."The
expanded definition of cinema as 'social
practice' or as 'integrated practice' of the
era intersected with the municipal antiracist campaigns initiated by the radical
Labour Greater London Council of May
1981 to March 1986. From 1983 to
1985, the Collective pursued a radical
82
pedagogy through their pioneering series
of workshops, film familiarisation courses,
and screenings. The intention, Akomfrah
suggested, was 'to invent a black film
culture which also means creating an
infrastructure — journals, seminars,
courses, a debate around the cinema,
in other words, an audience'.*°The group
saw themselves as catalysts of a community'
to come - their courses constituted
a pedagogical space for the birth of a new
art dne-culture.The mood ofthe moment
was epitomised in 'Black Independent
Film-making: A Statement by the Black
Audio/Film Collective', a text published
in the summer of 1983 in Artrage magazine
that affirmed the group's interest in the
ways that 'self-evident truths become the
DRAWING THE FORMS OF THINGS UNKNOWN
conventional pattern through which
the black presence in cinema is secured'.*'
The idea of cinema as integrated practice
peaked in 1985, the GLC'sYear of AntiRacism. That year, the Collective hosted
two courses: 'Race Traces: Cinema and
the Community', from February to March,
and 'Looking Black: Workshops on Cinema,
Race Aesthetics' from June until August.
George's programme outline for 'Looking
Black' posed some pertinent questions:
Is 'Black Cinema' possible? Do we need
a language of film and video? What are
the black aesthetics of film and video?
What should be the new cultural
priorities?^' Lina Gopaul looked further
still; as key players in the newly formed
Association of Black Film and Video
Workshops, the Collective envisioned
a distribution network, summer schools
and film festivals;*'altbough George
criticised the structural inadequacy
of integrated practice," the group
nonetheless succeeded in growing
an audience; by August 1986, the 40th
Edinburgh International Film Festival
\va.s hosting the three-day 'Third Cinema:
Theories and Practices' conference,
a move inconceivable without the
Collective's example. The group had
indeed shifted the terms of discourse;'^
more germane to this essay are the formal
implications of this discursive expansion.
An important effect ofthe aesthetic
of epic construction was the stasis of the
frame. The present instant ofthe moving
image was suspended in favour of a
condition of reverie. The topical temporality
of HandswoTth Songs was halted by two
non-narrative sequences in which the
camera travelled slowly through a darkened,
abstracted space, circling magisterially
around a series of photographs that had
been printed at different dimen.sions from
5ft portrait to 5ft landscape, mounted
on light stands that were covered in velvet
cloth to create the illusion of perspective.
These sequences were filmed over a twoday shoot at the Art and Photography
Department studios of the Polytechnic
of Central London. Several Black Audio
works were punctuated by cinematic
caesuras that functioned as .spaces
Kollwo Eshun
of contemplation and display. In his essay
'On the Borderline' (1992) Akomfrah
speculated upon the trope of the
exhibition that recurred throughout
the group's work. In Auguiste'.s Mysteries
ofJuly (1991) a police storeroom of
weapons was displayed with ceremonial
presence. In a second sequence,
a Bangladeshi London teenager and her
friend visited a darkened space entitled
the Museum of Dread that displayed
'an atrocity exhibition of unofficial police
history'"" containing mounted photographs
and a mannequin of a Police Commissioner
behind metal security barriers. Mathison
and George's installation Tbe Black Room
presented at the group exhibition Mirage:
Enigmas ofDiJJerence and Desire ( 1991 y
effectively translated these spaces from
moving image into sculptural volumes
that acted as televisual shrine to
contemporary African urbanism.
If the scale of photography*" in the
caesuras of Handsworth Songs enhanced
the stature of the image then the
camera movements crowned the still with
ceremonial value. The attitude of devotion
and care bestowed upon the photograph
by film epitomised one aspect of epic
construction." As archive, the image was
valued not only for the access to the past
it was supposed to enable but for the 'nowness of history contained in the sheer
material fact of the document' .*" If
Expeditions revisited the representational
101. Handsnonh Songs. 1986
102. Vanley Burke, Boy mth Flag, Handsworik Park,
Birmngham. 1978
\Oi.MpteritsoJjuly,
1991
104. Outline for The Black Room.
Trevor Mathison, 199S
105. The Black Room,Trevor Mathison
and Edward George, 1995
84
DRAWING THE FORMS OF THINGS UNKNOWN
genres that evoked the violence of the
simultaneously mourned their passing;
5. Abysmal the mystery...
order with which they colluded'' then
its dual quality of summoning up the
We too are actors wbo behold
Handswarth Songs revisited moments from archive while laying it to rest imbued the
Tbis ceremony; we hold
Thirties British documentary in order
film with a 'mournful angelic quality'
Our breath, dejying dissolution
to evoke the inoperative social conscience that manifested the passing of things
Derek Walcott.
of the era that genre had called forth.
about Britain which 'onefind.sgenuinely
'The Wedding of An Actress'"
Through the monumental close-ups
moving about its history, especially
of workers' faces in Industrial Britain
vis à'Vis film-making'.^" By playing what
The relation of still to movement within
(Robert Flaherty and John Grierson,
Icnnlnps called the 'music of Britain
epic construction was developed in the
1931), the stoic restraint of listen to Britain at war' against moments from forgotten
tableaux that exist throughout the group's
(Humphrey Jennings, 1942) and the
television documentary such as The Colony" films. The tableau not only halted narrative;
it allowed for a reflexive hiatus in which
onward motion of Nigbt Mail {Harry Watt (Philip Donnellan, 1964), the Collective
the camera staged an encounter between
and BasilWright, 1936) Britishness was
asserted a hitherto submerged affinity
the film frame, the limits of photography
formally arranged as a hymn to labour,
between the abandoned genre of the 1930s
and the form of history painting. Two
a song of cinema in which every worker
and the quashed hopes of the colonial
tableaux of British imperial icons
had their place and played their role.
subject, between the collapse of industry
functioned in this way in Handswortb
Handsworth Songs resuscitated the 'historical and the ruin of the very idea
was punctuated by mid-shot tableaux of
directors George and Mathison standing
in a field of sunflowers in Groombridgc
Place Gardens, Kent, holding prints
of Van Gogh's Sunßowcrs (1888) above
their heads.*'' In Twiligbt City, Auguiste
staged the high-contrast hiack and white
photography of Rotimi Fani Kayode's
presentness' of these images and
of social conscience."
Songs; Tbree Songs on Pain, Light and Time
The Milk Drinker ( 1986) and Tbe Fisb Vendors
(1988) as tableaux vivants. In a darkened
void, male figures posed in a gestural
vocabulary nuanced by Christian themes
of supplication complicated by the language
of homocrotif encounter." Mysteries oj July
was organised around an elaborate funerary
tableau for the victims of paramilitary
policing; the film is an inventory of forms
of public grieving. With Seven Songs
Kodwo Eshun
f^ JL
106. tiidustriat ñrilair\. Robert Flaherty and John
Gricrson, 19Î1
1 10. Trevor Mathison, Grtwrnbridge Place Gardens,
Kpnt, Three Songs on Pain, Light and Time, 199S
for Malcolm X, the aesthetic of the tableau
reached a peak of elaboration: the film
circled around tahleaux structured in
seven subtitled sei^uences.The opening
Solitude Scenes were adapted from specific
photographs sourced from James Van
Ml. Rotimi hani-Kayodc, The .Milk Drinker. 198 Î
DerZee's The Harlem Book of the Dead
107. t-\uen to Britain, Humphrey Jeniiings, 1942
108.Tableau, Handsworih Songs, 1986
109. The Colour of Pomegranaies, Sergei Paradjanov, 1969
(1978) that exemplified the interest
in the 'public character of ceremonial
mourning'.^'Akomfrah descrihed the
Scenes of Eden as 'The Autohiography
of Malcolm X as told to Sergei Paradjanov'.
What interested Akomfrah and
cinematographer Arthur Jafa was not
so much the frontality of Paradjanov's
Tbe Colour of Pomegranates (1969) hut
its elemental reductivism. As Akomfrah
explained 'Paradjanov had a stark, primitive
idea of cinema in which stasis is more
important than event or action... that
was important for Seven Songs because it
was a legend, in a way.'^** In moving away
from narrative and history, the tableaux
of Seven Songs conceived of figuration not
as character but as personification held
in a suspended state of emblematic
temporality. To film these serene blue
episodes, Jafa used a swing and tilt
Clairmont lens whose body was made
from a rubberised hellows.The rubberised
bellows allowed the camera operator
to bend the camera to shift the plane
of focus of the lens. This increased the
degree of control over the angle of light
entering the lens; light could now he bent
and ditlerentiated in qualitv and intensity.
113. Serta Songs fir Malcolm X. 199Î
113-114. Darricic Harris as Makoim X,
Seveti Soagsfir Malcolm X, 1993
DRAWING THE FORMS OF THINGS UNKNOWN
The incremental differentiation of the
focal plane meant that the composition
could be broken down by its properties;
this opened the way for an interrogation
of the norms of cinematography. Variations
in intensity of focus became possible;
the image became intermittent, hesitant
and sensitive; focus within frame became
controllable to a greater degree than ever.
Jala's interest lay in stretching the plane
until figuration became attenuated
or 'Masai-like'.This intervention into
pictorial space developed from the
group's interest in the gestural quality
of blur or ripple that derived from one
specific funeral portrait in The Harlem
Book of the Dead.'^VdXi Der Zee understood
the photographic print'as malleable
surface(s) to be manipulated for expressive
purposes'"' and in his commemorative
portrait of a little girl in an open casket
he applied Vaseline during the development
process to create the ripple that rose
vertically at frame right.
G. A new expressionism
Wbo counts as buman?
Whose hves count as lives?
And, finally, what makesfor a grievahle life?
of racialised knowledge, revealing to
viewers how film operated as a 'nonneutral technology... constructed for
certain skin tones'.""^ As Thames Television
prepared to shoot a discussion on the
uprisings before a local audience, (or the
current affairs programme TV Eye. Mathison
recorded the following conversation
between the producer in the control
room and the floor manager in the
studio, without their knowledge:
Judith Butler"
The notion of epic construction implied
an intervention into the multiple
technologies of the moving image. One
specific scene in Handsworth Songs acted
as an object-lesson on the production
Producer: OK Can I sec the audience?
Floor manager: Yes, from here.
Producer: Is it slightly dark or light?
Floor manager: I don't think so. You are
worried that there are not too many
whites, obviouslv there.
Producer: No, in lighting terms I'm
talking about. It just looks a bit down,
especially in front.
Floor manager: I have my friend, Mr
Lafaniin here who says that the reason
is the colour of their skins.
The brief conversation swerved between
anxiety about lighting, concern about
racial aggregation and agitation at the
illegibility of skin tone. The presence
of Afro-Caribbean and Asian subjects
troubled the norm.s of tclevisuality
provoking an uneasy movement from
technical to aesthetic to racial to visual
knowledges'^ that foregrounded the
incomplete intermediation of corporeality.
In a context in which white skin set
Kodwo E.shun
115. James Van DerZee.T/te Harletn Beck of the Dead, 1978
I 16. Seven Songsfor Malcolm X, 199Î
I l 7 . S ü e C o e , X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X, 1986
118. Cameraman, Haniiswaiih Songs, 1986
119. Testament, 1988
the standard for film, BAFC could not
rest at interrogating the image; more
importantiv, the group sought to rethink
what lighting, film stock, developing
and printing might become.
The notion of epic construction was
then only one aspect of an overarching
project: to reconfigure visuality around
tbe Afrodiasporic subject. This did not
merely mean inserting the diasporic
figure into the frame nor did it entail a
separatist cinema; rather it meant seizing
the opportunity to invent the forms that
Afrodiasporic cinema might take. Black
film, Jafa had argued in an Artforum article
in 1993, bad a'chimcralike' quality; it
was 'inherently without precedent';'''
with their obsessive attention to form,
multiplied to the power of seven, BAFC
were positioned at the centre of this space
of possibility; they could rethink film lorm.
But obstacles immediately emerged in
response to the Collective's experiments
in new aesthetic language. Akomfrah
recalled that upon completion of principal
shooting for Testament {1988) the group
took the film — which we had shot
without the correction filters that give
b
films their warm look - to a lab.
I'd get a print back from the lab and
they'd have colour corrected it. They'd
put the warmth back in. I'd ring them
up and say, 'This was shot without an
85 filter so can I have a colder print?'
They'd say they changed it because
they thought it didn't look right.
'It looked too cold; nobody's going
to believe that that's Africa. Africa
is a nice warm place.'
The Collective's vision of a dispirited
Ghanaian landscape occupied bv cheerless
characters aflronted the discursive regimes
that underwrote technological norms.
The group exaggerated the frigidity of
the print in order to open up a distance
between subject and landscape that
undermined assumptions about what
the image of contemporary West Africa
should look like; presumptions that
attempted to .secure 'an unproblematic
connection between character and identity,
between persona and place'.** In taking
upon itself the task of interpreting
BAFC's anti-realist aesthetics as an error
to be corrected, the laboratory sought
to contain and return their aesthetic
intervention to its proper place. The
laboratory's technical restoration was
carried out in the name of a common
sense that assumed a 'harmony between
people and their location' that amounted
to nothing more than 'articles of faith
legitimised by a regime of truth' that
assumed that 'people don't live out their
individual choices, thev live out their
traditions and cultures'.*' Testament was
a calculated transgression at the level of
the image but its implications exceeded
film form. What was at stake was nothing
94
DRAWING THE FORMS OF THINGS UNKNOWN
120. Tiffany Nelson and Tiffany Täte, Seven Songs
for Malcolm X. 1993
Í21. Olamide Faisun as Young Malcolm, Trida Ro.se
an Malcolm X's mother,Theodore L.Cash as Malcolm's
father, Seren Sangs for Malcolm X, 1993
1 22. Daughters of the Dust. Julie Dash, 1991
123. Citizen Kani, Orson Welles, 1941
less than the opportunity to rethink what
Rändere called 'the perceptual coordinates
of the common'.*" In 1985, the television
producers recorded by Mathison had
struggled to correct for diasporic
aggregation; in 1988, the laboratory
had attempted to reimpose a norm by
defining what was 'legitimate and acceptable
for blacks to think and sav and feel'.*'''
Akomfrah's statement generalised the
question of aesthetic normalisation into
the constitution of the conditions of
audibility and visibility as such; he thereby
anticipated Ranciere's notion of'the
distribution of the sensible' which was
constituted by forces the philosopher
named 'the police'. In Ranciere's view,
the police 'are less concerned with
repression than with a more basic function:
that of constituting what is or is not
perceivable, determining what can or
cannot be seen, dividing what can be
heard from what cannot'. As Kristin
Ross wrote 'Tlie police become the
name for everything that concerns the
distribution of places and functions, as
well as the svstem that legitimates such
hierarchical distributions. They are another
name for the symbolic constitution of the
social.'™ For BAFC, then, intervention
at the level of form, genre, memory and
technology exceeded questions of access
or representation and declared nothing
less than a new formulation of what
counted as .sound and image.
7. Drawing the form of things unknown
/ sball consider human actions and appetites
just as if it were a (question of lines,
planes and bodies,
Benedict de Spinoza^'
Alongside directors and cinematographers
such as Julie Dash, Arthur Jafa, Isaac Julien
and Raoul Feck, the Collective's films
sought to reimagine the aesthetic values
that cinema ascribed to properties
of enlightenment and occultation.
Epic construction was a way of reframing
the image but the project at hand was
broader süJl; the Collective and its fellow
travellers wanted to reposition the
imagery of the monochromatic within
the landscape of colour. The Collective
proposed to return to the moment in
film history just before the emergence
of colour in order to advance an alternative
future led by a new kind of expressionism.
A set of cinematographic ideas abandoned
by 1940s Hollywood were to be reinvented
for the present. In this sense, BAFC films
and videos might be seen as speculative
projects that conceptualised GregToIand's
cinematography for Orson Welles'
Citizen Kane (1941) as a 'paintbox' for
rethinking colour." From this perspective,
BAFC films and videos might be understood
as experiments with monochromatic
colour. They constituted a revisionist
reading of black-and-white cinematography
in which black was to be rethought as
a differential gradation within the tonal
95
124 25. Intertitlc for Millie's film,
Who Needs A Heart,\99\
126. Unused iijtcrtitle. Who Need^A Heart, 1991
\27. Memory Koom4iI,
!997
128.^eDii>ff Room4il,
Rotherhlthc, 1997
129-iO. The Last Angel oJHistory, 1995
palette of colour. In Akomfrah's reading
of post-war aesthetics,Toland had produced
a distinctive aesthetic with Citizen Kane
and Tbe Magnificent Ambersons (1942) in
which black, grey and white sat in tension
with each other. Toland had adapted this
approach from Russian and German
Expressionist cinema which posed tones
in stark argument with each other to
exaggerate conflict; in such a context,
the main character would be foregrounded
by white and set off against pools
of darkness that signalled drama within
the frame. German, Russian and American
expressionist dnemas all shared a tendency
to code the play of light and shadow as
normative values. After Toland, film noir
further codified the play of light and space
into a moral hierarchy; the emergence
of Kodak photography then racialised
this codification by privileging lighter skin
tones; in the Kodak regime, white always
occupied the keyligbts and black was
always banisbed to the margins. Akomfrah
emphasised that his account of post-war
aesthetics was not to be understood as
teleological; the notion of the frame could
not support a critique of the inherently
racist implications of chiarascuro. For the
Collective's purposes, colour was not
inherently racist but was central to race
considered as a technology of visuality.
It was to be understood as a normative
regime wbose values could be altered
thrtjugh an intervention within the multiple
forms that constituted its medial specificit>\
The group's neo-expressionist aesthetic
had profound implications for sound as
well as image. Who Needs A Heart aimed
to test their ideas of'the expressionist
potential of music in film'. A thesis was
advanced concerning the ability of sound
to 'occupy centre stage' without being
subordinated to ideas or image; what was
proposed was the notion that 'sound itself
had a gaze, a way of constructing a look'."
This hypothesis was floated in Who Needs
A Heart's opening credit sequence:
a rostrum camera moved inexorahly
towards a close-up of pariah figure
Michael Abdul Malik's eye wbich stared
back at the spectator; this still motion
was punctuated by an archive news report
of Malik's capture in Guyana in 1972;
heralded by an electronic threnody that
alternated with sequences of a 1961
recording of long trumpet drones played
by the Llamas and Tibetan Monks of the
Four Great Orders. Tibetan ritual music
is intended as an offering that allows the
faithful the space to exist in a state of
repose, 'free from motivation, free from
context'.'*The drone exalted the image
of Malik; it bestowed a seriousness upon
it that one was neither prepared for
nor accTJstomed to. Sound set the terms
for looking not in order to underline
psychological territory nor to act as
musical character but to shape the
contours of film as terra incognita.
DRAWING THE FORMS OF THINGS UNKNOWN
96
Economically speaking, Wbo Needs
A Heart signalled a shift in the media
landscape of the early 1990s. The
independent film sector was not to be
subsidised but was instead expected to
compete with other production companies
for commissions. Black Audio Film
Collective reformed itself as Black Audio
Films; the group entered a new phase of
practice. Their continued presence in art,
film and television nonetheless complicated
historical accounts of the era that typically
centred around the movement of a cinema
of ideas into the gallery space, a shift
premised on the death of subsidised art
cinema. While this diagnosis was not
incorrect, it nonetheless found it difficult
to account for the fact that for BAF,
television became 'one of the few places
where... certain experiments could be
carried out'.'' Critical historiography has
largely focused upon the reconfiguration
of the cinematic imaginary in video art;
much less attention has been paid to the
formulation of a new digital aesthetic
within the realm of the televisual.
most strikingly in Memory Room 4SI
(1997). These video-essays did not
constitute either a 'counter-television
aesthetics''* nor a form of'Third
Television'.'' BAF videos can be seen
instead as manipulations with the 'graphic
possibilities of the machine'.'" If BAF had
reimagined the potentiality of the print
in Testament and the lens in Seven Songs,
From 1995 onwards. Black Audio Films
were ahle to exploit the space of television
for their project of monochromatic
colour. Neo expressionism reached its
apotheosis in late video essays such as Tbe
then the mid-1990s found the group
intent on experimenting with the specific
possihilities of the digital.
Last Angel of History ( 1995), Three Songs on
Toßnally have done witb ibis God.
8. An expression of unbelonging
Pain,Light andTime (1995), Martin Lutber
Toßnaüy abandon the search for a space
King:Days of Hope (1997), Gangsta Gangsta:
in tbis world. To become sometbing otber
The Trcyedy of Tupac Shakur (1998) and
tban o buman being. Edward George'^
The Last Angel of History was to become
the group's best-known later work,
inspiring at least two exhibitions,""
a conference,"' a video-installation,*'
a novel"* and numerous film festivals.
The archaeological imperative of the early
works had been projected into a future
anterior; from this perspective, the ruins
of the present were to be scrutinised hy
the figure of the Data Thief for technofossils. More sombrely still. Memory Room
451 proposed a world in which dreams
had hecome pay-per-view entertainment
networks and time travel nothing more
than badly paid shift work in temporal
graveyards. TTie futurological turn evidenced
by The Last Angel did not only respond
to the technophiliac narratives of the time
Kodwo Eshun
97
nor did it proclaim itself a mythos for
existed as intensities, as Kelvin values
compositions of British drum 'n' bass
films, videos, multimedia installations,
the digital diaspora. More profoundly,
of warm or cold. By placing two 85 blue
producers such as A Guy Called Gerald
essays, manifestos and statements of the
it identified what Akomfrah called
filters in front of the camera, the technology
which featured in Tbe Last Angel oJHistory.
Black Audio Film Collective one begins
'inventories of Afrofiiturology' that sought
could be tricked into interpreting white
The vivid yellow deserts oïTbe Last Angel
to understand the wavs in which the
to complicate the regime of truth that
heat as freezing coldness. Instead of
of History, the altered colour balance
group proposed a series of inquiries
structured the division between utopia and
closing down the lens to underexpose the
of Tbree Songs on Pain, Ligbt and Time,
addressed to the propriety oí" sound and
dystopia." Several critical analyses'^ bave
image, the camera was forced to open up
the occluded orange waterscapes and
the ontology of image; these questions,
empha.sised the meta-mythologies scripted
towards the light; it compensated for this
streaks of digital chroma that suffused
in turn, can be con.stituted as an inventorv
by George; what concerns this essay
excess of brightness bv burning out the
tbe archival images of American cotton
of moments of tbe aesthetic, of what it
is tbe forms of stylisation that embed
light, creating extremes of darkness and
plantations"^ in Memory Room 4SI, the
might be and wbat it could be. In tracking
the film's mythopoesis.
pools of shadow saturated with colour.
violent violet skies of Gangsta Gangsta
the artistic development of the aesthetic
Akomfrah argued that the brain used
and tbe televisual shrines of Tbe Black
formulations of epic construction and
The Collective filmed Tbe Last Angel
'a retinal history' to 'calculate light' so
Room were fantasia In which shadow an<l
neo expressionism over sixteen years,
of History in Detroit and in the white heat
that the eye recognised that it was being
light shaped the contours of damaged
a project emerges in whicb tbe indivisible,
of tbe Mojave Desert; at such temperatures,
'cheated' about 'spatial properties'.
lives. They were expressionist evocations
intractable field of poetics as politics
landscape is defined entirely by extremes
In other words, the spaces portrayed in
of a posthuman condition. By exploring
is envisioned, revisioned, revised
of light. Akomfrah explained that tbe
the BAF videos were entirely posthuman
the development of formal signatures
and produced with a formidable,
chromatic .spectrum of digital technology
scénographies that paralleled the posthuman
in the photography, collages, slide-tapes.
far-reaching attentiveness.
DRAWING THE FORMS OF THINGS UNKNOWN
98
Notes
14. See Interviews recorded for The Brixton Tapes,
Television History Workshop, The Other Cinema, 1982.
1. Henry James, The American Scene, quoted as epigraph
to James Baldwin, .^^other Counuj', Vintage, 1963.
5S. Gramsd, The Prison Notàiooks.
2. Michel Foucault. The Archaeology'of Knowledge, trans.
A. M. Shciidan Smith, London;Tavistock Publications,
1972, p. H I .
16. Gd)i Teichert in Alexander Kluge, Die Patnoun, 1979.
!7. Bannii^,'Feeding Off the Dead', p. Î6.
18. See Derek Walcott,'The Royd Palms... an absence
of rmns', The London Magazine, Vo]. 1 No. 11 February
1962;Zhigniew Herbert,'Report from A Besieged City';
Wilson Harris, 'Artifice and Root' in TheWoinb of Space:
4. See. for example,Tanya Barson, 'Time present and
time past', in Making HiaoryiAn and Docuraentaty in Britain The Cross-Cultural Imagination. Westport, CT; Greenwood
Press, 1983, pp. 1 19-37. Akomfrah had already studied
from J929w(\W,Tate, 3006, p- 17.
Althusser in the Black Marxism Reading Group, led by
5. Akomfrah has cited Andre Gor/'s Farewell to the Wonting
Ricky Cambridge, editor of The Black Liberator journal.
Claii:An Eisay on Post Industrial Soclalisw (1980) as i key
19. Laura Mulvey, '"Magnificent Ohsession": An
text for the Collective. See also Stuart Hall, The Hard
Road to RencuahThatchcnsm anJ tbe Crisis of the Left. Verso, Introduction to the Work of Five Photographers" (I^SS),
in Visual anJ Other Pleasures, London; Macmilian, 1991,
1988.
p. 129.
6. John Akiimfrah, in Kass Banning,'Feeding Off the
20. Akomfrah. 'On the Borderline', Ten 8. Vol. 2 No. 1,
iîfad: Necrophilia and the Black Inwginary', Border/Lines,
Spring 1991, p. 52.
No. 29/30, 1993, p. 38.
3. Clare Joseph ¡eft BAFC in !985; David Lawson joined
in the same year.
7. Antonio Gramsci, The FIISOB Nold>ooh, trans and ed.
Quintin Hoare and Geoffrey Nowell Smith, London;
Lawrence & Wishart, 1971. p. 324.
8.The work of BLK Art Group artists an») others retur
throughüut BAFC films: Sonia Boyc-c,Tain |oseph and
Gavin Jantje.s in Hantlsworth Songs (1986), Claudette
Jolinson and Keith Piper in Who Needs A Heart (1992)
and Donald Riidncy in Three .'ion/f! on Pain, tight
ufiJ Time (1996).
9. See for example Eddie Chambers, 'Some Notes on Pan
Africanism an»! Black Art in Britain', in Run Through the
Jungle: SclcacJWntinffs, ed. GilaneTawadros and Victoria
Clarke, inlVA, 1999.
10. SeoThelma Golden, 'Introduction', in Freestyle.
The Studio Museum in Harlem, 2001, pp. 14-1 5;Thelma
Golden and ChristineY. Kini,'lncroiluctorj' Dialogue',
in ffiijufnfj',The Studio Museum in Harlem, 2004,
pp. 14-17.
11. John Akomfrah, in Banning,'Feeding Off the Dead',
p. Î6.
12. Gramsci, The Prison Noiehooh, p. 324.
1 Î, Black .\udio Film Collective, Documfrniu 11_PlatJorm i:
Eihhition. Hatje Cantz, 2002, p. 553.
21. Edward George, 'When i am Queen, you will be loo:
Interviews and moments, real and imagined;
a supplement'. 1987, unpublished.
22. Mathison, George and Joseph studied Fine Art,
Akomfrah, Auguiste and Gopaul studied Sociology,
Johnson studied Psyt'hologj. Mathison went on to gain
an MA in Mixed Media at Chelsea School of .Art while
Auguiste studied for an MA in Comparative Literature
and Cross Cultural Aesthetics at University of Essex.
27. Akomfrah, in Banning.'Feeding Off the Dead", p. 38.
28. BBC TV's flagship news programme.
29. Author of The Dual Mandate in British Tropical Africa
(1922), Lugard was High Conunissioner of the Protectorate
of Northern Nigeria from 1900 to 1906 and responsihle
for amalgamating Nigeria into a single colony from 1914.
30. Mathison, interview with author, December 2005.
31. Jah Shaka can be seen in Handsworth Songs and in
Franco Rosso's Babylon (1980).The Collective attended
Shaka's soundsysiem dances throughout the 80s and 90s.
32. Akomfrah and George attended Cabaret Voltaire
andTest Department concerts at this dme. See Cabaret
Voltaire DouhleVision (Mute, 2004) andTest Department
Program for Progress (1982-84, Cherry Rt-<1, 2006), for
example."; oC their multimedia work. See Simon Reynolds,
Rip It Up and Start .igain. London; Faber & Faber, 2006,
pp. 170-71.
46.The notion o f The Atrocity Exhibition' referenced
both the title of J. G. Ballard's condensed novel (1970)
and Donald Rodney's first solo exhihitíon 'The Atrocity
Exhihition and other Empire Stories' (1986).
47. See Mirage: Enigmas of Race. Difference and Desire,
ICA/inlVA, 199S.
48. The enlarged photographs of married couples in the
1950s were sourced from the archives of Birmingham
City Lihrary while Boy with Flag. Handsworth Park.
Birmingham, England, 1978 is the work ofVanley Burke.
See Stuart Hall, 'Vanley Burke and the "Desire for
Blacknes.'i'", in Vanley Burke.A Retronpectire. Lawrence
& Wishart, 1993. p. 12 and Mora]. Beauchamp Byrd,
'Everyday People; Vanley Burke 8t the Ghetto as Genre',
in Back to Black. Art. Cinema &^the Racial Imaginary.
34. Leah Dickerman, The Propandizing oJThings, NewYork, ed. R. J. Powell, D. A. Bailey and P Archer-Straw,
The Museum of Modern Art, p. 88.
Whitechapel Gallery, 2005. pp. 175-82.
33. Mulvey,'Magnificent Obsession', p. 129.
35. George, 'When I am Queen, you will he too'.
49. Hall, 'Vanley Burke and the "Desire for Blackness"',
36. A condition named hy Bachelard, The Poetics of Space.
pp. 183-211.
p. 15.
50. Uriel Orlow, 'Lateni Archives, Roving Lens', in
Ghosting:The Role of the .\rchive wilhin Contemporary .Artists
Film andVideo, ed. Jane Connarty and Josephine Lanyon,
38. Hilda Kean, TheTransforttiaiion of Political and Cultura! BrturcThis, 2006, p. 35.
Space in tjindoti from Punk to Blair, ed. Joe Kerr and
51. Coco Fusco,'Black Eilmmaking in Britain's Workshop
.Andrew Gibson, London; Reaktion Books, 200Í.
37.X-RaySpex,'Identity',A&M, 1978.
23. Images such as McPherson and Oliver <attr.).
39. Alison Butler. 'The Half Open Door, Channel Four
The Scourged Back. 1863, a carte de-visite of à male slave
and Inilependent Production in the UK', The Independent.
in profile, hand at hin side, his hack a mass of scars and
Fihn andVideo Monthly, October 1987,p. IS.
welts; later appropriated hy Carrie Mae Weems for her
work Frotn Here I fianWhai Happetieii and I Cried (\'í9S—9(>).
40. John Fitzpatrick,'Hackney meets Hollywood",
24. See Margaret Dickinson, ed.. Rogue Reels: Opposiuonal Living Marxism. September 1989. p. 45.
Film in Britain. I94Í-I990. BFI Publishing, pp. 308-09.
See also www.iooponline.coop for the historj' ofthe
Briti^ cooperative movement.
41. John Akomfrah, 'Black Independent Film-making;
A Statement by the Black Audio/Film Collective',
Artrage. No. 3/4. Summer 1983.
35. Gaston Bachelard, The Poetics of Space, trans.
Maria Joia.s, Beaton Press, 1994, p. 192.
42. Looking Black programme notes.
26. Alexsandr Rodchenko, 'Ways of Contemporary
Photo^phy' ( 1928), in Alcxsandr Rodchenko, ed. M.
Dahrowki, L. Dickerman, P. Galassi, NewYork:
The Museum of Mmiern Art, 1 '398, p. 88.
45. See Jim Pines,'Introduction", in The Aisoctatwn of Black
Film andI'idepWorkshops Brochure, BR, 1988 and June
Givanni, 'A Curator's Conundrum: Programming "Black
Film" in 1980s-199()s Britain'. The Movitig ¡wage. Vol. 4,
November 1 Spring 2004, pp. 60-75.
Sector'. Ajierlmage, February 1988, p. 1 3.
52. Akomfrah. in Paul Gilroy and Jim Pines, 'Handsworth
Songs; Audiences/ Acsthetioi/ In<lepenilence', Fratnework.
No. 35, 1988, p. 13.
53. l-latidsworth Songs reworked four sequences from
The Colony which wa.s set in Birmingham; each scene
was tinted in blue or sepia yellow, interviewers' and
interviewees' voices were removed and scenes rescored
with a musique coucrèu soundtrack composed by Mathison.
43. Una Gopaul, in conversation with author, July 2006.
54. Robert Collis and Phillip Dodd, "Representing the
Nation; British Documentary Film 1930-1945', Screen.
Vol. 26 No. I, January February 198S,p. 23.
44. Edward George, 'New Directions in Training' (1985)
and Lina Gopaul,'Which Way Forward?" (1985) both
in this volume.
55. Derek Walcon, CoUecteJ Poems I94S-I984.
Straus and Giroux, 1997.
Farrar,
Kodwo bshun
56. See Donald Kodney: Doublethink, rd, Richard Hvlton,
Autograph. 200Î.
7Î. Pervaiz Khan, 'Black and White', Sight and Sound,
57. See RoOrai Fani-Kayode and Alex Him, ed. Mark Sealy,
Revue Noir/Autograph, 1997.
74. Akomfrah in conversation with author,Täte Britain,
58. Kobena Mercer, james Van DetZee, London: WiaJdon,
30OÎ,p. 108.
75. Akomfrah in conversalion with author, March 2006.
May 1992, pp. 30-Î1,
2004,
76. As suggested by Butler,'The Half Open Door', p, 17.
59. Akomfrah, in conversation with author, March Í006.
77. As a parallel toThird Cinema priijiosed by Siarita
60. The Harlem Bcok of tbe Dead, James Van DerZee, Owen
Malik, Hepresenting Black Britain. Blact anii.isian Images on
Dodson and Camille Billops, New York, Morgan &
Television. London : Thousand Oiks, Delhi: SAGE
Morgan, 1978.
Publications, 2002, p. 164.
61. MerceLT. James Van DerZee, p, 108.
78. John Akomfrah, in conversation, March 2006.
62. Judith Butler, Precarious life.The Powers of Mourning and
79. Edward George,'(ghosi the signal)', in this volume.
Violence. Verso, 2004, p. 20.
6Î. See iMac Julien and Nina Kellgren in conversation,
Looking for Langiton, broi-iiure notes. BFI, 2005, pp. 11-13.
Kellgren. Director of Photography on Looking for langaon,
said 'at the time, the metering system, the ercv scale
was all based aroiunl Caucasian skin, and you can'l ju.st..,
work at it, in a standard way that vou would with white
slün, around which the whole technology wa.% based, so
you have to approach it in a very different way. We had
tremendous discu.wions about this and I got a great
education from the directors.'
64. See Richard Dyer, While, Introduction, London and
New York: Routledge, 1997, p, 82,
65. Arthur Jafa, 'Like Rashomon but Different', vtrt/örum,
June 1993,
80. Motbenhip Conntaion, Stedelijk Museum Bureau,
December 19%-January 1997.
81. loving the Allen, September, l997Volksbuhne,
See also Lot-ing the Alien: Science Fiaion. Diaspora,
Multikuttur. ed, Dietrich Dietrii hsen, Berlin: ID Verlag,
1998.
82. Isaac Julien in conversation wilh John Akomfrah,
at the From Ba(la.ss to l.ast Angel' scTeening at Tbc Other
Cinema. London 22 November 2004. Julien stated that his
film Baltimore was influenced by The Last .Angel af History.
Si. See Thomas Meineckc, Hellblau. Roman Suhrkamp,
2001.
H4. Jiihn Akomfrah, unpuhlished lecture, Goldsmiths
66. Thomas Allen Harris,'Searching the Diaspora: An
Interview vrith John Akomfrah', ,4^rlmû^, April 1992, p,
10.
Camps: Race, Idattity and Nationaltstn at the Etid of the Colour
67. Harris, 'Searching the Diaspora', p. 11,
85. See Sean Cubitt, Digital Aeahetics, London: Sage,
68. Gabriel Rockliill, 'Translator's Introduction',
in Jacques Ranciere, Tbe Politia ^Aestbeüa, London:
New York, Continuum, 2004, p, 3,
Times of Globalisation. Hano\er, NH, and Uindon:
University Press of Neve England, 2002; and Sheila J.
69. Harris,'Searching the Diaspora'.
Angel of History', forthcoming.
70. Kristin Ross, May 68 and its Afterlires. Chicago
and London; University of Chicago Press, 2002, p. 23,
86.These animations, designed by Mathison and Pervaiz
College, November 2004. See also Paul Gilroy, Between
Une. Allen Lane: Penguin Press, 2000. pp, Î27-56.
1998; Ruth Mayer, Artificial Áfricas: Colonial Images in ihe
E'etty, 'Afrofuturist Vi«cHis in John Akomfrah's Tbe Last
71. Benedict dc Spinoza, Ethia. trans. Edwin Curley,
Penguin Books, 1996, p- 69,
72. John Akonifrah, interview with author, March 2006.
Khan, antitipali-d Jeremy Blake's digital animations lor
Paul Thomas Anderson's film Puncb Drunk Lore {2002)
by six years.
132
131. Edward George, the Mojavc Desert,
Tbe Last Angel ofHatory, 1995
I 32 - 3 3. The Mojave De&crt, The Last Angel
of History. 1995
1 34. John Akomfr^, Dewald .Akcuma, Lina Gopaul,
Memory Room 4 5 / , 1997
1 35, Tupac Shakur memorial. New York,
Cangsta Gangsta: Tbe Tragedy of Tupac Sbakur, 1998
136. Trevor Mathison, Edward Georse, on location,
Gangsta Gangsta:Tbe Tragedy of Tupac Sbakur, 1998
106
COALITION BUILDING:
BLACK AUDIO FILM
COLLECTIVE AND
TRANSNATIONAL
POSTCOLONIALISM
OKWUI ENWEZOR
137.
Psychic Splits:
Dialectics of Crisis and Renewal
One of the central qualitie.s of the
revoludonarv discourse of modernism
and the art that defined its most
progressive ideals during the twentieth
century is the enduring idea of an evercreative self destruction and constant
reinvention.The assaults on the formal,
discursive and material elements (and
propriety) of modern art allowed artists
to participate in the dual characteristics
often ascribed to modernity: progress
and change and the rapid transformation
of social experience brought about
by urbanisation and industrialisation.
At the helm of the cycle of destruction.
deconstruction and reconstitution were
various entities of the historical avantgardes. In each stage of this phoenix-like
transformation — both in terms of form
and content, methodology and concept
— modern art, in the hands of avant-garde
artists, deployed a set of dialogical
constructs {classicism and modernity,
destruction and renewal, for example)
to distinguish its critical models from
those that had dominated the work of the
previous generation of Western European
artists up to Edouard Manet. Artists from
Cezanne onwards would attack the spatial
stability of painterly perspective which
subsequently came to influence the work
of Braque and Picasso.
At the same time as these changes
were occurring, artists of the European
avant-gardes were being confronted with
new notions of form through their crosscultural encounters witb non European
art and objects. These encounters, though
historicised as part of the legacy of the
historical avant-gardes, existed at the
juncture where colonial and colonised
cultures met, and would become relativised
as the encounter between the modern
and the primitive. In this way a significant
aspect of modernism was its response to
subjectivity and identity; more specifically,
the manner in which notions of primitivism
pressed upon Western avant garde artists
to sublimate the values of non-Western
artistic canons. So from its early
Photographic test. Expeditions, 1982
formulation. Western modernism, seen
from within its source (modernity), was
singularly endowed with the canny ability
of endless repetition: it constantly staged
a revolt not only within its means of
production, but in its relationship to
subjectivity and identity (Van Gogb), in
its exploration of the dialogic intersection
between seifand other (Gauguin), and —
a constant in Its methods and discourses
- in the carnal association between the
primitive and the modern (Picasso).
Thi.s conjunction of modernism and
primitivism is a commonplace, but tritical
reflection on modernism has been less
rigorous in addre.ssing issues of race and
identity, especially the question raised by
i
108
COALITION BUILDING: BLACK AUDIO FILM COLLECTIVE AND TRANSNATIONAL POST COLONIALISM
138
what Frantz Fanon identified as an
epidermal schema:' the issue of race
writ large and overwritten by processes
of historical repression (Surrealism being
one example) whit^h would be recuperated
by artists associated with the Harlem
Renaissance in the United States and
Négritude in France in the 1920s and
1940s, respectively.'This epidermal
schema, transposed to the values of
subjectivity and identity, is a harbinger
of some of the preoccupations of
multiculturalism in the 1980s.
Before examining this legacy and how
it plays out in the narrative, documentary
and experimental films and writings of
Black Audio Film Collective and its larger
139
submersion in the rhetoric of diaspora
and the production of transnational
post-colonialism, it is important to
underscore modernism's attachment
to processes of renewal. Revolutionary
modernist artists worked simultaneously
to degrade and rejuvenate the dim embers
of modernism and its progressive critical
models, first by attacking and pitting
themselves against both traditionalists
and progressives; and secondly, by recourse
to self-analysis (a form of return of the
repressed): a return, no doubt, linked
to forms of self-questioning through acts
of indiscipline and refusal of convention.
Today these acts of transgression against
the rules of modernism's practice and
procedures have been largely adopted
and ensbrined as the central legacy of
the historical avant-gardes as health giving
dissenters of modern art. The history
of the insurgency perpetrated by the
twentieth century avant-garde movements
can therefore be understood from these
procedures of renewal: moving from
backwardness to enlightenment, from
convention to experimentation, from
stabihty to instability. Understood in
this way, these were attacks articulated
not only witbin the forms of artistic
practice but were also staged at the base
of society and its institutions.
Antinomies of the Multitude
The Western historical avant-gardes thus
developed their rethinking of modernist
practices in two fundamental ways, each
related to how modern art sits witbin
systems of institutional legitimation on the
one hand, and witbin the bourgeois tastes
ofWestern society at large on the other.
On the first level artists responded to
perceived crises in tbeir given discipline,
requiring a complete rethinking of the
parameters of the object and its content.
As a consequence, twentieth century
modernism was constituted - in relation
to avant-garde practices — by a range of
antinomies. The most obvious example is
the perceptual reordering engineered by
Okwui Enwezor
109
New Negro
U Mil ÏELIE
\KliHK tT
ntSÎ
à
1 38. The First International Congress of Negro
Writers and Artists, I9S6
I 39. Group photograph iif delegates to the First
Inlcrnational Ciingn-ss of Negro Writers and Artists,
The Sorbonne, Paris, I9S6
140. Leopold Sedar Senghor, Anthologie de la Nouvelle
Poèite Ségrt et .Malgache de Langue Française, introduction
hy Jean Paul Sartre, 1948
Cubism, and by extension the
transformation of medium purity by
the Cubist collage, and of temporal and
narrative continuity in the use of montage
in film. On another level there was
a deeper antinomy, the reality of which
i.s the pervasive social crisis evidenced by
large-scale cultural, political and economic
changes early in the twentieth century,
such as the First World War and the
Bolshevik Revolution in Russia, and the
increasing domination of everyday life
by forces of industrial capitalism.
A third antinomy, one which since
the late nineteenth century has become
the leitmotif of modemitv, is the massive
movement of people across political
and cultural borders. These migrations
throughout the twentieth century
transformed the cultural maps of many
nations, making the idea of border cTossinp
a key motif of dwelling, a zone from which
new cultural practices were formed and
sustained. Underscoring this, in our time,
post-colonial migration — most of which
occurred after the collapse of European
colonial projects in Africa, Asia, the
Caribbean and Latin America - deepened
what it means to be cosmopolitan.
141 . Alain Locke (ed.) The New Negro. 192S
However, this cosmopolitanism is widelv
142. Aimé Césaire, Discourse on Colonialism, 19SS
divergent from the emigre culture oi'ßn de
143. Stokely Carmichael and Charles V. Hamilton,
siècle Paris. London and Paris - which were
Blúck Pnucr'The Po!ltics of Liberation m .Xmerica, 1967
headquarters of substantial colonial empires
144. Hucy P. Newton, Revalatlonary Suicide, 1973
- experienced a different sort of migration
145. The Situationist Internütional .\nihologf, 1981
in the post Second World War period.
Even in the United States, the massive
black migration from the South to the
urban centres ofthe North was a product
ofthe third antinomy. It made places such
as Harlem into cosmopolitan centres of
lilack culture, and gave rise to the loose
collective of wTiters and artists that form
the Harlem Renaissance. This larçe biack
migration to the cities of the North, like
the post Second World War post-colonial
migrations that accelerated in Europe,
bringing a new flow of immigrants,
transformed key cultural forms of Western
urban life. The Négritude movement another loose collective of pan-African
writers and artists formed in Paris
between the wars - is, like the Harlem
Renaissance group in NewYork, part
ofthe cultural process of migration. In a
sense the development of these collectives
seems always bound to issues concerning
the conceptualisation ofthe multitude, that
is, they emerge with a sense of historical
awareness of group identification and a
desire to effect changes in institutional
paradigms. As such, collective activities
can be located at the level ofthe multitude,
in order to articulate key deficits in
cultural djxd political positions.
Tlie multitude., like most revolutionarv
forces, therefore emerges from crisis.
The loss of space in the social forums
of society or the lack of participation in
the development of historical processes
is often a driving force behind these
COALITION BUILDING: BLACK AUDIO FILM COLLECTIVE AND TRANSNATIONAL POST COLONIALISM
MO
146, Poster,The Second Conference of Neero
Writers and .\rtists, Rome, 19S9
148, Tí« Black Panther, Saturday, October 19, 1969
147. The Black Liberator, Vol. 2. No. 3
June 1974-January 1975
150, Images oj'Nationality, 1982-84
149, rill- Black Patither. Saturday, November I 3, 1969
BLACK LIBERATION STtlUeGLE SHOWS PROGRESS
149
147
formations. The protest movements
of the 1960s produced situations for
the amelioration and deconstruction of
standards of cultural and artistic practice.
From anti colonial movements, the radical
liherationist politics of guerrilla and
environmental groups such as The Black
Panther Party in the US, FLN in Algeria,
PLO in Palestine, Red Army Faction,
Red Army in Japan, Greenpeace, .Animal
Liberation Front and other groups were
not exclusively centred in the sphere of
politics. In the same way, there occTirred
a parallel field of activities in the sphere
of culture, whereby artistic responses to
the political CTÍSÍS that pervaded the 1960s
and the 1970s brought into focus the
work of collectives such asTucuman Arde
(Rosario, Argentina), Laboratoire AgitArt (Dakar, Senegal), Artists and Writers'
Protest and Spiral (New York), and Arts
West Associated (Los Angeles). In the case
ofTucuman Arde, the great rupture that
needed to occur was in the separation
of aesthetics from art, and in so doing the
approach of their practice was orientated
towards producing a 'violent collective
action' out of which new cultural content
could emerge.' In the case of Laboratoire
Agit-Art, the tactics of rupture were
directed simultaneously at the ossified
politics of the post-colonial State and the
institutionalised form of commodity
objects to which Senegalese artists had
surrendered.* For the American group,s,
their work emerged directly from
concerns developed out of the civil rights
and black power movements, fusing
cultural activism and the strategy of
protest in their work. According to Kel!ie
Jones, the groups 'became involved with
civil rights, disarmament, and anti-war
issues, participating in letter-writing
campaigns, interventions in newspapers,
protest marches and pursuing a focus in
integration into museums and other
mainstream art world settings'.'
In a similar vein, the Situationists'
notion of psychogeographic practices as
part of the revolution of everyday life
advances a model of collective activity and
action upon the social fabric. TTiese models
represent articulations of the productivity
of collective thinking. They enunciate
distinctive protocols of c-oUective endeavour.
Artists of different political and cultural
persuasions understood the importance
of the multitude in the conceptualisation
and production of space, as an activity
no longer connected to discrete practices
of individual artists, but as statements
connected to what Antonio Negri
and Michael Hardt enunciated as 'life
in common'." In Hardt and Negri's
formulation, 'life in common' is at the
root of the collective power of the multitude.
It is produced across boundaries of
difference, in solidarity, with broad
forms of affiliation, 'in a spiral,
expansive relationship'.'
ê
112
COALITION BUILDÍNG: BLACK AUDIO FILM COLLECTIVE AND TRANSNATIONAL POST-COLONIALISM
OFTHf
If the Situationists advocated the dispersed
perambulations of the derive as the means
hy which the multitude achieves part of its
social restitution, the Brazilian conceptual
artists Helio Oiticica and Cildo Meireles
advocated something else at the level of
the social and ideological respectively. For
Oiticica, the Parangole, the multi-coloured
capes he designed for performances that
traversed the variou.s contours of Rio de
Janeiro's favelas, can be likened to a form
of social attire; one which allows the
celebrants of his collectivised performiuices
to stake a claim to and produce a new
social space. On the other hand Meireles
attempted to pierce the opacity of the
public sphere of Brazil's political culture
dominated hy the military dictatorship
from the 1960s to the 1980s through what
he calls insertions into ideological circuits.
TTiese insertions were conceptual works
conceived for free, random distribution
of key political statements in the .sphere
of exchange and the commodity. Here,
though, the individual artist is not working
along the lines of the modernist notion
of the autonomous artist, but as a member
oí a broad affiliation of citizens engaped in
cultural dispute with authorities of power
and systems of enclosure that they impose
on free expression. In the proposals of the
Situationists, Oiticica and Meireles, the
articulation of social production converges
with and diverges from the early methods
of the European historical avant garde
collectives which tended to be grounded
in the narrow sense of a collective as
a body of producers. However, attributes
of the historical avant-garde strategies
serve as important precedents for the
activities of later groups. Therefore,
in their meeting and separation, these
strategies and activities highlight the key
lexicons of collectivity: from the more
traditional interventions of the early
European avant-gardes which attacked
the circuits of production and institutional
canons of legitimation to transnational
avant-garde formations which centred
their expressions across broader cultural,
political and social formations. Meireles,
in a statement from 1970, captures this
divergence in a reference to Duchamp'.s
work. He writes: 'If Marcel Duchanip
intervened at the level of Art (logic of
phenomena), what is done today, on the
contrary, tends to he closer to Culture
than to Art, and that is necessarily
a political intervention...'"
This statement helps us in situating
the critical parameters that inform the
cinematic and intellectual ambitions of
Black Audio Film Collective as the late
modernist approaches to action of the
1970s gave way to the postmodernist
strategies of critique of totalisation and
grand narratives of the 1980s. Taken
together, some of these developments are
key indicators for understanding the critical
development of BAFC in the early 1980s
in London. There was no question that the
Ukwui tnwpzor
<3-
O
>
NING
151-57. ¡maga of Nationality, 1982- 84
1980s marked a period of rethinking
of forms of cultural power and
representation among minority artists
and intellectuals in England. If BAFC's
emergence coincided with the collectivised
and radicalised aspirations of British racial
minorities, tbe group's critical project
could be understood as rising from the
base of a multi-ethnic and cosmopolitan
mukitutle based on a series of transnational
intersections.
Figurations of Ethnicity
I have used this outline partially to orient
us towards a more historically inflected
reception of the emergence of Black Audio
Film Collective, especially as part ofthat
unique hybrid of post-colonial artist/
intellectual practice. The task of this
account, therefore, is not to rehearse
many of the commonplaces of modernist
history; rather, it is to examine certain
genealogies of radical practice, and tbeir
implications for the work of groups such
as BAFC. More specifically, I began an
account of modernist and early avantgarde collectives in order to seek possible
connections between the different models
that emerged at the end of the twentieth
century. My goal is also to move beyond
these models in order to show a new side
of the faceted coins of modernism and
contemporary art. What I intend to do
is provide a basic and cursory review.
BAFC's formation is bound up in the
spirit, the Zeitgeist of the post-Notting
Hill riots in whicb the black British
community contested tbeir social
invisibility and political powerlessness.
BAFC,' and related groups
or such as Sankofa
The main historical period that
concerns us is the 1980s, the decade when
BAFC was first formed by a coalition of
young black Britishfilm-makers.The
group wanted to formulate a nonhegemonic regime of cinema practice that
did not sublimate the specificity of black
and diasporic critical models through the
whitewash of mainstream white liberal
systems of representation. Emerging from
the British film workshop model, a model
connected to leftist labour practices,"
Film Collective and Ceddo, were young
film-makers intent on disarming the
primitivist social model reserved for
Asians, Africans, West Indians and Muslims
in Britain. The focus of BAFC's analysis —
the analytical purpose of the cinema being
proposed is key here - was a cinema
centred around complex accounts of black
subjectivity. In the manifesto (Do not all
avant-gariles publish manifestos?) 'Black
Independent Film-making: A Statement
by the Black Audio/Film Collective''"
114
COALITION BUILDING: BLACK AUDIO FILM COLLECTIVE AND TRANSNATIONAL POST COLONIALISM
Pot €l9rky Mqdeirá, and Jamfiica,
turthen 400 Ton^ 94 Gu
I
•
Ml
prr
, , she will UiZtû orbefürc,
N. B. Surgcíonsan
ranted, for Ships i
ítan Trade,
A
published in Artrage, John Akomfrah
reflects succinctly on the task of
independent black British cinema: 'What,
after all does "black independent filmmaking" mean when present film culture
is a largely white affair?' he asks. In his
response he not only discusses the agency
of black filmmakers, but also sets up
the implicit task of the group's work
as directed towards the deconstruction
of the fetishisdc attachment to the cult
ofthe auteur which earlier independent
avant-garde film-makers such as those
ofthe French NewWave had embraced.
The logic of collectivity they were to
adhere to was not based exclusively on
collectivised labour, but also included
forms of identification and modes of
spectatorship with a broader transnational
historical framework. To bring together
two ideals of collectivity, namely the
forms of division of labour specific to tbe
group and the broader alignment with
questions of black and diasporic histories,
Akomfrah then emphasised the central
task: 'The Black Audio Film Collective has
chosen to take up these issues in a very
particular way, and this is around the
question of the "figuration of etfinicity"
in cinema'."The quest also included the
'attempt to look critically at how racist
ideas and images of black people are
structured and presented as self-evident
truths in cinema'."
I Copper Ditto for 4^p-Sla
I Irnn ^nraacei4i Cíalion
»I.
Rapports des forces:
Resisting Representation
It is important to place Akomfrah's
statement in the context of the emerging
consensus among various post-colonial and
decolonisation movements which insisted
that the tools of representation must be
wrested away from the disciplining grip
of various state organs and their repressive
policy initiatives which target minorities
living in the West. This state machinery
also acted at long distance through the
export of proxy terror to suppress the
cultural goals of large majorities in client
states: Iran and Afghanistan are two
important examples, especially in the early
part of the decade during the populist
conservative regimes of Ronald Reagan
in the USA and Margaret Thatcher in
Great Britain. This was the period of high
Cold War. Equally significantly, the early
years ofthe Islamic revolution in Iran and
the guerilla war in Afghanistan against the
Soviet army brought to the fore the forces
of radical Islamic politics. There were,
as well, divergent cultural positions that
defined some ofthe practices ofthe time:
feminist, gender, queer, multicultural,
subalternist and Pan-Africanist theories to
name just a few. Perhaps these alignments
should suggest a rethinking of what we
mean by collectivity. One can distinguish
between formal collectives and informal
collectives. Formal collectives are those
groups such as BAFC organised specifically
116
COALITION BUILDING: BLACK AUDIO FILM COLLECTIVE AND TRANSNATIONAL POST COLONIALISM
1S8. Photographic test. Expeditions, 1983 - 84
1 S 9 - 6 1 . HouiiiB'orlA Songs, 1986
as a working group with a signature that
designates the specificity of their practice
and identification with a product, image,
text, etc. Informal collectives arc broadbased social movements that galvanise
individual supporters around common
interests in order to affect and correct
critical deficit in the political and social
sphere. Such movements do not have
a defined membership, but engage
adherents and supporters across the
political, economic and cultural classes.
The feminist movement is one example.
Given these shifts during the 1980s,
many of which began in the 1960s, the
political and cultural frontlines of the
world were moving, sliding away from the
dominant forms of coercive power and
hegemonic institutional practice which
had defined the Cold War. Viewed
from the vantage point of the present,
a centrifugal force was building: it was
then in its nascent stage. The world was
in play. There were being formed what
Pierre Bourdicu called rapports des forces,
a idnd of coalition of radical counterpower.
Seen thus, the 1980s was the period when
the forces of resistance were placed at the
radial joints of a new oppositional politics
of form and representation. The kind of
work produced by collectives began to
take critical stock of the long-standing
problems between representation and
social repression. They were based on
certain types of mild iconoclasm. Looking
back it becomes clear - with groups such
as ACT UP, Group Material, Autograph,
IRWIN, Guerilla Girls, Urban Bush
Women, REPO History, Gran Fury,
Colectivo Cine Ojo - that this decade
marked a watershed, a golden era
of collective artistic practice in
contemporary art and culture at large.
This happened not only because the
contemporary artistic and cultural spheres
were in a state of volatility, but also
because political developments in the
post-colonial world brougbt artists and
intellectuals face to face with a reconfigured
subaltern articulation of a new cultural
and political discourse. If the rules of the
game in modernism had had a coherent
self-understanding, an inner tension that
the artists of the historical avant-gardes
reacted to, either in opposition or parasitic
collusion, then the fact of the post-colonial
shattered that sense of coherence,
particularly in the case of contemporary
art and culture. Post-colonial subjectivity
thwarted and frustrated the old assumption
of stable categories within which
permissible forms of rebellion were
allowed to occur. Rather than a singular
modernity," as Fredric Jameson has
argued recently, post-colonial subjectivity
placed a premium on and argued for the
priority of multiple modernities. This
represents a signal shift from the dialectic
of crisis and renewal to the dialectic of
crisis and difference, a primal challenge
to the certitudes ofWestern totalisation.
okwui Enwezor
117
Transnational Post-colonialism:
Dialectics of Crisis and Difference
-
The aesthetic and ideological programme
of BAFC rests on this fundamental fact:
the dialectic of crisis and difference is what
distinguishes its form of avant-pardism
from that of the historical avant-gardes.
How might we situate this signal moment
in the practice of BAFC? One must
begin from the ground of transnational
post colonialism. By this term I mean to
introduce a set of historical and theoretical
frameworks shared by loose and sometimes
incommensurate alliances, between various
decolonising social forces," progressive
political movements, and a new crosscultural coalition between intellectuals,
artists and activists that spans different
ethnic and national groups with a shared
hi.story and experience of coloni.sation.
Arriving in Western European cities in the
immediate post-war years, as immigrants,
students and guest workers, these groups
shared another common experience: they
lived on the margins of the host societies
where they had settled. But one enduring
historical experience, especially in the
context of Britain, was the connection
to the British Empire and its social
intervention into the subjectivity of the
native. The memhers of BAFC shared
this legacy of empire.
It was therefore in salutary recognition
of this fact of empire - its exaggerated
moral imperative, its civilising pomposity
— that BAFC's first project Expeditions:
Sign.i of Empire/ Images of Nationality served
as an intellectual inauguration of the key
themes oftheir work: race, ethnicity,
difference, colonialism, empire, hybridity,
exile and transnational post-colonialism.
In Expeditions, we are confronted with the
question of the incessant return to the
historical archive as the ground zero for
an archaeology of colonial .suhjectivity, and
as Homi Bhahha reminds us, as a scene
of ambivalence.''What is fascinating ahout
this first outing of BAFC is the prototypical
form of its cinematic language: the 3Smm
slide tape. Having promulgated a manifesto
outlining its intentions, the question is why
did BAFC choose this proto cinematic
route? The answer may lie in the formal
structure of the work, especially in its
intertextual reworking of text, sound and
image, each sliding across the space of the
other, occluding, excavating and amplifying
the simultaneous relay of history,
commentary and sonic affect. Expeditions
demonstrates a key element that ha.s heen
constant in all of BAFC's film work, the
use of the visual and aural sample. More
.specifically, it underscores the importance
of the archive as more than a metaphor
for archaeology. Rather, the archive is
both a residual trace and, as the refrain in
Handsworth Songs suggests, a ghost machine
incubating the ghosts of many other
stories. Rather than being a moving image
machine. Expeditions is a kind of writing
18
COALITION BUILDING: BLACK AUDIO FILM COLLECTIVE AND TRANSNATIONAL POST COLONIALISM
machine in the sense that the archival
images drawn from the cupboards of
empire are textualised.Thus, BAFC began
their critical project not from the point
of view of a moving image culture, but
as a writing project, with tbe archive of
empire representing a site for rewriting
the narratives of empire. It is the numbing,
repetitive, sinister, almost electronic
voice-over that transforms and informs
the languidly paced movement of the
slide dissolves. As one listens, a voice
continuously intones: 'The ones who
are born hero, if you look they are young
people really... I think they don't know
who they are or what they are... really
what you're asking is how one gives
them a sense of belonging...'
o
fa
Expeditions alerts us not only to the
rewriting of the crisis of empire, but
reminds us of the psychic rupture inherent
in post-colonial subjectivity. More than
anything, it is this legacy that defines
BAFC's principal cinematic project:
one dedicated to the production of a
transnational post-colonial public sphere.
In the metropolis where the group
emerged, tbe dire conditions under
which various post-colonial citizens found
themselves, their lifeworlds marginalized
in relation to the social practices of the
majoritarian culture, became tbe concrete
sites of disaffection. In tbe 1980s,
transnational post-colonial practices
and discourses reacted in open defiance
against the political crises produced by
Thatcherism and Reaganomics, and the
hostilities aimed at racial minorities.
For British culture, some may point to
the Brixton riots of 1981 as the seminal
event that broke the dam of repressed
post-colonial subjectivities and laid bare
the residual animosities between the black
British community and empire. The
aftermath of the riots produced a
rethinking of cultural strategies and
unleashed the creative fury of British
minorities. The flowering of Briti.sb
cultural studies bolstered by the analytical
rigour of Stuart Hall, the rediscovery of
the works of the likes of C.L.R. James,
the emergence of thinkers such as Paul
Giiroy and Kobena Mercer, the launch
ofTKirdText by Rasheed Araeen, and the
emei^ence of Southall Black Sisters
among a host of other groups gives an
indication of the artistic and intellectual
climate under which Black Audio Film
Collective was founded and within
which it operated.
Tbe collective's key work, Handswortb
Songs (1986), is a succinct articulation
of the dialectic of crisis and difference,
and a critical primer - in artistic terms of transnational post-colonialism. Though
Handiworth Songs is an analvtical essav on
the cultural conditions under which young
black men and women in Britain lived,
and the racist policing tactics directed
against them, the film, produced for
120
COALITION BUILOING: BLACK AUOlO FILM COLLECTIVE AND TRANSNATIONAL POST COLONIALISM
162, Poster, Handsworth Snngs, 1986
Design: Edward George
163-64, Handsworth Songs. 1986
Channel Four, did not merely reflect upon
profoundly the agency of the oppressed;
the structural violence ofThatcherism.
it narrates their stories, not purely from
In the aftermath of the protests in
the point of view of the event from which
Handsworth, the iilm inhabits a different
it derives its name, but equally through
order of things: it is as much about
an archaeology of the visual archive of
elsewhere as about Britain.That elsewhere
minoritarian dwelling in Britain. As is
is the broader post colonial world. This
often the case in BAFC's work, the ghosts
feeling of disjuncture is reflected not only
of those stories inform the notion of a
in the jump cuts of the film's narrative
historically inflected dub cinema whose
discontinuity - moving between archival
spatial, temporal and psychic dynamics
photographs, newsreel fragments, media
relays the scattered trajectories of
reportage, and on site interviews - it is
immigrant communities. This is what
also deeply anchored by the sombre aural
makes Handswortb Songs a classic of 1980s
pulse, the disjunctive syncopation of the
cultural analysis alongside such works as
snare drum beat, the mournful reverb
The Centre for Contemporary Cultural
of the dub score that .sustains a quiet rage.
Studies collectively authored Tbe Empire
Though ostensibly addressing the issues
Strikes Back (1982) and Paul Gilroy s There
oí policing, Handswortb Songs reflects more Ain't No Black in the Union Jack (1987).
Taken together, BAFC's work from
its earliest inception has functioned on the
level of archeology through relentless data
mining of African and diasporic history.
This history represents the black box
of BAFC's attempt to formulate a critical
account of transnational post-colonialism.
In this sense, the work is always an attempt
to formulate an advance publicity for
its critical models.
Third Cinema and Proletarian Publicity
To historicise fiilly the place of Black
Audio Film Collective in the discourse
of collective practices in the 1980s, and
in relation to the dialecijc of crisis and
difference, we must go beyond Margaret
Thatcher's Great Britain to the larger
arena of the transnational public sphere.
However, it is important to differentiate
this public sphere from the bourgeois
public sphere'* theorised by Jürgen
Habermas, which is closer to that
confronted by the early avant-gardes of
the twentieth century. Perhaps the most
apposite designation is what Oskar Negt
and Alexander Kluge cal! the proletarian
public sphere, by which the agendas
Okwui Enwezor
of the collectives of the 1980s were
to make clear their signal ideological
differences from the political classes
against whom they were aligned. Negt
and Kluge specifically deployed the idea
of proletarian publicity'' as the means by
w hich a coalition of the disaffected speak
trutli to power. Handswortb Songs in this
context can be described as a work of
proletarian publicity. One of its chief
attributes is the attempt at an analytical
deconstruction of social violence directed
at post-colonial subjects in Great Britain.
Though influenced bv the language of
montage, the tradition of creative
documentary and the essay films of Chris
Marker such as Sat)s Solei! (1982) and
A Grin Without a Cat {\977) the broader
121
politics of BAFC's films are based on the
dialectical structure of Third Cinema
propagated by Octavio Getino and
Fernando Solanas.'*This alignment with
the theory ofThird Cinema, focused as
it was on the specificity of using dnema as
a tool for a collectivised historical project
of decolonisation," suggests that BAFC's
choice of subject matter can be understood
principally through the critical lens of
proletarian publicity. The films do not
function purely on the grounds of the
aesthetic policies of the bourgeois public
sphere, but rather they seek to animate
the public interest which lies outside it.
What was the cultural climate of the
1980s under which the work of BAFC
emerged? I will limit myself to two
political spheres, the USA and Great
Britain, while adding a few examples
from Latin America. During this decade
a number of artistically significant and
poiitically astute groups emerged in the
USA and Great Britain. They became
highly \'isible in the post-dvil rights debate
on race, gender, identity and class within
the institutionalised practices of the
Reagan and Thatcher administrations.
The rise of these collectives and groups
registered the emergence of a new
coalition of voices, whose critical and
artistic projects of cultural inquiry,
documentary humanism, public
engagement and radical education joined
divergent political forms with theoretical
tools of social deconstruction. This
coalition, working independently and
interdependently under disparate c-u!tural
and historical conditions, reacted to the
rise of a new form of conservative
political agenda.
In Latin America, where various
American-sponsored dictatorships had
established police states such as Chile,
Nicaragua, Argentina, Honduras and
El Salvador, there emerged a range of
vigorous oppositional artistic and tact:ical
media groups devoted to long-term
liberationist, and-imperialist principles
- groups such as Colectivo Cine Ojo
(Chile), Sistema Radio Venceremos
(El Salvador), Ukamu Film Collective
COALITION BUILDING: BLACK AUDIO FILM COLLECTIVE ANO TRANSNATIONAL POST-COLONIALISM
122
16S-66, Chris Marker, Sam Soleil. 1983
167. Chris Marker. .^ Or in Without a Cat, 1977
(Bolivia) and the Mothers of the Plaza de
Mayo (Argentina).'"There is no doubt that
the rise of these collectives was precipitated
by the crisis that was then growing within
the global social imaginarv dominated
by instruments of neo-liberal capitalism.
In this crucial sense the collectives
of the 1980s share a similar historical
relationship to that which a number
of early twentieth-century avant-garde
groups such as Dada, die Brücke,
der Blaue Reiter, Surrezdism, Russian
Constructivism, the Harlem Renaissance
and Négritude had to the political power
oftheir time.
This development is consonant with
an argument that 1 have elaborated
elsewhere, namely, that in the modern era
artistic and intellectual collectives tend to
emerge during moments of crisis." TKis
crisis can be social, cultural, political or
economic; however, its effects seem always
to Peñérate environments of disillusion
o
and disaffection, leading to a counter
challenge by artists.^^ Dada emerged from
disaffection with the carnage of the First
World War; socialist collectives developed
in post-revolution Russia; the Situationist
International came out of a search for an
alternative to the pervasive mediation
of subjectivity and developed trenchant
critiques of capital in response to the rise
of colonisation of everyday life. Artistic
and intellectual collectives make their
most jjersuasive contributions during
times of deep societal transition.
As is clear from the ahove, the work
of these collectives and their attitude
towards representation vary from one
historical point to another depending on
their respective agendas. This is important,
since I do not want to give the impression
that collectives are alwavs models
of political rectitude and are therefore
always progressive in each given field
of engagement. Some are not overtly
political while others are. Tliey can be
artistic or intellectual or a combination
of both. Recent examples include
Multiplicity, a Milan based group focusing
on questions of border conflict in Europe
and Retort, based in the San Francisco
Bay area, which descrihes itself as an
'antagonist of capital and empire' and
whose influential hook Afpicted Powers:
Capital ond Spectacle in a New Age of War,
offers a pessimistic diagnosis of the present
state of world politics. A fundamental
part of Retort's work is an attempt to
recuperate the intellectual legacy of groups
such as the Situationist International.
A common thread can be observed among
these coalitions of forces, namely a critical
disaffection with the prevailing order of
things and the entrenchment of institutional
values that provides no new avenue.s
within which disparate and even
antagonistic interlocutors can match
wits with each other.
Okwui Enwezor
123
Notes
1. Frantz Fanon, Black Skin.White Masks, trans. Charles
Lam Markmann, New York: Grove ftess, 1967.
2. In his recent book Proabetic Gods, Cambridge, MA:
October Bookâ and MIT Press, 2004, critic and art
historian Hal Poster begins the first section, 'Primitive
Scenes', by attributing the early rupture within
modertiism to Fanon's book Black Skin,Whitr Maski and the
relationship between the primitive and modern.The title
oí Fanon's hook is the inverse of the landmark and
loundational work of twentieth-century modernism,
Picasso's Les EkmoiseUes d'Avignon, vnâçix is made up of
nothing but black masks and white sicin. Foster's attempt
is signiticanl, even if, in typical arl historical fashion, it
did little to confront the legacy of Harlem Renaissance
artisis sucb as Lois MaÜlou Jones and those of Négritude
in the articulation of the dialectic between the primitive
and the mixlern,
13. See Fredric Jameson, ,1 Singular MoJnnity: Esuty on the
Ontola^ oJtht Present, London; Verso, 2002.
14. See, for instance, Salman Ru.shdie's stTeed
'Handsworth Songs', published in resfx¡nse to Black
Audio Film Collective's film of the same name in
imaginary Homelands: Essays and Criticisra 1981-91,
London: GranU Books, 1992,pp. IlS-17.
15. See Homi Bhabha, Tht Location of Culture, London and
New York: Routledge, 1994, especially the seminal essay
'The Other Question; Stereotype, Discrimination, and
the Discourse ofColonialiam'. f^, 66-84.
16. See Jürgen Habermas, The Siruclural Transformation
of the Public Sphere, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1989,
17. Oskar Negt and Alexander Kluge. Public Sphen and
ixperience:Toward an .Analysis of the Bauigeois and Proletarian
Public Sphere, trans, Peter Labanyi, Jamie Owen Daniel
andAssenka Oksiloff. Minneapolis, MN: University
3. See Man Carmen Ramirez, 'Tactics for Thriving on
Adversity: Conceptualism in Latin America, 1960-i 980',
in Global Cottceptuahsm: Points of Origin. l9Í0s-l9S0s,cd.
Luis Camintzer, Jane Farver and Rachel Weiss, New York:
Queens Museum of Art, 1999, pp. S2-71.
To understand the remarkable historical
trajectory out of which the film practices
of the Black Audio Film Collective
developed one would have to look at
some of the profound but competing
ideological positions of a number of
historical avant-garde groups and
contemporary collectives. As I have
tried to show, on one side of this equation
are the aesthetics derived from early
twentieth-century European avantgardes based on the principle of artistic
collectivity. On the other is the historical
and philosophical alliance BAFC developed
in line with Pan-Atrican avant-garde
groups such as the Négritude movement
and the Harlem Renaissance group.
These strategies converge in shaping
the contemporary film language of the
group, in its interest in projects of
historical deconstruction, but above
all on a cinema based on an ethics
of transnational post-colonialism.
4. See my essay'Where, What, Who, When: A Few Notes
on "African" Ctinc^eptualism', in Camnitzer, Farver and
Weiss, eda. Global Conceptualism, pp. II 1-12.
5. Kellic Jones, 'It's not Enough to Say "Black is
Beautiful": Abstraction at the Whitney. 1969-1974', in
Discrepant Ahstraaion, cd. Kobena Mercer, London and
Cambridge, MA: INIVA and MIT Press, 2006, p, 155.
6. Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, Multitude: Wtr and
Democracy in tbeAgeofBtnpIre, New York: The Penguin
Press. 2004.
of Minnesota Pres.s. 199Î.
18. See the influential manifesto by the directors of the
film Hour of Furnaces. Octavio Getino and Fernando
Solanas, 'Towards aThird Cinema: Notes and Experiences
fcir the Development of a Cinema of Liberation in the
Third World', in Movies and Metbods. An Anthology,
ed. Bill Nichols, Phoenix, AZ: University of Ariwma
Press. 1976. pp. 44-64.
19. It might be important to link the themes of a
decol<mising cinema from the point of view of Third
Cinema with Guy Dehord's critique of spectacle in
relation to what hp calls the 'colonization of everyday
life'. Debord's critique of spectacle as auch has imbricated
within it a programme of decolonising everyday experience
&om the rapadty of capital as the chief medium of spectacle.
7. Ibid, p. 197.
8. See Ramirez,'Tactics for Thriving on Adversity', p. 68.
9.The workshops, connected as they were to leftist and
labour movements, suggest solidarity with the values and
aspirations of the working class.
10. John Akonifrati, 'Black Independent Film-making: A
Statement by the Black Audio/Film Collective', Attragt:
httr-CulCuralArts Magazine, Summer 1983, p. 39.
11. Ibid.
12. Ibid,
30, For a thorough review of the kind of work being
undertaken in Latin America during the 1980s sec Coco
Husco. hcvicKing Hinories: Selections from Niir Latin .imerican
Cinema, Buffalo, NY: Hallwalls Contemporary' Art Center,
1987. This seminal book is an important attribution to
the range of collective practices thai were part of the
global vanguard of the 1980s.
21. See my essay. 'The Artist as Producer in Times
of Crisis', in Empires, Ruins, and Netmirks, ed, Nikos
Papastergiadw, Melbourne: University of Melbourne
Press, 2005,
I
nBtnl
168. Lina Gopaul, eflitin|; Hanihworth Songs, 1986
169. Lina Gopaul, John Akomtrah, Polytechnic of
Central London studio, Handsworth Songs dioot, 1986
170. David Lawson, Lina Gopaul, Ridley Road.
London 1986
171. Avril Johnson, John AltomlVah, press conl'crpncp
for Testament, FESPACO Pan..African Film Festival,
Burkina Faso, 1989
172. John Akomfrah, press conférence tor 7ísfíjmín(,
FESPACO Pan African Film Festival, Burkina f^aso,
1989
30
AN ABSENCE OF RUINS
JOHN AKOMFRAH
IN CONVERSATION
WITH KODWO ESHUN
KODWO ESHUN: We both attended Documenta 11 in 2002; it was striking to see the ways culturally, on our own, as individual film-makers, would be another. The sense that
in which Handsworth Songs, which was installed in the Kulturbahnhof, resonated with the somehow the group of people I'd met in the mid-1970s, Lina Gopaul, Reece Auguiste,
present. There are certain signatures in the work ofthat era which communicate to us
Avril Johnson,Trevor Mathison, Edward George, David Lawson, people with whom
now, obliquely, from a far off time. So, I would Hke to open our dialogue by asking you
I went through all the major political events in further education in the mid-70s, who
about your sense of the 1980s, In retrospect, what, for you and the other artists of the
were prepared to make the shift to a cultural politics, and were prepared to give up
Black Audio Film Collective, was a defining moment in terms of the cultural landscape
their own individual courses of action to pursue that project, that would be another.
of the 1980s?
But, for me, 1 suppose the defining moment would be the disturbances of 1981. That
seems to me, in retrospect, major. I have spent a long time trying to resist reducing
what we did to a major political event, because I thought that, in a way, there was a sort
JOHN AKOMFRAH: As with all of these things, when you are asked to name a moment,
of determinism there that underscored several idea.s that were in currency at the time.
you remember things which are disparate and which are sometimes not connected. So,
You know, every time you spoke to somebody about any kind of black art, they would
in my case, there are a numher of moments, some personal, some intellectual, some
say, 'Oh well, it all started in 81.' !t seemed to reduce it to that moment.
political. I will name as many of them as I can.The Pan-African Black Art Conventions
of the early 1980s, when I first encountered the artists Eddie Chambers, Keith Piper,
Donald Rodney and Claudette Johnson would be one. The multiple arguments with the
KE: You are referring to the riots in Brixton in 1981, and also inToxteth, Liverpool.
Arts Council when we first left Portsmouth in 1982, over whether or not what we did
could be considered avant-garde, that would be another. The attempt to try and finally
register as a Collective, when it became clear that we were not poing to make it.
JA: Yes, Liverpool and Brixton, for me, were major, partly because they seemed to.
131
for the first time, in my case anyway, register something that you felt, viscerally and
intellectually, which was that there was a gap between official discourses on race and
what we knew. By 'we', I mean, my generation, the people who grew up and came of
age in 1976. The events of 1981 seemed to mark a rupture with the official discourses
on race. I would say that 1981 marked a break in the politics of representation,
that took people like me three or four years to digest. So, that, by 1985, when civil
disturbances started again, you seemed to have done the research, the psychic research
for that project.
KE: I think one important idea that emerges when one looks back on that moment
of the mid-to-late 1980s is that artists became concerned with questions of memory,
that they become discontented with, to put it crudely, the normative languages around
history, heritage, nationality and memorialisation.The questions of memory and duration
then emerged as key sites of aesthetic engagement. I think of the Collective's work as a
sustained engagement with questions of memory. Could we connect that preoccupation
to Foucault's ideas of counter memory which were being mobilised by artists and
theorists at the time? Formally speaking, the idea that memory existed partially, and
fragmentarily, meant that one's formal language had to take account of these gaps.
You could not present the fullness of memory; you had to invoke the interruptions and
those interruptions spoke as eloquently as the speech, the silences became as important
as the voices. This was a question of the form of politics and the politics of form and this
articulation came to the fore very much throughout the 1980s and into the early 1990s.
Perhaps these questions might coalesce around the notion of archive. One notion that
emerges in Handsworth Songs is the poetic reworking of the archive, the slowing down
of the image, the address of voice-over, and the mixed feelings one experienced in the
presence of this reconfiguration of the archive. I wonder if you could elaborate on
the implications of that moment of revisiting the archive.
JA: For us, the project was always a kind of investment in memory. The return to the
archive was indisputably, in our case, connected with a return to the inventory of black
presences in this country. The investment in memory, I would say, took two distinct
forms. It seemed to me that, at the time, all projects around the notion of memory
had to deal with two things, the question of presence and, obviously, by implication,
the question of ahsence. In the case of the black archive, the question of presence had
AN ABSENCE OF RUINS
to do with the fact that official memory denied you a certain kind of intimacy and
solitude. You know, when you watched those newsreels, they seemed to not even
be about people, they seemed to be about statistics. You know, 'Oh, here come the
darkies... —
' 1 know you hate that word, but it is appropriate in this case — 'coming
off the boat.'-it just seemed to lack any understanding that the people you were
looking at, people of colour, might have a trajectory that was not just to do with them
being a statistic. On the other hand, there were also crucial absences that one had
to deal with, and some of them were even to do with the ellipses of our own kind
of languages. I remember listening to Howlin' Wolf, to his famous song about the
.44 pistol with that lvric: 'I've worn my .44 so long, it's made mv finger sore.' And you
are listening to it and you think, 'Weil, why is this guy angry? What the hell is he angry
about?' Because what is animating the song is actually not present in the song itself. And
so much of what constituted black presence was also underscored and overdetermined
hy these massive absences. So that was one thing. The second thing about the memory
was that it seemed to get us out of a number of possible cul-de-sacs. If you were educated
formally in the mid-to-late 1970s, at the time when postmodern orthodoxies were at
their height, one of the things you noticed more and more was that people would say
things like, 'Oh well, this is about trying to avoid inferioritv'. In other words, there was
a sort of hostilitv to the question of identity itself, which became crystallised around a
hostility to what people call identity politics. And you realise that we could not do that.
We did not have the luxury to be hostile to a question of identity because our very
moment of becoming is tied to the question and the politics of identity. You could not
avoid it. So, the notion of memory was a way of sidestepping some of what you might
call the implications of the formalisms of certain practices. You needed it a.s a kind of
corrective gestin^e to the Lacanian delusional orthodoxies, which were the ones which
we were heing given as the way forward, theoretically. But the idea of memory also
seemed to me a way of posing que.stions to what one might call the official discourse.
Because the official discourse insisted on narrativising black lives as migrant lives,
insisted on treating black subjectivity as simply either criminal or pathological
or sociological; there always seemed to be a category which came before you could get
to that identity. And the recourse to memory was, for us, a way of sidestepping that.
It was not simply about going back to the past because, clearly, what we were talking
about was trying to .secure legitimacy for present subjectivities. But you needed to
question the way in which those subjectivities were positioned in several discourses
of governmentality in order to just be able to get to the new, the now. So, that was
the importance of meniorv, for me.
John Akomfrah in conversation with Kodwo Eshun
KE: I am interested in the complicated poetics of that turn to memory. Certainly
Handswortb Songs retains the sense that a certain kind of formalism has a real
importance. And my sense is that the possibilities of rupture entailed by certain kinds
of formalism are important for diasporic artists, and yet remain largely overlooked,
remain somewhat difficult to talk about. I would be interested to think through the
Collective's preoccupation with the formal.There is a moment in Handswortb Songs
which is fascinating, because it occurs almost off-camera, as it were, that relates to
this idea.Tliere is a sequence in which a local meeting is staged in order to be televised
and you hear the producers talking about capturing images of the audience and one
producer in the control room says to the other something along the lines of'You know,
it's looking a bit dark at the front' and he is talking about darkness as a technical
problem, as a failure in legibility. And then the other producer on the studio floor
responds by saying 'Well, that's because there's all these black people sitting at the
front,' So, vou get this weird moment where a technical problem immediately become.s
a racialised problem that immediately becomes a spatial question, a question of presence;
all of these matters are conflated. Here you begin to see the ways in which the technical,
the formal and the spatial entangle each other in a way that is difficult to pull apart and
resolve. And one of the notions that BAFC proposed, although it i.s under remarked, is
133
that one had to intervene in the film medium itself. Film as such was not neutral. One
bad to enter into the medium of film stock and intervene in technical questions sucb as
colour correction, filtering, lighting, the whole field of what is called sensitometry, the
whole question of the sensitivity of light to skin.Tbese are not identitarian questions,
they are technological and formal questions of embodiment whose resonance is political
and spatial. So a technical question begins to resonate uncomfortably with questions of
social oppression. I am very interested in the project of intervention at the level of the
technical and its relation to the social dimension of form.
JA: Talking about Handsworth Songs and that sequence, it is interesting how much that
crystallised a certain kind of obsession. I remember doing an interview with Coco
Fusco in which I said something that got me into more trouble than anything else. I said
the questions that animate what we do are not formal but emotional ones. And people
were, like, 'God, what an anti-intellectual thing to say.' But it was not that, at all. There
was a sort of tyranny of the image that forced the kind of convergence that you are
talking about in Handswortb Songs. Let me give you an example. There used to be
a programme when I was growing up called VoUce Five, which was presented by a man
134
called Shaw Taylor. And you would sit down and this programme would come on, and
1 used to pray- it was not just me, I had three brothers, and we used to sit there praying
that the mugger he was going to name was not black. Because you knew what was going
to happen the next day. You just knew this was going to be a major point. So, there was
a certain kind of tyranny which overdetcrmined our lives, that came via the image,
which forced you to have both a theoretical, an emotional and a philosophical approach
to images. And that was really all I was trying to access in saying these questions were
more than just formal ones. Everyone accepts that a certain kind of crisis of authority
inaugurated European modernism, and everyone accepts that that crisis of authority
was not simply formal, even though the implications were formal, with Cubism
and so on. But no one ever extends us that courtesy. At the time, anyway, now it is
commonplace, but, at the time, it was not, people would just come up to you and say,
'Oh, go on, tell it as it is' as if the way to the form was unproblematic, and it certainly
was not. Once you have accepted that there is a regime of truth that you were, in some
ways, trying to get beyond, there was then the question of what you did, and that was
an emotional, a philosophical and a technical problem. So, there we were with a
camera, trying to document, trying to find a language for a process which was itself
trying to find a language, if you know what 1 mean. And it struck me that, actually, what
AN ABSENCE OF RUINS
we were dealing with was not simply individual questions, they were almost generational.
In other words, the recourse to form, to the formal, and the recourse to trying to find
a way in which one could get the form, to, if you like, obey certain other questions,
seemed almost a precondition to becoming, for my generation.
KE: If we could hold that sense of a generational concern with form and then move with
it until we get to the early-to-mid-1990s, we might find ourselves navigating a slightly
reconfigured landscape. Questioning the limits of the documentary image, questioning
the limits of factuality, as Black Audio did, meant that you necessarily raised the question
ofthe fictionality ofthe document. So, by the early-to-mid-1990s, the group, as artists,
had developed a sustained engagement with thefictional,with questions ofthe oi^anisation
of character, more mainstream questions, in a way. I want to play devil's advocate and
ask you if that concern animated a desire to become more populist in your approach?
Perhaps a more productive way of thinking through what happened at this time might
be to suggest that, in England, there was a feeling that the experimental or the art
film, however we define it, had moved from the arena ofthe international festival film
circuit, and certainly from terrestrial broadcast television, into the gallery which now
John Akomfrah in conversation with Kodwo Eshun
13S
about the construction of a kind of narrative with stills, about the ways in which
a narrative might be created out of blocks of frames. So we were there, in the early
1980s. I think what is different now is that I am quite happy for the work to travel
in whichever way it wants to go, because, actually, the questions which animate it are
not just televisual ones. I remember sitting in a conference organised in New York
in the mid-1990s, when Edward Kamau Brathwaite presented this incredible work
that literally brought me to tears; he read this long poem which was just an invocation
of different moments of becoming, in the diaspora. So, he named places, he named
dates. And it was this invocation ofour presence, via recourse to time and dates and
places, that was just so moving. And you suddenly realised, at the end of it, 'Yes,
actually, this is the project all along. This is what we have been trying to do all along.'
1 mean, on the one hand, you have, from the beginning, the work of people like Derek
Walcott, who was very important for what we did. I mean, Derek Walcott's notion
JA: The distinction between art and film, gallery and cinema was never a watertight one
of the diaspora being organised around an absence of ruins, that phrase in itself, that
for us. Because, of course, most of the early work that we did at Black Audio, between
1982 and 1985, that is, the two mammoth tape/slide projects. Signs of Empire and ¡mages suggestive phrase, helped so much to try and define what you did in the absence of
of Nationality, were created specifically for the gallery and were created by deploying the ruins, in securing identities. And the fact that - and 1 know these two are not supposed
to be the same at all - but the fact that you could hear Brathwaite, if you like, allow us
aid of the cinematographic apparatus. We thought very seriously about the question of
an alternative narrative, not a cinematic one but an alternative narrative, through which
montage, we thought very seriously about the question of colour, and also very clearly
became a kind of black cube. So, there begins to emerge the idea that a certain kind
of speculative cinema had died, in the theatrical sense, and had been reborn inside the
white cube. In tbe British context, you have an artist such as Steve McQueen who is
indebted to a cinematographic imaginary, and who then becomes emblematic oí the
idea that the black cube is the zone where experimentation with the moving image has
now moved to. I wonder how you situated the 1990s, which now appears suspended
between the kind of envy that the art space has for dnema, at the same time as it
disavows cinema. It says, on one hand that cinema is dead, but, on the other hand,
it says, dnema lives here, in the gallery. 1 wonder how you positioned yourself
in terms of that changing landscape.
AN ABSENCE OF RUINS
I7Î 77-Black Audio Film Cotlecrive.
Ridley Road. 1989
Stories of becoming could be brought into public spatx, seemed to me to justify what
we have to continue to do, which is - and when 1 say 'we', I mean myself and the people
I work with - which is to resist the idea that what we do has to be fixed by the end,
by where it arrives, be it television, the gallery, the cinema. I mean, I am not, on one
level, interested in the arrival points, I am much more interested in the process by
which we access these countermemories, if you like. Does that answer your question?
KE:Ycs, it begins to answer it. It explains how one continues to function, bow one
continues to pursue an ongoing project, to experiment with Íife,while, around one,
the landscape itself is changing. I mean, the change from Black Audio Film Collective
to Black Audio Films to Smoking Dog Films in retrospect feels very much a continuation
oí the same concerns. But Smoking Dog's work has not received the close attention
and the critical analysis that the work of Black Audio bas and I think that is because
cridcal energy bas been directed towards the narrative that I outlined. It has moved
towards the gallery world. And that is why Documenta 11, which is where we started
our conversation, was so moving to me because it was a moment wbere you saw
British artists, such as yourselves, but also others such as CerithWyn Evans and Zarina
Bhimji all positioned in an internationalist frame. So a context was created in which
aYBA narrative did not become, once again, the single, overarching account of the
present which was to be exported for market. So, that brings us up to the present
moment. I wondered what you thought of a statement that Kobena Mercer made
in which he characterised our moment, the one that we live in now, as 'an era
of multicultural normalisation, in which diversity is increasingly administered as a
social and cultural norm in postmodernity'. Mercer went on to say that contemporary
artists no longer feel responsible for constructing Afrodiasporic presence as an object
of knowledge in tbe global market of multicultural commodity fetishism. I take it
that the term cultural diversity itself is a bureaucratic term for the management of
cultural difference, bowever that is to be organised. What Kobena Mercer points out is
that, if institutions appear to have taken that on, artists are now obliged to adopt quite
distinct strategies to navigate the present. Would you agree with Kobena's
characterisation of the era that we live in now?
JA: Yes, I agree with him. 1 think, in a way, if I had to distinguish, myself, between how
1 and my colleagues worked belore, and the way we work now, I would sav that I am
John Akomfrah in conversation with Kodwo Eshun
I.Î7
Edited from Foaodat Ions: The Birth of Memory, dialogue
on Day 2 <}{ A Free State Conference, Detibel, Arts Coun<il
England, ITie British Museum. Marih I9ih 2004
much more concerned with what the work itself has to say ahout certain questions.
Whereas, in the 1980s and most of the 1990s, we were much more preocc-upied with
trying to contrihute to a broader cultural debate about black identity or cultural
politics. Becau.se I find that, in a way, that interest is the way in which we could respond
to certain questions. The recourse to memory, or now countermemory, is still part of
trying to, in some way, contribute to a palimpsest of national identity. And, in writing
that, you will have to resort to gestures and narratives which, at their base, are radological.
Nuvv, 1 do not see that as a problem, providing that is the focus. As for Kobena's point
about multicultural normality; yes, in a way, we were trying to respond directly to that
hut on the other hand, that is not what animates what we do. Having said that, the
normality is to be accepted, hecause we won, you know, we won. We made certain
arguments, and they are now, you know, hegemonic. We won. The question is, what
next? I do not think we should accept the victory as a kind of restriction even though
it might seem to be for some people. The regimes of truth I was talking about trying
to get beyond earlier were the ones which have determined black lives, as I understood
them, in the 1980s. It is not true to say that normalisation is always a part of regimes of
truth. There was a certain kind of normalised sense of what constituted a black identity,
multiple or otherwise, in the 1980s. One should not be worried about normalisation
since normalisation is the norm, as it were. When one is faced with these moments,
one has to remind oneself what it was that one was trying to do. We were trying to find
and legitimise new versions of becoming, which were not aberrant. The fact that you
had to do it within a certain iiminal space did not mean that you wanted that identity
to be marginal. In other words, the place of speech need not necessarily be the place
of identity, and that was always very clear for us. Those new versions of becoming,
which are really part of the four-century hattle to secure our humanity, to continue
to widen the vocahulary of what constitutes the human, seemed to me to resort to
a variety of languages. And some of those are raciological. And in the process of using
that language, it is clear that some will become mainstream. Now, does that then mean
that the project itself is over? Well, clearly not. You only have to look at the ways in
which ideas about black masculinity continue to circulate in our culture to know that
the project is not over. You only have to look at the ways in which certain official
discourses continue to criminalise and pathologise certain black identities to know that
the struggle is not over. So, we need to make separations here, cither in the language,
or what we are descrihing as the language, in order to move on. There is still work
to be done. And, as Robert Frost .said, there are miles to go before we sleep.
1
HO
INTRODUCTION TO
ARTISTS' WRITINGS
KODWO ESHUN
& ANJALIKA SAGAR
Erom the outset, the artists of the Black
Audio Eilm Collective placed a great
emphasis on the dimension of the
discursive. The group engaged in the
forrnulation of theories, propositions,
statements, positions, hypotheses,
interventions, speculations, dialogues,
debates and conversations, which, in their
entirety, constituted a series of critical
perspectives that sought to inaugurate
a discursive space for an independent
culture of the moving image. This insistence
upon reflection, upon inquiry and upon
questioning led the group to form alliances
across and between the spaces of the
artistic and the political while
simultaneously engaging in intensive
debates with international avant-gardes
from Britain, America, West Africa,
Canada and India. In their different ways,
Akomfrah, Auguiste, Gopaul, George
and Johnson were artists who wrote
statements and presented papers; the
exception to this investment in the
discursive was Mathison who always
preferred to draw or sketch or compose
than write; and Lawson whose energies
were focused on marketing, distribution
and public relations.
The group positioned themselves
as public intellectuals engaged in the
assembly of and participation in the
formation of a critical public sphere,
configured from exhibitions, forums,
screenings, conferences and symposiums,
disseminated through anthologies, journals
and magazines. Indeed, one of the pleasures
of the BAEC film is the witnessing of the
staging of a body of thought, the enactment
of what Pierre Bourdieu calls 'the bodily
hexis', that is the 'durable manner of
standing, speaking and thereby of feeling
and thinking' through the formal setting
of the studio interview; the appearances
and the narration of authors, artists and
activists such as Samuel R. Delany,
Octavia Butler, Greg Täte, Robin D.G.
Kelley, Homi Bhabha, Meera Syal,
Paul Gilroy, Gareth Pierce, Toni Cade
Bambara, Rozina Visram, Coco Eusco,
Jan Carew, Tricia Rose and Thulani Davis
across the Collective's films and videos
constitute a cinema of the intellectual
imagination that is unparallelled in
contemporary culture.
The selected and edited writings of
O
historical moment. Thus Auguiste's texts
'Black Independents and Third Cinema:
The British Context' (1989) and 'Black
Cinema, Poetics and New World Aesthetics'
(1988) and Johnson's'Identity' (1989)
sought to stake out much-needed space
within film aesthetics, cinema histories
and the space of representation. Gopaul's
'WhichWay Eorward?' (198S) and George's
'New Directions in Training' (1985)
constituted interventions at the level
of policy. Akomfrah's 'On the Borderline'
(1992) and George's 'Reflections of
the Black Experience' (1986) were
intended as meditations on contemporary
photography that revealed the formal
preoccupations of the group with questions
of figuration and contexts of museology
while the Collective's 'Expeditions:
On Race and Nation' (1991) was presented
as a photowork that emerged from and
extended the form of Expeditions, their
epic tape-slide work. A late work such
as George's '(ghost the signal)' (1997)
revealed his characteristic interest in
fictional histories and the production
of fabulation. Previously unpublished
writings such as Auguiste's 'Twilight:
Auker's World' (1988), Gopaul and
Akomfrah's 'Colour Symbolism in Ghanaian
Society' (1989), Akomfrah's 'On Writing
BAFC fall into two sections of published
and unpublished writings. The former
texts were published in journals such
as Ten: 8 or Undercut or magazines such
as Artrage that are now either inoperative
or remain difficult to access. The latter
constitute a cross-section of writings
from the BAEC archive that indicate the
distinctive styles of address mobilised
by the group. Often presented at major
conferences and then reworked for
Wbo Needs A Heart'{\99\) and 'Notations
subsequent publication, these texts
of Collective Inventions for Who Needs
provide a valuable insight into each
A Heart' (1991) indicate the process of
artist's theoretical intervention, the
intensive research and extensive rewriting
enunciation of a group statement and
from which each work eventually emerged.
a window into a bitterly contested
141
1 JOHN AKOMFRAH, Black Independent
3 EDWARD GEORGE, New Directions
Film-making: A Statement by the
in Training (1985)
Black Audio/Film Collective (1983)
The first pubUc statement of the Black
Audio Film Collective, published
in Artrage Intercultural Arts magazine
in 1983; the London-based magazine
functioned as the hub of the national
independent black art scene throughout
the 1980s. This text epitomised Akomfrah's
role as the spokesperson of the group; of
the seven founders, it was Akomfrah who
took the most pleasure in articulating the
public position of the group and situating
the group project within the broad field
of cineculture.
BAFC were one of the most active
participants of the eight workshops that
constituted the Association of Black
Workshops. In 'New Directions in
Training', George gave a stringent account
of the group's integrated practice, itemising
the successes and shortcomings of their
film familiarisation and training courses
and locating both within the structured •
inequality and institutional racism endemic
to the media, art and cultural sectors
of 1980s Britain. This text is published
here for the first time.
4 EDWARD GEORGE, Introduction
2 LINA GOPAUL, Which Way Forward?
to Reflections of the Black Experience
(1985)
(1986)
Presented by Lina Gopaul for the 'Which
Way Forward?' conference at the National
Film Theatre, London in 1985. The
conference hosted debates about the
future directions of the grant-aided
workshop movement in a post Greater
London Council context. The 'Which
Way Forward?' paper captured Gopaul in
her role as the strategist of the Collective;
Gopaul was a Maoist-inspired militant
more interested in the political economy
and foundational legacies of black film
culture for generations to come than the
pursuit of an auteurist film career or an
engagement with the art sector as defined
by the gallery system. This text is published
here for the first time.
First published as the catalogue essay
for Reflections of the Black Experience,
a major group exhibition of ten
contemporary British Asian, African
and Caribbean photographers that included
work by David Lewis, Ingrid Pollard
and Sunil Gupta; curated by Monika
Baker and presented at the Brixton Art
Gallery, it was commissioned by the Race
Equality Unit of the soon to be abolished
Greater London Council as part of
a London-wide cultural programme
entitled, somewhat simplistically.
The Black Experience. Edward George's
interests in questions of desire, figuration
and sexualities successfully complicated
the exhibition's positivist brief.
142
Looking back on the exhibition in his
monograph Pictures from Here (2003)
Gupta wrote that ten photographers were
invited 'to contribute 10 photographs
each... The project brought photographers
out of the woodwork and together
for the first time... under the umbrella
ofthe GLC (Sunil Gupta, Pictures from
Were, Autograph/Boot, 2003, pp. 32-33).
5 REECE AUGUISTE, Black Cinema,
Poetics and New Worid Aesthetics (1988)
First presented at the 'Cultural Identities'
conference, held at the Commonwealth
Institute, Kensington, London in March
1986, published in Undercut, 17, Spring
1998 and repubhshed in The Undercut
Reader: Critical Writings on Artists Film
andVideo, ed. Nina Dañino and Michael
Maziere, Wallflower Press, 2003, pp.
1S4—S6. Auguiste presented his paper
in the fourth and final panel of the
conference entitled 'Aesthetics and
Politics: Working on Two Fronts'. Other
speakers included Martina Attile, Peter
Gidal, Isaac Julien and Mandy Merck.
Auguiste was influenced by poetry and
the non-fiction essays ofWilson Harris
and Elias Canetti as much as by cinema;
he specialised in position papers that
cleared a discursive space for the group's
complex practice. Auguiste and Gidal
disagreed over the disruptive potential
of desire within a theory of cinema; and
the event as a whole evokes the sense of
restricted space for theoretical movement
INTROOUCTION TO ARTISTS' WRITINGS
that BAFC insisted upon; it is in this
context that Auguiste, in his Introduction
to the panel, written after the event,
stressed the ways in which 'we are
struggling to construct and articulate
a politics that can begin to address, in
cinema, the complexities of post-colonial
existence in the already troubled terrain
of postmodernism' {Undercut Reader,
p. 1S3). Looking back on the event. Dañino
noted that the 'Cultural Identities'
conference constituted 'the first time
black and white filmmakers, critics
and theorists from different cultural
backgrounds came together in a series
of film screenings and discussions...
where vocabulary is being formulated
and the agenda to some extent is being
contested and negotiated', {Undercut
Reader, pp. 130-31).
published in the same issue of Framework.
Handsworth Songs had broken with the
expectations not just of white television
documentary and white avant-garde film
practice but, equally, with the obligations
of black film practice; these bad-tempered
arguments across widely differing sections
of the British mediascape attested to the
degree to which BAFC had offended the
mainstream black British norms of The
Voice, the putatively radical black British
norms of Race Today and the liberal Asian
fictional norms of Salman Rushdie; it is
from within this embattled context that
this text emerged.
7 REECE AUGUISTE,
Twilight: Auker's World (1988)
One of several treatments written by
Reece Auguiste that would form the basis
for what would eventually become
6 REECE AUGUISTE, Handsworth Songs:
Twilight City (1989).The third version,
Some Background Notes (1988)
published here for the first time, reveals
First pubhshed in Framework 41, Auguiste's
Auguiste's close reading of ítalo Calvino's
text functioned as a response to the
Invisible Cities (1972) as well as Patrick
reception accorded Handsworth Songs in
Wright's On Living in an Old Country:
reviews, and subsequent letters, pubhshed
The National Past in Contemporary Britain
in The Guardian by Salman Rushdie, Stuart
(1985). Most pertinent to this text,
Hall and Darcus Howe, in the political
however, were the recent events of
journal Race Today by journalist Michael
Monday October 19, 1987, or Black
Cadette and in Tony Sewell's review for
Monday, in which the Dow Jones
TheVoice, London's popular Caribbean
Industrial Average fell calamitously,
tabloid, and as an introduction to the
precipitating percentage declines in
interview between Auguiste, Akomfrah,
the Hong Kong, UK, Australia, US
Gopaul and George and sociologist Paul
and Canada stock markets.
Gilroy and film researcher Jim Pines
8 AVRIL JOHNSON, Identity (1989)
Presented on April 7, 1989, at the
National Identities Conference on
Feminism, Representation and Identities
England, attended by Lina Gopaul
and Avril Johnson. Johnson studied
psychology at Portsmouth and retained
an acute sense of the mutual ambivalences
ofthe collective project. Her elegantly
posed paper reflected on the implications
and imperatives of group nomination,
pointing to the expectations and
entanglements that the Collective's
invocation of raciality mobilised; in doing
so, she anticipated points raised in the
early twenty-first century by curator
Thelma Golden. This text is published
here for the first time.
9 REECE AUGUISTE / BLACK AUDIO FILM
COLLECTIVE, Biack Independents and
Third Cinema: The British Context (1989)
First presented at the 1986 Edinburgh
Television Festival and published
in Questions of Third Cinema, ed. Paul
Willemen and Jim Pines, London: British
Film Institute, 1989, pp. 212-17. Mercer's
text, 'A Third Cinema at Edinburgh:
Reflections on a Pioneering Event',
Screen, 26(5), Autumn 1986, provides
an insight into the immediate context
in which Auguiste negotiates the
insufficiencies of Third Cinema for the
present, seeking to establish a degree
of singularity that cannot be subsumed
by the simple invocation of cineculturai
legacy, no matter how radical.
Kodwo Eshun & Anjalika Sagar
143
10 JOHN AKOMFRAH,
12 JOHN AKOMFRAH, On Writing
Colour Symbolism in Ghanaian Society
Who Needs A Heart (1991)
(1989)
This interview was conducted between
John Akomfrah and Lina Gopaul at the
BAFC office in October 1989, upon the
Collective's completion of the location
shoot of Testament in Ghana. Akomfrah's
archaeology of colour symbolism offered
a perspective which complicates the film's
already complex chromatic register. This
text is published here for the first time.
11 BLACK AUOlO FILM COLLECTIVE,
Expeditions: On Race and Nation (1991)
Edited by George from texts contributed
by Akomfrah, Gopaul, George, Johnson,
Auguiste and Joseph. First published
in The Myth ofPrimitivism: Perspectives on
Art, ed. Susan Hiller, London/New York:
Routledge, 1991, from papers presented
at a seminar on primitivism hosted by
Hiller at the Slade School of Art throughout
1989-1990. In its initial publication.
Expeditions was presented as a photowork
in which details selected from the slidetape epics Signs of Empire and Images
of Nationality were counterpointed by
text comprised of group writing and
quotations from the archives of imperial
governance. Expeditions exemplified the
group's preoccupation with the literary
form of the inventory which allowed
them to focus on epistemic shifts
while simultaneously charting wider
genealogies of becoming.
Akomfrah reflects upon the process
through which the biographical imperative
is rejected in favour of a writing attentive
to a life understood as trace and as enigma.
The notion of a cinema of transparency
is displaced in favour of a cinema of
impressions and opacity that is subtle
enough to capture the invention of gestures
that we take for granted. The single
'master script' is replaced by a proliferation
of writings, by Akomfrah, by George,
by the actors. This text is published
here for the first time.
13 JOHN AKOMFRAH, Notations
of Collective Inventions for
Who Needs A Heart (1991)
In the absence of a script for Who Needs
A Heart, the actors could not rehearse
their roles but were obliged instead to
invent them in response to each other,
to interior spaces, to Akomfrah's
presentations on the cultural politics
of the 1960s and to the wide range of
o
music selected and played during three
weeks of workshop sessions. In this light,
these texts might be understood not as
footnotes to an already decided process
but rather as notations of a collective
process of fabulation; Akomfrah likened
this methodology and its outcome to that
of Wong Kar Wai's workshops undertaken
for his film Chungking Express (1994).
This text is published here for the first time.
to the same matrix of concerns.
On the Borderline (1992)
Dietrichsen conceived the conference
after watching The Last Angel of History
First published in Ten: 8 in 1992 in
which had a major impact upon German
response to the British debut of work
critics, influencing Dietmar Dath,Tobias
by American photographer Lyle Ashton
Nagl, Christoph Spehr, Barbara Kirchner,
Harris. 'On the Borderline' extended
Ulf Poschardt's DJ Culture (1998),
Akomfrah's long-standing interest in
Ruth Mayer's Artificial Áfricas: Colonial
photography, which paralleled George's
Images in the Times of Globalisation (2002)
'Reflections' essay and the group's interest
and Hellblau (2001),Thomas Meinecke's
in the work of Rodchenko, Burke, Faninovel which includes a scene in which
Kayode, vanDerZee, Horsfield and others.
characters attend the 'Loving the Alien'
'On the Borderline' sets its speculations
conference. George's inventory of
within the figure of the imaginary museum,
musicality as a space of alterity epitomises
the space of installation that recurred
his interest in speculative mode of writing.
throughout the Collective's films from
The text was translated from German
the neutral space of Handsworth Songs to
by Angelika Welt and was untranslated
the 'Museum of Dread' in Mysteries of July,
into English by Edward George.
anticipating the trope of the museological
in the work of Meshac Gaba.
14 JOHN AKOMFRAH,
15 EOWARO GEORGE,
(ghost the signal) (1997)
First published in German in Loving
the Alien: Science Fiction, Diaspora, Multikultur,
ed. Dieterich Dietrichsen, ID Verlag,
1997. George presented an early version
for the 'Loving the Alien' conference,
held at the Volksbuhne, Berlin, in
September 1997. Other participants
at 'Loving the Alien' included the critics
Dietmar Dath, Mark Dery, Kodwo
Eshun, Paul Gilroy and Greg Täte, music
producer Skiz Fernando and the artist
Renee Green. To coincide with the
conference, German music magazine
Spex published a special edition dedicated
144
The area of black independent film-making will soon see the growth of a number of
workshops established with the specific aim of catering for black film needs. We will
also see a growth in the number of films made by members of these workshops. As in
anv other field of cultural activity and practice such a development calls for collective
debate and discussion. Some of the important issues to be raised will be around tbe
relationship between the workshop organisers and participants in the course. The
others should obviously be about the nature and structure of the courses themselves.
Prior to this debate, however, is the task of accounting for the specificity of black
independentfilm-making.What, after all, does'black independent film-making' mean
when present film culture is a largely white aBair? And does this posture of independence
presuppose a radical difference of film orientation? If this is the case how does one
work within this difference?
'
The Black Audio Film Collective has chosen to take up these issues in a very particTilar
way and this is around the question of the 'figuration of ethnicity' in cinema. Our point
of entry is around the issue of black representation. The Collective was launched with
three principal aims. Firstly, to attempt to look critically at how racist ideas and images
of black people are structured and presented as self-evident trutbs in cinema. What we
are interested in here is how these 'self-evident truths' become the conventional pattern
through which the black presence in cinema is secured.
Secondly, to develop a 'forum' for disseminating available film techniques within
the independent tradition and to assess their pertinence for black cinema. In this respect
our interests did not only lie in devising how best to make 'political' films, but also
in taking the politics of representation seriously. Such a strategy could take up a number
of issues which include emphasising both the form and the content of films, using recent
theoretical insights in the practice of film-making.
Thirdly, the strategy was to encourage means of extending the boundaries of black
film culture. This would mean attempting to de-mystiiv in our film practice the process
of film production; it would also involve collapsing the distinction between 'audience'
and 'producer'. In this ethereal world Kim-maker equals active agent and audience
usually equals passive consumers of a predetermined product. We have decided to reject
such a view in our practice.
Underlying these aims are a number of assumptions about what we consider the
present priorities of independent film-making should be. These assumptions are based
on our recognition of certain significant achievements in the analysis of race and the
BLACK INDEPENDENT
FILM-MAKING
A STATEMENT BY THE BLACK
AUDIO FILM COLLECTIVE
JOHN AKOMFRAH
145
media. It is now widely accepted that the media play a crucial role in the production
and reproduction of'common-sense assumptions' and we know that race and racist
ideologies figure prominently in these assumptions. The point now is to realise the
implications of these insights in creating a genuinely collective black film culture.
fronts. With this in mind we are also making preparations with the GLC Ethnic
Minorities' Committee to organise a number of courses on some ofthe themes outlined
in this article. Neither the dates for the screenings nor film courses have been finalised
Such a programme is also connected with our awareness ofthe need to go beyond
certain present assumptions about the task of black film making. We recognise that
the history of blacks in films reads as a legacy of stereotypes and we take the view
that such stereotypes, both in mainstream and independent cinema, should be
criticaliv evaluated. This can be connected to a number of things that we want to do.
We not only want to examine how black culture is mis-represented In film, but also
how its apparent transparency is given a 'realism' in film. It is an attempt to isolate
and render intelligible the images and statements which converge to represent black
culture in cinema. The search is not for 'the authentic image' but for an understanding
ofthe diverse codes and strategies of representation.
'I am indebted to T/ie Core' — Eddie George, Una Gopaul, Claire Joseph,
Trevor Mathison for discussion which led to this transcription.
It could he argued that all this is stale water under a decaying bridge and that we
know all this stuiT already and that black film-makers already accept their responsibility
and are aware of these problems. There is a lot of truth in this. Others may say that as
long as we are making films and gaining exposure of our work we are keeping black
film culture alive.
o
- both will be advertised when they are.
178. Lina Gopaul, Jiihn Akomfrah, l'uioni and Rensions
film fatniliariiiation course,1984
179. D^/irentOesirw.Trevor Mathison, 1982-85
To place our discussion in a relevant and meaningful context the Black Audio/Film
Collective in conjunction with Four Corners cinema will he organising a number
of screenings to run with the Colin Roach photography exhibition at Camerawork
Gallery.
The series of films and discussion will run under the title oï Cinema and Black
Representation and will deal specifically with the complexity of black portrayal in films.
The main aim here is to see how film can contain 'information' on race, nationality
and 'ethnicity' with (Presence) or without (Absence) black people in films. With this
in mind we hope to cover a number of films and themes ranging from prison movies
like Scum to Hollywood social criticism films like Imitation oJLiJe.VJ\\2.X we will be
attempting will not be to push all the films into one category of racist films but rather
attempting to examine what specific responses these films make to the question of race
and ethnicity.
In the end we realise that questions of black representation are not simply those
of film criticism but inevitably offilm-making.These issues need to be taken up on both
146
WHICH WAY FORWARD?
LINA GOPAUL
This paper will be concerned with the possibilities of Black Independence - the language
of possibilities is necessary, because what we mean wben we invoke the term 'Black
Film sector' is a film-making practice characterised by different points of ^niree
— different desires, different strategies and modes of intervention in film making.
But the language of possibilities is fixed by a context: this question of context
is one of the issues we want to explore today.
Black Audio Film Collective believes that the grant-aided sector now exists in a
critical conjuncture. It is a location which is governed and structured by a number
of considerations: 1) Political 2) Cultural 5) Financial
These are the sets of considerations which constitute the present structural crises,
of which the dominant one is financial.
Biack Audio Film Collective, like other workshops, h still developing. Our present
is partly the result of the 1981 uprisings. But our development cannot simply be
understood in mechanical or reductionist terms. Black film- making existed before
the riots, but it took different forms — here lies a paradox which confronts workshops.
In 1981 we witnessed the riots which in turn created a space for our intervention
in the media - but curiously enough the further entrenchment ofThatcherist poUdes
i.e. GLC abolition, rate capping, the Arts Council's Glory of the Garden etc. presents
a threat to the sector's existence. With the demise of the GLC and the absence
of a 1981 conjuncture we face financial uncertainties, traumas and even annihilation.
The reason for this should be made clear. Black workshop practice, like other
forms of cultural production, necessarily exists in a relation of dependency to funding
agencies, Biack workshops face a future in which they could become recipients
of a rhetoric of aid.
The implication of this shift means that the sector is pushed into a different context
of operations. A new context, therefore, demands a coherent but broad strategic
practice. For the task ahead no single strategy is adequate - we must deploy a
multiplicity of strategies because the conjunction demands it.
1) It is imperative that we take on the priorities of in.stitutional struggle.
2)That we take seriously the que.stion of representation within institution.
3)TTiat we debate and dialogue around institutions.
4) Collective mobilisation for institutional changes.
This necessarily means calling for reformulation of present cultural policies.
We need policies which take account of race - but only as a means of concretising
debate on media access and control. We recognise that on the suhject of race and
cinema the majority of funding practices amount to nothing other than rhetoric.
147
This is clearly articulated in present funding criteria, because funding policies are
primarily geared towards white film and video groups; a massive disparity has been
created and sustained by present funding policies.
Black workshops do not need independence by proxy.
The question of institutional struggle is important at the level of film training —
very little can be learnt from short courses because students can inevitably do little
after them. We therefore need to work towards a position from which we can begin
to demand that race and cinema become a permanent feature of film school training.
In this context knowledge of technique is in itself not enough.
Politics and language is just as important and imperative in black film culture ;is any
other element. Film familiarisation courses that are conducted hy groups in the sector
and those organised hy the black body politic - these must be seen as part of a general
strategy for the future development of the sector.
180. Trevor Mathison. Claire Joseph, John Aitomfrah,
Edwird George, Ridley Road, 1984
In relation to black and Third World cinema, institutions currently involved in
distributing these films are not effectively circulating and puhlicising them.
181 Avril Johnson, Moscow. 1988
Britain's black and migrant communities have been forged out of unequal
relationships between the centre and the periphery. These relationships as we all know
extend to cultural forms and the circulation of imagery. Thus black and Third World
cinema is directly relevant to the political and cultural development of our communities.
Distribution institutions have lapsed in their priorities, to the point where there are
more and more African film-makers for example becoming increasingly reluctant to
send their films to British distribution agencies. An alternative structure or institution
whose primary aim is to promote and disseminate black and Third World films is
absolutely necessary. The politics of such an institution would have to be informed by
black and Third World histories and how that relates to the specificity of Britain's black
and migrant communities.
In Thatcherite Britain a language of alliance is becoming increasingly necessary.
We would need to think through the possibilities of concrete collaborations between
black and Tbird World film-makers. The issues which confront us are necessarily diverse
and we need to approach them in the spirit of diversity.
148
NEW DIRECTIONS
IN TRAINING
EDWARD GEORGE
(ASSOCIATION OF
BLACK WORKSHOPS)
182. Claire Joseph, Edward George, Reece Auguiste,
Visions and Revisionsfilmfamiliarisation course, 1984
18Î. Looking Bhck Him familiarisation course
outline, 1985
Design; Edward George
The ABW is a grouping of eight black film and video workshops situated throughout
the country. Its general function is to represent and advance the interests of the Black
Workshop sector in areas of production, distribution, training and exhibition, to provide
a framework in which it is possible to affect questiOTis of production and finance.
been the first period in post-war Britain in which we have been able to get to grips with
film and video technology for our own interests. This is largely because of a number of
political and institutional interventions made by working and underclass blacks in the late
1970s which forced questions of race and cultural production onto the political agenda.
From the eight workshops, an important cluster of film and video familiarisation
cour.ses have been initiated. The Black Audio Film Collective ran a 12-week course
covering the technological, theoretical and analytical aspects of film and cinema. Titled
'Visions and Revisions' (1984/5), the course delineated and connected a number
of concerns around race and cinema, problems of how to deploy the technology
for a black independent film culture, problems of training and prohlems of finance,
prohlems of politicising the technology. Other courses followed, particularlv by Retake
Film and Video Collective, Ceddo Workshop and Sankofa. In their own distinctive ways,
each group prioritised questions of politicising the relation of race to the technology
of film and video, both in practice and theory.
I
The training that existed before the rise of the eight black workshops failed to establish
a sense of interconnectedness between race, cinema process(e.s) of signification and
technology, its institutions and independent Him making. The effect of this absence is that
there would exist a numher of qualified black technicians but no structures by which the
technology could be consistently deployed for political and cultural self-interest.
The courses were advantageous in a number of ways. To begin with, they answered
a critical absence. There was an absence of training at any cogent level for blacks: there
was a lack of a historical framework for the presence of such training; the 1980s have
For us, as people interested in film and video work and the possibilities of a yet to
he realised film and video culture, training was important for a number of reasons.
It would enable us to realise our own projects. We could challenge existing technical
norms and gain entry into securing a certain technological independence. It would
engender a concrete engagement with the production of meaning, especially around
cinema's racial bodies. Such training would provide us with such skills that we should
stand the same chances of employment as a white person similarly skilled. Moreover,
it would firmlv contextualise such skills in the interests of a hlack film and video culture.
149
An impossible demand perhaps, since the very sense in which production was thought
of excluded a self-interested black independent presence. Blacks were often considered
the least suitable for makingfilmsor videos on issues particular to themselves, possibilities
of finance were negligible, and this lack of financial support, coupled with a failure
by the largely white independent sector to fully address questions of an independence
based around race, cinema and technology, reflected an agenda at odds with our own
desires for a black film/video culture. The workshops thus emerged as a means of
securing our own training for our own ends.
The film and video courses provided by the workshops intervened in an area where
previously no voice(s) had existed which specifically addressed questions of training
for black film and video makers. There had been the Black Media Worker Association
(BMWA), whose function was to provide a broad intervention into the area of blacks
employed in the media. Unfortunately its diversity tended to diffuse its effectivity,
especially in relation to independent Him and video making. The National Film and
Television School of course provided courses which were generally available, but its
almost non-existent intake of black people reflected a hidden agenda of exclusion
of the black working class on the grounds of a lack of finance and under-qualifieation.
In the context of previous training initiatives for black people, the workshops'
initiatives proved beneficial for a number of reasons. They have built a very particular
audience, a critical constituency, the majority of which is increasingly committed to
a black independent film and video culture. At their most successful, the workshops
have identified an integrated teaching practice, a process which connects questions of
technologv to wider questions of production - questions of finance, distribution and
exhibition. They have problematised the relation of tbe technology to an anti-racist
cultural politics of film and video. Such courses provide a number of areas of possible
intervention for training, again particularised by an ongoing commitment to a black
independent film and video culture. It also provides important systems of support,
internal structures and specific interest groups which can lead to different approaches
to Him and video.
Overall, the main advantages of the film and video familiarisation courses was that
they provided an exposition of the importance of politicising the technological aspects
of Him and video making, so that it could no longer be an isolated technicist question
simply of hands-on experience, but one of connecting that experience of technology
to wider questions of race and gender (BAFC's 'Looking Black' f/v course, 1985),
finance and distribution (Ceddo's 'What Future the Black Workshops?' 1985),
meaning and productivity (BAFC's 'RaceTruces' screenings and seminars, 1985).
The courses did, however, have their shortcomings. TTiey were brief and
sporadic (lasting a week to a few months at the longest), and it proved difficult to
provide students with the next step; the courses do not ensure unionisation, nor do
they guarantee further training since there is little formal recognition of the courses by
any of the more established training bodies (JobFit, NFTS, the numerous art school f/v
courses). The courses had no real cultural /political status outside of their own context;
people may be in a better position to secure training on the basis of their experience
with the workshops, but not on the basis of the workshops' cultural/political specificity,
or the basic ways in which they outlined the importance of training. The workshops are
largely dependent on other courses (NFTS, JobFit etc.) to further concretise their
initiatives, hence the importance of a dialogue with institutions which prioritise
questions of training.
Since the rise of the black work.shop sector, there have been manv cbanges in the
availability and meaning of training. Unfortunately, initiatives such as JobFit have failed
to recognise the success of the workshops' approaches to training. For the future, the
workshops will continue to run courses which will become more comprehensive and
increasingly sophisticated, building on their own developments.
150
INTRODUCTION TO
REFLECTIONS OF THE
BLACK EXPERIENCE
REFLECTIONS
OF
THE
BLACK
EXPERIENCE
niimiHTID BTi -"E OLC RACE EQUALin UNIT
»•TtltW DmiOTMWl JOHMTt OHENBtODIE OEOBQE
MOTUM IDITeanXMMrTMM OO0WBm*TCOl MONIllA B
Mjtnc BOOTH •
VANLIY BUIIKa •
lUNIL OUPTA •
MUMTAZ KARIMJM •
OAVID LKWIB •
ZAK O V I •
•NONID H>LLAflD •
«UZANNI RODKN •
MAOAHI•HARAK a
EDWARD GEORGE
KKLIOTIONI
OP WORK BY
AIIMIT niANOIB
184—8S. Catalogue, Reflections ofthe Black Experience,
1986
186. Edward George, Visions and Revisions film
familiarisation course, 1984
187.
Catalogue, from Two WoWdi, 1986
188. Catalogue, The image employed: The use ofnarratire
in Black an, 1987
184
We are confronted with a body of photographic work. A body of reflections on the
black experience in post war Britain. A series of photographic meditations, diverse in
their character yet consistent in their emphasis on the primacy and value of autonomous
representation in matters pertinent to the lives of black people in Britain.
We are confronted with a corpus of concerns, the substance of a photographic
inventory - the social; the political; the economic; that of gender and sexuality; the
cultural. An expansive terrain, full of familiar signs and referents. What is there to
convince us that these photographers can at least show something new of the familiar,
or at best, convince us of anything more than the familiar?
We have excerpts from the work of 10 black photographers, their names might be
new to you. They were selected on interview and portfolio by a smail panel of black
workers in the cultural field. Among the photographers are photo-journalists, students,
cultural practitioners, and political activists.
They comefi-oma diversity of cultural/political hackgrounds, and use photography
for a number of different ends. This might make us wonder ahout the idea of so many
divergent perspectives forming one exhibition, especially one with such a tenuously
homogenising
title.
'
IBS
The title of this exhibition is 'Reflections ofthe Black Experience'. It is a body
of work made from study, impression and contemplation. It draws from an inventory
of contemporary and historical references, for a political/radal memory to come and
one which is with us. What coheres divergences is the question of race. The body of
work here constitutes a racial body in that the photographers' collective worldview
is spoken in the interests of a number of black presences. The photographs are here
to work in the interests of these presences before any considerations. This collectivity
is African, Asian, and Caribbean in its descent and its ascension, and while such
collectivity is not new, it is not common enough. The racial body of these photographs
is gendered, its sexuality is formed along the boundaries ofthe racial /political and
these are the means by which it speaks. The gender and the colour of this racial body
signifies at the level of their geopolitical and cultural effects rather than as questions of
chromosome and pigmentation or biology and physiognomy.
We thus have a number of presences, a body constituted from differences, held
in the moment of photography. We are in the presence of Asian women and men,
and Afro/Caribbean women and men. They take photographs and the unity of their
exclusivity makes them particular. It affirms an opposition, a positioned response to
existing visual histories of the biack experience which may not essentially prioritise the
151
From Two Worlds
thej.mage employed
187
interests of black people. Should this body of work engender new associations for us in
the face
of these histories which jostle for our attention? Will it be a useful addition to a growing
language of cultural struggle? These are questions for reflection.
'Reflections' marks a 'moment' in a time of economic and political implosion.
A moment when a numher of cultural initiatives have been taken by municipal
government as responses to the demands for 'new values'.The old order has been
thrown into a state of imminent collapse by the excesses of'minority' interests.
'Reflections' is a component part of municipal government's challenge to the claims
of these demands. On this occasion, the spaces that hold photographic discourses
together are being fought for. They are the spaces of the body, the space of event,
and the space held for questions of geography. What is at stake here is the ownership
of the terrain of social relations upon which the racial body is used to m;irk out, and
conversely, upon whose body is marked out the terms and limits of existence for a class.
The presence of this body of work is reflected and mediated by the memories and
traces, the practices and situations of other photographies. In these presences lie
multiple histories of the racial body; images and bodies lying embalmed in uneven
188
and contradictory relation.
In the wake of the body lies photography's contingency, the force of history against
discourse. And central to photography's discourses of the body, of event and geography,
is a lack, for the radal body, of self-movement, a body without an internal machinery,
frame upon frame of meaning grinding the body to halt.
We are confronted by a photographic socius. We may be 'bom again' in these
photographs. We may be witnessing our deaths in objects. We are confronted by the
possibility that this exposition may mark the ascendancy of a new racial body, a new
geography of radal discourse, a new positioning of the racial body in the field of sodal
relations.
These possibilities need not be regulated or normalised by talk of'positive images'.
The images here are neither positive or negative, and that is not where their effectivity
lies. The question for the success of these photographs lies in the extent to which they
can establish new cartographies of presence while rethinking the old. It is a question
of timely meditation and calculated mediation; of challenging the force with which
governmental, judicial, corporate interest, and market forces produce meaning
from and around the racial body for their own ends.
152
BLACK CINEMA,
POETICS AND
NEW WORLD
AESTHETICS
ARTRAGE
Inter Cultural Arts Magazine
REECE AUGUISTE
Histories of black independent film practice have hemmed film-makers into a set of
social relations which demands that the inventories of cinema itself should he assessed
anew. An analytical reading of this cultural field reveals two distinct but vet interrelated
historical antecedents which inform our filmic practices: the early period of British
black independent film production from Lionel Ngkane's allegorical yemima and
Jobnnie (19S4) to that of the 1970s with the films of Henry Martin, Horace Ove,
imruh Bakari (Caesar) and Menelik Shahazz and the political and aesthetic interventions
ofThird Cinema as a counter-movement In film, which is critical of its position as it
is of European cinema.
Our point of departure is that each generation rewrites its own history. Black
independent film practice is at a critical conjuncture where it must necessarily make
a radical departure from other film practices. Our presence in independent cinema,
as it is currently structured and mediated hy institutional and the political is, !
believe, engaged in a struggle for its epistemological terrain through modes of
visual articulation and narrative concerns which do not desire to emulate or mimic
other cinemas. It is a cinema critical of its own discourse as it is of other cinemas.
other Cinemas,
Other Criticisms
BLACKBOARD
There are two distinct traditions from which black independent film practitioners
can extrapolate materials towards the development oftheir own film aesthetic: one is
the literary traditions of the diaspora, rich and diverse in myth, parables, and orature
and its diverse practices in the diaspora; the second isTeshome Gabriel's theoretical
work on Third Cinema: Tbird Cinema in tbe Tbird World: Tbe Aesthetics of Liberation.
It is these interrelated fields that are capable of producing the desired inflections,
new forms and new narrative structures in cinema. Black British independent filmmakers are the product of the New Worid, also of Africa and India, and whether
horn in the Third World or in the spectacle of declining British inner cities, they have
a generic connection with the perils, pleasures, passions and contradictions, the cultural
landscapes of the New World.
» BUCK TELEVISION^ Wbat do rou
JuHin Henriquci on Utck t«l*vhlDn
• «CHEVMO THtT AW: IndepsrKl«.! blMk
U n and *Uw Van Ciltwn
PlltS MODE FUTUHES, NEWS AND KVEWG
1 want to turn my attention to Derek Walcott, who, in my view, is the Caribbean's
greatest poet. A.ssuming that Derek Walcott's maxim, 'Each generation re-wTites its
own history', is correct — as I believe it is — it therefore becomes possible to locate the
manner in which black independents articulate a series of incisions and inscriptions into
the history of British independent film culture. A combination of the system of racial
representations and the inventories of cinema have structured our engagements with
the histories and practices of cinema, with narrative forms and structures and with
ISÎ
political/economic questions upon which independence is based,
BLACK
CINEMA
Britain and America
I shall make reference to Brazilian cinema - Cinema Novo - a cinema of extreme
solitude, reflection and revelation. Historical, geographical and economic differences
aside, I am compelled to reiterate Glauha Rocha's insights on oppositional film practice:
When film-makers organise themselves to start from zero, to create a cinema with
new types of plot lines, of performance of rhythm, and with a different poetry, they
throw themselves into the dangerous revolutionary adventure, of learning while you
produce, of placing side by side theory and practice, of reformulating every theory
through every practice, of conducting themselves according to the apt dictum
coined hy Nelson Pereira Dos Santos from some Portuguese poet: 'I don't know
where I'm poing, but 1 know I'm not going over there.'
y (..Mont I, »V
ICA
documents
7
Black Film
British Cinema
189. Artraye Ínter-Cultural Arts Maga/ine, Issue no. 8,
Spring, 198 S
190. Screen: Other Cinemas. Other CrUicísms,
Volume 26 Numbers 1-4, May-August, 198S
191. Blackboard, double issue, Spring 1986
193. Undercut: the magazine from the London Filmmaken
Coop, Number 17: Cultural Identities, Spring 1988
19Î. Black independent Cinema, University of California,
1987
194. Black Film Bniish Cinema: ICA documenls 7, 1988
I'm not arguing for an uncritical reproduction of the filmic practices of Third Cinema.
I make reference to Glauber Rocha so as to demonstrate an affinity with the desire to
rupture and embark on new beginnings. Black film-makers are constituted hy diverse
histories of exclusion and emigration; hy cultural experiences emanating from the historical
conditions of the New World, Asia and Africa. The cultural terrain upon which we work
is invested and structured by pluralism, which indicates the immense problems involved
in attempting to affirm a unitary definition of cultural identity and social experience(s)
through the apparatus of dnema. Cultural diversity disavows the singular and monolithic
in cultural production. It is precisely this diversity of experiences that must inform
aesthetic production and the problematisation of representation.
Derek Walcott has painted in word.s a visual representation of the Caribbean
archipelago, finding the source of his vision in its human tragedies, its terrors and
triumphs. It is revealing that Walcott once remarked that 'The trulv tough aesthetics
of the New World neither explains nor forgives history'. Given that in this forum we're
talking around the binary of pohtics and aesthetics in cultural production, it is appropriate
that I enunciate the invaluable contribution that New World literary discourses and
aesthetics can make in the development of our visions of black cinema in Britain. It is
here that memory must assume the position of privileged informer. The extrapolation
of memory from literary forms and contexts crystallises the intersection between
literary concerns and cinema. New World poets such as Pablo Neruda of Chile and the
Martiniquan, Aimé Césaire, for example, have made memorv the substance of their
work. The desire to grapple with the tropes of memory, with the intersection of mvth
and history must not he understood as exclusive to literary productions although these
constitute a body of archival matter which can inform our film practice.
154
Although history continues to weigh heavily on the present, there exists a paradox in
that it Is not the unbearable forays of past history which continue to traumatise New
World consciousness, but the ambivalence and tragedies of the modern; a contemporary
vision which struggles with tragedy. Here the myth of the noble savage collapses under
its metaphysical contradictions. Walcott reminds us of this when he says '... that myth
never emanated from the savage, but has always been the nostalgia of the old world
- its longing for innocence'. Our vision is not naïve, unlike the great monumental
poetry of the Old World; we do not pretend such innocence. Memory as it is
conceptualised by New World poets is salted with the bitter memory of immigration
and fragmentation. It is this acidic taste of memory that has to be brought to the service
of the struggle of black independent film practioners.
These are historical and contemporary ideas that should be addressed by cinema.
New departures in film culture also necessitate a struggle for radical forms, reference
points, for a filmic vitality in narrativity and audio/visual style. Film practitioners
cannot continue to rearticulate the discourses which structure positive/negative
representations of race. Film-makers who want to develop a cinema of relevance
must jettison the discursive concerns of multiculturalism and the positive/negative
image to the cultural wasteland. Our presence in the 1980s demands an interrogation
of the rhetoric of race in relation to cinema. It aiso necessitates a re politicisation of the
technological apparatus of cinema. Politicisation can occur in the production process.
A testing of possibilities and limitations.
Thus the successes of the black independent sector rest on an astute reading of the
political economy of independence, institutional practices and a radical reconvergence
of cultural identities and filmic representation/production. If Walcott's notion of an
aesthetics which 'neither explains nor forgives history' is to supersede the dominant
discourses of the European avant-garde and other cinema traditions, then film-makers
have to interrogate and evaluate the genealogy of those traditions. Again it is a question
of testing limitations. Engagement with cinema thus assumes a set of multiple practices,
which is why I believe that the title of the forum is both inadequate and deceptive.
The struggle for new life and vibrancy in cinema must occur on multiple fronts.
BLACK CINEMA, POETICS AND NEW WORLD AESTHETICS
DJasporic Discourse and Inventories of Tradition
The Ethiopian film-maker Haile Gerima has signified the importance of literary subjects
in the formation of oppositional dnema: 'Because of the rich history of black literature
and our renewed oral tradition, the independent dnematographer must, out of necessity,
incorporate and fully use this astounding body of resource material.' Gerima's insight
put into sharp focus the organic connection between New World poetics and the
possibility of forging new aesthetic presences in black cinema. The poets of the New
World have had to address memories of terror, its historical antecedents and the
manner in which the present is mediated by it. These themes of terror and exploitation
are indicative of the breadth and vision of New World imagination, as in for example,
the poetics of the Guyanese poet Martin Carter, in his beautiful poem 'The Terror and
The Time', which is the title of a film from the same country by the Victor Jara collective
about the formation of the Guyanese working class.
Notes Towards an Aesthetic of Terror
It is possible, I believe, to develop an aesthetic of terror in cinema akin to Walcott's
'tough new aesthetic' which is ultimately transgressive, capable of produdng mutations
and incisions, which can ensure that the Western gaze can never regain its privileged
position as the ultimate arbiter of symbolic meaning and representation. A black
independent cinema which attempts to register an aesthetic of terror is concerned with
possibilities, critical of its genealogy and trajectory. When we allow memory to assume
the seat of privileged informer, of having a transgressive function, then the process of
re naming begins. As Walcott says 'We are blest with a virginal, unpainted world, with
Adam's task of giving things their names'. The act of naming things anew is a fundamental
prerequisite of a cinema with new voices and visions.
Finally, I shall address the issue of audience accessibility and questions of language.
My reference point is Black Audio/Film Collective's slide/tape production Expeditions:
Signs of Empire and Images of Nationality .The Collective has often been asked the question,
'Who is your audienceP'The question is always premised by the understanding that
Recce Auguiste
155
the language in which we have chosen to articulate colonial exigencies is thought of
as rather abstract, difficult and ultimately inaccessible. I must deploy a Shakespearean
subject so as to affirm the importance ofthe use of this language. The subject? Caliban.
A subject whose historical existence is characterised by a psychic split: the language of
Caliban's unconscious is as much to do with exclusion and accommodati<ïn as with fear.
The paradox is that Caliban's presence reveals to us the psychic turmoil of his master
Prospero. Through Caliban's action. Prospero's soul is revealed. Listen to Walcott
on this dilemma. 'Your view of Caliban is of the enraged pupil.You cannot separate the
rage of Caliban from the beauty of his speech, when the speeches of Caliban are equal in
their elemental power to those of his tutor, the language of the torturer has been mastered
by the victim.' Now the terrain upon which we work is such that the critical deployment
ofthat language is towards the production of new meanings. This is viewed as
collaboration with dominant language but for us it is victory.
195. Reece Auguiste. Ridley Road, 1992
156
With the launch of Black Audio Film Collective's debut film Handswortb Songs into the
public domain, there has been much debate about the film's form, its multi-layered
narrative structure, its audience and the deployment of archival footage. Most revealing
about this debate has been that strand of thought which addressed the complexities
of the role of black film artists in contemporary Britain. The underlying assumption
advanced is that there is a particular documentary form or set of practices which Black
Audio Film Collective should have pursued in the making of Handswortb Son^s.The
structure and form that our critics have alluded to is of course that of documentary
realism. Unfortunately, these critics who have been most vociferous on this issue have
in my opinion failed to address the numerous textual problems associated with this
genre. One has to beg the question, 'Whatever happened to the debates that took place
in the pages of Screen, Framework and other film journals concerning the problem
of documentary realism?'
HANDSWORTH SONGS:
SOME BACKGROÜNO NOTES
The reception of Handswortb Songs as a result has bordered on both critical acclaim
and hostility, the latter has in our opinion been more dismissive than con.structive.
In the interview that follows the attempt has been to address and extend the parameters
of the debate around our work. We also acknowledge that any introductory text to such
an interview is equally problematic because of the dangers of reproducing what has
already been said in the interview. So, in writing this introductory text, the attempt
has been to avoid the temptation of writing in a manner that is overly didactic. We have
decided to construct a text that at least struggles to overcome some of these problems.
REECE AUGUISTE
Poetics and Time
The work which later became known as Handsworth Songs already had an imaginary
existence prior to its composition if one takes into account the abundance and creative
use of archive film. Our first engagement with archives began back in 1982, and Handsworth
Songs is partly a continuation ofthat engagement. Handswortb Songs was preceded by
a two-part tape-slide project called Expeditions: Signs of Empire and ¡mages of Nationality.
Expeditions was a visual textual exploration of nation, the mythology and rhetoric of
race, the uncertainties of empire, of paranoia and the psychic disintegration of colonial
imaginations. It was ostensibly a visual presentation of the decentred T . For Black Audio
Film Collective, the archive constitutes a privileged terrain of knowledge: in archival texts
we were confronted with fragmented residues of histories of migration, memories of
the joy and pains of settlement, of the grim possibility of having to consolidate the
157
experiences of arrival and often how best to make sense of rejection in the face
of hostility and social indifference. Every new piece of film that we retrieved from
the archives presented us with new possibilities ol deconstruction and simultaneously
the reconstruction of both past and present.
Space and Politics
'Keeping people alive with words, isn't that almost the same as creating them with
words?' - Canetti. Some have heen quick to proclaim 'documentary film is dead'.
Weil, is it? While the cynics gather round to bury its lifeless bones, a gentle diasporic
One of the problems that we confronted in the construction of Handsworth Songs was storm refused to acknowledge its death. Black Audio Film Collective says it is
still possible to rescue it. The documentary form/narrative is not dead; the
how best to dramatise the past which is, for a few minutes, encapsulated and imprisoned
by time. To bring aÜvc those nervous reflexes, to capture and reconstitute the sensibilities PRONOUNCEMENT of its death is an indication that a crisis of the cinematic
imagination has taken root in British film culture. To let it die amounts to a disservice
of those who were forever 30 years voiceless or those who were given a voice when the
BBC or other television companies said 'You may now .speak, but don't forget our narrator to the film work of John Grierson, Robert Flaherty and Humphrey Jennings.
holds in his left hand a sword and in the right hand the winning card.' In other
words, 'we shall articulate your emotions, we shall define your sense of belonging
or displacement'. Our task was to find a structure and a form which would allow us
the space to deconstruct the hegemonic voices of British television newsreels. That was
absolutely crucial if we were to succeed in articulating those spatial and temporal states
of belonging and displacement differently. In order to bring emotions, uncertainties and
anjcieties alive we had to poeticise that which was captured through the lenses of the
BBC and other newsreel units - by poeticising every image we were able to succeed in
recasting the binary oppositions between myth and history, imagination and experiential
states of occasional violence.
We arc reminded by Elias Canetti that 'In England words waste away'. Handsworth
explodes, sociologists produce exhausted theories, law and order barons scream for
more demonic regulation of the surplus class. While theorists theorise, the volcano
remains active, smoke and ashes refuse to disappear. The sulphuric smell defines the
mood, the nation is astounded, but Handsworth remains voiceless, strangled into silence
by the media barons. Explosions occa.sionally remind us that all is not well. 'One invention
still lacking - how to reverse explo.sions' - Canetti. To make sense of the debris in
Handsworth, Black Audio Film Collective had to reconstitute the fragments, and in
so doing, words, sound and image came alive in an audio/visual style. Like a drama
of long lost recognition, a politics of necessity brought to the public domain the
contradictions of innocence and expectations. The sad irony of Lord Kitchener's words
'London is the place for me'. Kitchener standing on the deck, nervous, shaking, but
desperately trying to keep the calypso rhythm together; Prospero wants to hear so
Caliban must continue to sing it. The context of production, together with the film's
own structure, ensures that the articulation of time and the black presence is recuperated
and seen anew, that Britain's post-war anxieties around race are laid bare for all to see.
Handsworth Songs was made in a Griersonian spirit with our own diasporic inflection
adding substance to it. We hegan hy wanting to resurrect the past, to reconstitute form,
narrative space, of allowing memory to tell history, her/story differently. Our task was
a flight from talking heads and didactic forms in cinema. Black Audio Film Collective's
intention was always to stretch the imagination so that the poetics could be finely
interlocked with a black political aesthetics. Poetry in combination with a set of multilayered images forges a lyrical space into which British post-war sensibilities around race
could be conceived anew, for 'In a certain sense the past is far more real, or at any rate
more stable, more resilient than the present. The present slips and vanishes like sand
hetween fingers acquiring a material weight only in its recollection' (AndreiTarkovsky).
In the final analysis Black Audio Film Collective will continue to excavate the past
while clutching in our hands segments of the present, because the important point
is that the vibrancy of black independent film culture remains alive even in the debris
of Prospero's malady.
196, John A!»imfrah, Soho Road, Handsworth,
Birmingham, UK, 198fc
197. John Matheson, cameraman, John Akomtrah,
Handsworth Songs, 1986
158
TWILIGHT: AUKER'S WORLD
REECE AUGUISTE
Twihgbt is a 16mm film documentary essay on the idea of a city in ascension and decline.
contemporary, imaginary perpectives with a voice-over narration. Placed at the film's
Isedora in the land of Macedonia. Auker vows to visit Macedonia (England) and on
her return will tell him of Isedora (London), Macedonia's central city. Since he is blind,
she will tell him of the stars and of their planetary positions, from whicb he will infer
the fate ol this fantastic dty. Auker will then know the formula by which she can read
the future of Macedonia's neighbours.
centre around which all three perspectives coalesce is the fictional character Aukcr
Isedora (London): The metropolis
The film proceeds from the premise that it could be any modern metropolis. Twilight,
however, is predominantly concerned with London, tbe metropolis, its past and
its present, focusing on the inner cities. London will he explored from historical,
whose presence can either be onscreen or through a voice-over {imaginary}.
I
Fragments of Auker's biography
Auker is a creature of the city, a product of its triumph and misfortunes. Born ami
raised on tlie south side of the city, Auker splits her time between work and travel.
Auker's entry into the narrative is through voice-over narration. We are told of Auker's
recent trips to South India, of her encounters with an old blind Dravidian military
general who told her stories of ruined ddes, cities with fantastic names and histories
and those that are living the last pages oftheir demise. He believes that the character
and fate of cities can be read in the positioning of stars/planets in the solar system.
But one dty remains a mystery to him.
The film's narrative will address the city in terms of its districts and experiences
ofThatcherism in the 80s. Through a combination of interviews, archives, voice-overs
and shots of contemporary London, a portrait of the city will emerge. The various
districts will be called hy names other than their real names.
Lsedora'sfinancialcentre will be referred to a.s Valdrada, i.e. the vicinity of the stock
exchange. The centre of commerce, trade and the money market, there you will find
tbe largest concentration of locusts and vultures. Valdrada's god is money and when its
inhabitants are betrayed by their gods they are visited by calamities. The locusts and
vultures will be examined in the context of the impact and reverberations of the big
bang andThatcherism itself on the city, through last October's Black Monday.
159
Hogarth's painting A Rake's Progress will be used to make both historical and
allegorical commentary on contemporary London. In addition to this, the material
that will be useful here will be archives of the 1930s stock market crash, government
speeches, contemporary TV news reports and interviews.
London's inner dties will be referred to as the districts of Kademah. in Kademah,
tbe occasional traveller will see the largest concentration of Isedora's dispossessed,
its inhabitants walking its barren streets aimlessly, large groups of the unemployed,
alcoholics and the homeless sleeping in stations and under bridges. In the midst
of all this waste, the senate (Thatcher's government) has dispatched its task force
team to Kademah (inner dties) to deal with its dispossessed.
Through the use of voice-overs we learn that on arrival in Macedonia (England)
Auker finds her way to Isedora (London), the dty built on thinning clay and chalk, a dty
of half-completed buildings, narrow canals and underground tunnels plagued with rats
and fading monuments. A city whose inhabitants have been repeatedly struck by plagues
and most recently an army of locusts and vultures (i.e. yuppies, financiers, property
developers and cocaine users).
Auker discovers that the Macedonian senate (Thatcher's govt) has despatched
a series of task force teams to the districts of Kademah (inner dties: Tower Hamlets,
Peckham, Brent, Hackney, Brixton etc). In Isedora, Auker monitors the activities
of the senate's task force team and begins to make contact with a cross section
of Isedora's inhabitants.
Twilight will present the views of this cross-section of people through a series
of interviews in which they speak of different aspects of contemporary London in the
era of Thatcherism — of their personal experiences and opinions of Tliatcherism such as
poll tax and its effect, homelessness, yuppies, drug abuse and bow they view their
metropolis in the year 2000.
The interviewees are a professor. An alcoholic. A writer. A busker. Community
architects.The aged. A black senator (M.P.) from the Macedonian opposition party
(Labour). The unemployed. Factory workers. Health care workers. Nurses. Interviews
are to be filmed both on location and in studio.
The archives will include the following: Foreign diplomatic (i.e. commonwealth)
visits to the city. Scenes oí early immigrant life in London of the 1920s. Industries.
160
198. Photographic test,The City o! London,
Twilight City, 1989
199. Photographic test, Lloyds of London,
TwHight City. 1989
200. Photographic test, Spillers Millennium Mill,
Royal Victoria Docks, Tvtilighi City, 1989
201. Photographic test, Nat West Tower,
Tv,iilght City, 1989
202. Photographic test, Co-operative Wholesale Society
Mill, Royal Victoria Dock.s, Twilight City, 1989
20Î, Hilda Sealy a.s Olivia Levelle,
Twilight City, 1989
Jesse Jackson's visit to the metropolis (already shot BAFC archives). Tebbit and Kinnock
on the inner cities. Charles visits and pronounces on the inner cities. Burning buildings.
An aerial shot ofa burnt out desecrated city (Kiev),
In addition to archives, Twilight will make use of Hogarth's paintings and engravings
to evoke a particular view of the past. Hogarth's paintings will be used in the development
of the narrative in the sense that his work addresses the themes of the savage and
o
civilised in English society i.e. the civility ofthe aristocracy juxtaposed against the
squalor and depravity ofthe lower orders. Again, Hogarth's blacks, often depicted
as either domestic servants or generally as part of the lower orders are in fact pointers
to the hypocrisy and degeneracy of English society.
The paintings are: Gin Lane, Marriage a la mode, A Harlot's Progress and The Four Stages
oJ Cruelty. Hogarth's paintings will heighten the Hlm's allegorical context/style.
Details of London's gothic buildings will further heighten the themes of horror
and dominance as a characteristic feature of the metropolis.
161
IDENTITY
AVRIL JOHNSON
But I must confess to you these dilemmas are clearly to do with previous positions.
Previous places that race has occupied in my life and I dare say yours.
I have worked for five years in a Collective which has been primarily concerned with
experience and representation. With enabling and empowering — however problematic
those tasks might be.
The concern with representation was clearly a concern with social categories.
With the vigorous demands of Race that subjectivities connect with.
The categorical imperative of Race was that when identities speak they primarily
confess a racial experience; that difference comes in different colours - one which will
never mention its name, the other which would endlessly confess its experience. One
which would give its authority by silence, the other wMch would always rise to effortlessly
position itself by telling it like it is.
I wanted to raise two points about identity as a way of dealing with an increasing
dilemma about the relationship between the public and the private.
I know this had some relationship with a general question of identity raised by this
conference. But I also realised that in putting the two things together, a private dilemma
about the relation between the public and the private and an ongoing debate about
identity, cultural or otherwise, immediately opened up another dilemma that is to do with
choice and urgency on a political level. Privately it is to do with positioning; with how one
positions oneself vis-à-\is a grand monolith of race and nationality; with how one positions
one's speech vis-à-vis the binaries of inside and outside, with whether one continues to coopt with the futile gesture of them and us.
The dilemma is also one of delegation - which self will I delegate to speak on my behalf
here today for myself and Una for a conference of mainly academics, which I clearly am
not, if the theme is one of identity. The dilemma is ultimately one of speech. What speech
I feel comfortable with, what speech will reveal something to you. It is a general dilemma
about hou' one reconciles subjectivity with dillerent speech cijmmunities while working
as a Producer, Production Manager, Script Consultant, Collective member.
1 hese are professional subjectivities as it were. 'Professional' speeches and professional
jiositions of speech. 1 could speak to you as:
a) A Black Woman
b) Ethnicitv i.e. born in the Caribbean etc.
c) A member of Black Audio
This leads me to the two points I wanted to raise in the beginning. Points to do with
difference and identity; to do with how difference is articulated, how different categories
are formulated and reformulated.
In Twilight City we travel with Olivia through London, taking a tortuous route
of denial of identity and the destruction of Utopia. This has obvious implication for
debates around identity.
A firiend asks why we still maintained a black in the Collective's name - behind this
question is a desire for wish fulfilment, i.e. the business of race is over. One would like for
this to be true. But when the Arts Council decided to get rid of different ethnic categories
and instead implement the pluralism of cultural diversity/difference one questions
what practical value this will have. One doesn't want to say that the busine.ss of race
is never fmished because that would lea\'e race in a historical vacuum from which it
cannot be rescued.
Inside the black community Network East had a phone-in programme about whether
Asians consider themselves black. The idea behind the question is that some people have
gone beyond calling themselves black while others still desire that category.
Both positions display the same desire for wish fulfilment.To raise these two points isn't
to fix race permanently as unfinished business, but to point to the discrepancy between
circulation of categories and subjecti\ity. If there have been changes they have been arrived
at through debate and will not be glimpsed by unilateral declaratiem of independence.
163
BLACK INDEPENDENÎS
AND THIRD CINEMA:
THE DRITtSH CDNTEXT
REECE AUGUISTE/
BLACK AUDIO FILM
COLLECTIVE
I will proceed by posing a set of questions that I believe have emanated from the
historical context of black independent film production in Britain. They are questions
that should concern all audio-visual practitioners who are serious about the direction
of black independents.
In the general context ofThird Cinema practices it is of vital importance that there
is some clarification of the terrain from which we speak, that film-makers are aware
of the social conditions in which they are expected to produce a politics and dnema
aesthetics of relevance. The threat posed to the pcssihility of sustaining black independence
implies that an examination of our situation is necessary. The questions which Black
Audio Film Collective wish to ask are:
1. What is the precise state of black independence vis-à-vis the British cultural
industries?
2. Do the history and contemporary engagements of black film makers constitute
Third Cinema practice in Britain?
We are coming from too mucb,
we are moving towards too little.
Elias Canetti
These are complex questions and any re.solution has to emanate from concrete analy.sis
of the political economy of dnema in Britain. For independents the question of production
has always been an issue of priority. However, the desire to produce film as commodity
has a location in the market and is determined hy conjunctural factors - economic,
political and cultural. The sector's further development is therefore literally hemmed
in by these social relations. It is important, then, that film practitioners analyse their
location in relation to wider developments in the industry.
Our point of departure is propelled hy the idea that each generation necessarily
engages in a process of rewriting/reconstituting the past. Film-makers have to paint
their own landscapes, they must breathe new life into each moment in cinema.That can
only be achieved when practitioners have mapped out the field of visual representations
and the film techniques they may wish to deploy. Historicity aside, the presence of
British black independents is essentially a post-war phenomenon, of which the black
workshops are the most recent development. Historically, the workshops have always
been structured and determined by three interconnecting factors; 1) political, 2)
financial, and 3) cultural. Those three interconnecting categories have always
determined, and will continue to do so, what is possible or not possible in an
already severely racialised terrain. The space that we occupy as film-makers is
increasingly becoming crisis-ridden, and thus the political economy of our independence
is threatened. Undoubtedly Thatcherism, which is of course the most distinctive form
163
of Conservative politics of the post-war years, has had multiple effects on tbe British
cultural industries. Again, and paradoxically, the crisis is notThatcherism itself, hut
the broad Left and its inability to produce an alternative vision of Britain in the 80s.
A general paralysis seems to govern the Left's political imagination in the 80s, and that
is particularly pronounced in the area of cultural production.
A BLACK AUDIO FIUM COLLECTIVE PRODUCTION
SACRIFICE A PIECE OF T H I PAST
FOR THE WHOLE OF THE F U T U K
2(H
Having said that, we must also acknowledge that the crisis of the British film industry
predates the advent ofThatcherism. It appears that Thatcher i te politics is merely
hammering home the last few nails into the coffin. Those vital considerations aside,
we still do not have a film policy on a national level tbat is capable of creating a vibrant
and viable film and media industry; of promoting a film culture which has at its centre
new and challenging visual productions, together with the necessary finances to ensure
its continuation. A reformulated and viable film policy with central and local government
providing capital investment would ensure full employment for film and video artists
whose immen.se talent for the art of cinema often dies a horrendous death. Any national
film policy, however, cannot alTord to erase from its agenda the issues of race and
representation; thus hlack independents have, with relentless persistence, to deliberate
and ensure the inscription of race on any film policy agenda in Britain. In this cataclysmic
field of multiple contradictions, of political and cultural uncertainties, which is partlv
determined by economic monetarism, where precisely are black independents located
and how can we best arrest the tide?
From our critical evaluation and assessment of this conjunctural crisis, vis-à-vis
dnema. Black Audio Film Collective believes that independent producers in this sector
occupy a sodal space that is structured and governed by determinance of a state of
emergency. If I can for a moment quote Homi Bhabha as a means of punctuating and
extending this analysis: 'In every state of emergency there i.s emergence.' Here Bhabha's
political insight opens up a space in which we can both recast and stretch the possibilities
of independents. The demands and social responsibilities are quite direct: black filmmakers have to rethink the political/cultural agenda, together with the possihie
strategic engagements for ensuring the continuation of independent film practice.
It appears highly problematic to converge a politics of cultural resistance, as is practised
by our diverse communities, without the prioritising of the real specificity of film
production. In other words there is a danger that cultural resistance can he romanticised
and thus reduced to an essentialist discourse of political practice.
Sii^ai^JMÖjtötE&u-
lithe concept 'cultural resistance' is to retain any analytical statu.s, it will have to
he substantially reworked in order effectivelv to address the structural crisis of tbe 80s.
BLACK INDEPENDENTS AND THIRD CINEMA: THE BRITISH CONTEXT
164
In our view multiple contestations and concrete relations, in combination with the
institutional shift within the media industries, may just constitute the albatross round
the neck of romantic and essentialist readings of cultural resistance.
The conceptual binary of power/knowledge is not a given, nor does it represent
static epistemological categories. As a couplet, it is historically contingent because of the
different power relations and knowledge productions that exist in discourse. Therefore,
the debate can be most productive when it is linked to conjunctural relations of the
media institutions, and the workshops' relationship to them.
Thus it is the spedficity of conjunctural forces that should inform the manner
in which 1 ) emergence takes place and 2) the political and cultural agendas can be
drawn up. These are some of the strategic considerations that should contribute to film
practitioners' overall understanding of the dynamic shifts occurring in the sector, and
do to some extent determine the possibility of black independents. Workshops can
only construct a viable challenge to the apparatus of dominant cinema when we have
thoroughly and vigorously analysed the actual political economy of cultural production
in this post-GLC conjunctural terrain, where many are still recovering from the postabolition blues. In fact the politics of abolition have effectively inscribed film-makers
into a different amalgam of social relations where Institutional, local state cultural
policies, and central government are forcing independent film producers to reassess
the edifice of cultural production.
i'
I
Third Cinema
Tbe conceptual apparatus called 'Third Cinema' is very broad. The manner in which the
concept is loosely deployed means that it is progressively in danger of abandoning its
analytical potency. In invoking the term Third Cinema practice, film artists in Britain
must be politically astute to recognise that Third Cinema in its classical dimension
does not exist in Britain. However, those film-makers who remain adamant about
its existence should at least give recognition to its infancy.
207
Although there are historical reasons as to why we are in agreement with the
theoretical explorations of Third Cinema prac1:itioners from Glauba Rocha to Safi Faye,
we also believe in giving privilege to bistorical and geographical contexts in the
formation of our film sense. Independent film producers of the diaspora have a historical
/cultural task which is to extend the boundaries of dnema as an apparatus capable of
1. In 1986 ihe Greater London Council and iilhtr
metropolilan coun<ils were abolished hy the Consei-vative
government. The councils, and the GLC in particular,
had been a nujor sourcf <il' support for emergent
d.s well as established cultural practices.
Reece Auguistc/BIack Audio Film Collective
165
articulating our vision ofthe social world.Therefore, it is absolutely redundant to
reproduce the filmic categories and organising principles ofThird Cinema theory in
the metropolitan centres, for this amounts to an intellectual disservice to those who
for many years mentally and physically laboured to make it a viable proposition within
a particular geographical context.
Debates around Third Cinema have not in my view sufficiently addressed developments
in the cinema by diasporic subjects living and working in the metropolitan centres of
London, Paris, NewYork etc.Thus it becomes immensely problematic when films from
Britain are incorporated into this all-emhracing conceptual framework called Third Cinema
practice. Such a process does not allow adequate space for a critical evaluation ofthe
distinctiveness of films emerging from Britain and other Western metropolitan centres.
That level of analysis and critical reflection is most needed.
However, I believe that a tentative relationship does exist between Third Cinema
in the Third World and that which is In the process of becoming in Britain's black
communities, but the principle of reciprocity is such that it forces both a contingency
and a mcdiacy. In our attempt to develop an alternative visual grammar it is imperative
that we acknowledge influences other than that ofThird Cinema. It is precisely that
plurality of film form, of narrative techniques and our sense of the kind of cinema that
we wi.sh to develop, that distinguish our work from that of Latin America, Africa
and India.
An intervention in visual culture that is capable of artic-ulating the diasporic condition
has to proceed from political, cultural and historical specificities, not from general
filmic criteria or abstract formulations. Black film practitioners in Britain occupy a
specific historical space, and it is one that has been forged by our particular experiences
of race, politics and cinema aesthetics in Britain. It is only through a process of
experimentation that there can be new developments in film techniques, new criteria
for visual representation and new voices in cinema. Only then can we make genuine
claims to have made any significant contributions to that large and impressive body
of work by film-makers ofthe 'periphery'. We should first and foremost recognise that
there is a syncretic process occurring in the area of film culture, and it should be given
its due celebration. Given the level of social uncertainty that presently exists in this
cri.sis-ridden political and cultural matrix, it is important that film practitioners repoliticise
the technological apparatus of visual representation. Politicisation can occur in the
production process itself: that sovereign space where film-makers can radicalise the
representations of gender, sexuality and the archaeologies of black subjectivity. Black
208
2CM. Poster. Twilight City. 1989
De.sign: BAFC
30S. Musical visualisatiiin lor I'lcclronic synthesiser
.soundtrack, Tmltghi Ciy,Trevor Mathison, 1989
206. Conuct sheet, Jwlilghi Ctty, 1989
207. Contact sheet, Tmilight City, 1989
208. Outline for Twilight City, Reece AuguLste. 1989
i 66
209. Trevor Mathifion in the .studio for tht- Tmligbt City
soundtrack, 1989
BLACK INDEPENDENTS AND THIRD CINEMA: THE BRITISH CDNTEXT
workshops occupy a field of practice, theory and analysis. We are thus engaged
with cinema as a technological mode of production, as a constellation of institutional
conflict, wars of shifting positions, and as a systematising of the ways in which sound,
image, colour and movement signify.
210 12. Muskal visualisation,Trevor Mathison, 1989
Tentatively, this field constitutes an interrelated voice of multiple concerns, a voice
given presences and framed by questions of technological, institutional and significatory
battles, a war of meaninp, a cinema of signification. The conditions of existence
experienced by workshops imply that film makers of the sector should utilise every
technology of visual production that is available to them. That would of course demand
an increased use of so-called marginal formats, like for example Super-Eight film. This
also demands that an interdisciplinary approach to film-making should inform one's
conception of film practice; it is a question of building a particular audio-visual style.
Since its inception. Black Audio Film Collective has endeavoured to build a critical
language, a grammar of precision, of movement and fluidity. It is a ta.sk that we feel will
contribute to the enrichment of black independent film culture. An inter-disciplinary
approach which is both constructive and engaging eradicates any conception which
poses itself as a monolithic discourse of form. Indeed, our film Handsworth Songs is an
attempt to problematise notions of narrative structure and form, questions concerning
the parameters of black aesthetics and in particular the radal economy of signs.
i'cc Auguistc/Biack Audio Film Collective
167
[)iasporic dnema should be a cinema of appearances, evoking and marking new
inscriptions. The value of this cinema in terms of the development of independent
film culture is immense. Our task should be that of developing a cinema which has a
multiplicity of configurations, of identities and histories, of rewriting visual styles and
evoking a dialogue between technology, class, gender and language. Given that our
presence in the metropolitan centres has been forged out of unequal relationships
between the centre and the periphery of post-colonial contradictions and presences,
we passionately believe that it is apt to further inscribe meaning into those presences.
A presence spoken through a system oi knowledge, because there are no dark continents
of meaning and there are no dark continents of cinema untouched by an aesthetic of
presence. The issue is that of producing new forms of aesthetics, of visual styles and
experimentation with clear-cut political and social objectives that can contribute to
the development of an art form so young as the cinema.
In this manner, sound and image may assume new life and signification as one of the
organising metaphors of black dnema in Britain. Diasporic film-makers can learn from
the insights of Indian film-maker Kumar Shahani: 'to open up the language, to reveal
every articulation in reality by revealing every articulation in the form.'This, I believe,
should be one of our many tasks and responsibilities as film-makers of the diaspora.
210
-1
1 t- l- :
•
-I
"I
\
-1
: ::
•
•
•
iÍ
1
ti
i
1II
-
•-
-
•
-
h"h-
•- i - l -
il
1
rrr
t—
-
1-4-
M «1
—
1
lili
•
1
•
• • •
1
1
1
—
1
'- t
-- ;
11 i
111--1 !
r
-M-J-t~ —1
!i-
V-
i
h-
• •
•
ff
m
a
1
i
-
(
T+FFFfi
1 Ili'
.p±
S"
- e •
• •• •
"
L
tt
—
1
;
j
1
L
•
•1 ••
,
H^^.
-——
1
•
fl m r
111H li
11
:
i
1
;
—
- -i
—r
-
m*
•——.
1
11
r
T
m
•
Í
—1
•
s•
I
• •
1-
—.
-
1 1
1
w
4-
1II T
l.
-*
H
• •
-mr
]
I
A. .
. . . Í
. . 1
41
n 1 «J 11
J
m11
n
-
Ti 1 Mill
ïr
-r
1
.
njT
4-
...
c:
L.
T
4
mm-
f
hi
r
'—
,^
•r—
•r
-
\
\
-
—1
-•
---
-
^T~'—*—
I
\
-f
-
-L U u
.i
\ s.
•.p r
,1.
i1
i
\
-
! !
-
t
!
r
t •
>•
1
L
•ff •
11
r+
f-4+HI
• f f
L
V
1
-.
-
-•-
.:|
-It
1_
k
-
i ±1
-
u
71?
170
COLOUR SYMBOLISM
IN GHANAIAN SOCIETY
JOHN AKOMFRAH
INTERVIEWEO BY UNA GOPAUL
I come to questions of colour via fine art andfilm-making.My understandings of colour,
having lived for 25 years now in England, emerged from being a student trying to make
films, and through art history. In that kind of world, there are clear traditions by which
one understands colour. A very obvious example of this relates to the standard art
historical account of red and of blue. !n nineteenth century colour theory, red comes
forward and blue recedes. I have always understood them to be in some ways polar
opposites, giving us differing definitions of space. My interest in colour in Ghana
specifically started while making preparations for Testameni, a film about memory. What
surprised me was to find a universe in which colour meant other things. It was a shock
to begin work in Ghana and to find that there was another universe in which you place
the two colours together because they speak the same thing. I think what one is talking
about is a universe in which red and blue speak in the same language with the same
intensity but from different vantage points. 1 do not think you can say that about red and
hlue in the nineteenth-century colour field. The definitions of space provided hy hoth
are very, very distinct. One is about distance and providing foreground and so on, and
one is about providing background. One recedes and one comes towards you. So to
approach questions of colour with a Ghanaian inheritance means, in a way, undergoing
a particular kind of transformation in w hlch you are willing to suspend disbelief in your
own understanding of colour, momentarily. I think that at some point they come
together again, but momentarily one has to forget what the nineteenth century offers.
The ideas that Testament was trying to deal with were, on the whole, intangible ones,
of mourning, of loss and death. It became clear in the course of trying to devise a
structural narrative for this film that one would be missing a lot if one did not pay
attention, in some ways, to how the 'tribes' understood the organisation and operation
of colour. In our investigation of colour it became clear that, traditionally, colours have
been used in very specific ways to describe the two extremes of human life - birth and
death. If you go searching for rituals that are associated with these two extremes you
come up against colour. Death, for example has three very central colours: black, blue
and red. Those colours were always confined to rituals of mourning so that the rituals
are almost synonymous with those colours. It is very difficult to make sense of those
colours without referring to the key rituals with which they are now intertwined and
vice versa.
Rfd, blue or black can be broken down to describe the different kinds of death
that a particular mourning session would take up. If you go to a funeral you would find
people in red and for those people there would be a kind of anger about the fact that
171
ABLACK AUDIO FILM COLLECTIVE PRODUCTION
TESTAMENT
THE WAR ZONE OF MEMOHIES
BIACK AUDia FILM COlLECnVE
M B >S a televsnn presente In 1966 SW lefl Om tx tnglana
M i Loriüan liHStil min «ukshao fonned <n !983. BAFCi key pnoriiv
.in«f a miHiatv com SMvcwed never to retum. In 1987 Abena
nm Deen 0 » dmetiiinen ol a Hack mdependanl H!rn cirihve in R[ii<iNi
len Enqiand b l Chara with a sma tdntslan a m
BAR7S pas inducHans mlucB'EVEOnNKS'
ani the mnm «MnM) fMannnmarv WMlSwilRTK SDMGS
the person is dead. Those wearing blue are probably relatives who are so shocked they
really do not want to express anything more than just a kind of muted but dignified
silence. The majority will be in black, black being a much more public, collective
definition of mourning. So with some minimal understanding of colour, you can, in
.some ways, understand the space of death and how that space is organised at a funeral.
Now what interested me was the question of why those colours predominated
in those celebrations. What is it about them that lends themselves to be appropriated
in that way for ritual. I do not think I am close enough to answering that yet; all one can
say at this stage is that there are a number of tributaries of thoughts and ideas through
which different definitions and düíerent understandings of colour have entered into the
everyday in Ga society. It is not accidental; it is not mere coincidence, when you find
out that, for example, up until the fifteenth century, the Gas made sacrificial blood
offerings to the key deity of the tribe. At a certain point the deity was seduced and
tricked into taking shark blood or tuna blood because it could not distinguish it from
human blood.
So 1 think in a way part of the u.se of red in Ga society masks a certain dishonesty.
A public exhibition of a certain .shame for having participated in this trickery. And yet
undermining that shame is also the understanding that red really is a colour of permanence,
a colour of defiance because it is the colour of blood. It is not easy but one can draw
a line from the offering of sacrificial blood, at a particular moment, to these uses of that
colour as a way of singing death out of the trihe and with it the burden of the past. It
comes to stand for a way of banishing both shame and death to the margins of that .society.
It is not quite so easy to do the same sort of archaeological inve.stigation of blue.
But i think you cannot understand the predominance oí blue without also understanding
the fact that for long periods of time, really up to the middle part of the twentieth
century, the chief occupation of men in that tribe was going out to sea. They would
.spend long hours of the day, I suppose most of the day really,fishing.They would start
at dawn and they probably would not come back till about three or four in the afternoon
just in time to then sell the produce. When you take into account the fact that they have
thought enough about the significance of the sea to attempt to ofier produce oí" the sea
to their deity as sacrifice - if people are prepared to go that far in securing a certain
kind of understanding of their life through the sea then we can begin to see the ways in
which the sea would have played more symbolic functions in their lives as well. So red
and blue entered into the everyday via ritual and in some ways, up until now, they have
John Akomfrah Interviewed by Lina Gopaul
173
21).JohnAkoinfrah, Una Gopaul, Ridley Road, 1992
2 H . Card, Testament. 1988. Design; BAFC
215. Card, Testament, 1988. Design: BAFC
216. Tania Rogers as Abena, grain silo complex.
Tema, Ghana, Testament, 1988
217. Emma Francis Wilson as Danso, Testúment, 1988
317
both been kept in the everyday on the margins, specifically for celebrations,
for mourning and for ritual.
Black is that much more difficult to deal with but 1 think one has to be aware that
black itself has this central prominence in tribal life ofWest and East African religion.
With most societies in East and West Africa, you will find the existence of black material.
People would wear it normally; it need not be associated with death at all. But in Ghana
it is very unusual to find the use of black material in any other way except to do with
death. That may have to do with the fact that traditional symbols for describing the
activities, the names and the principal functions of the deities in Ashanti society are
always represented in black. The Adninkra symhols, which one thinks of as oracles,
as voices of the dead and tbe supernatural, are traditionally always represented in black.
So in a way you can understand why, symholically, that colour could be appropriated
for rituals of mourning and loss. It is already part of the universe and the ritualistic.
I have talked a lot about death. Tlie other extreme is to do with birth. 1 am using
birth in a much looser, much more generic sense of the term, in terms of festivities
which are to do with harvesting, the emergence of thefir.stday of the Ga season, the
deity celebrations wbich are to do with the arrival of the gods in that society. There will
be specific days in which people ofthat tribe will be literaliy possessed. There is no other
description, no otber word that describes the activity, any more effectively. People will
be possessed and they will come out and speak the voices of the dead, the ancient ones.
When they do, they are always in white. 1 know of no occasions where a person has
been possessed when they arc not in that material. There is a particular chalk which the
Gas call 'ayiloh'.That chalk has to be daubed onto the face, the arms and so on and
trinkets have to be worn, most of wbich again are white. So literallv. from head to foot,
people would have to he covered in these ornaments and daubed in white, and that
would be the way in which the tribe accommodates its understanding of the most
important thing in its life - its gods and its voices of the dead, which organise life much
more effectively than anything of the present. That knowledge can only really he consumed
at the ritual festivities of the Woulumei and Wuioyei - the men and women of the gods
— who are represented in this colour.
The colour also has other kinds of functions hecause once it becomes the organising
principle around which people make sense oflife, anything to do with the affirmation
of life then has to go through that colour. If you want to marry somebody there are
particular things you have to hring. One of which would be the material white, or if you
174
COLOUR SYMBOLISM IN GHANAIAN SOCIETY
offend somebody, if you offend the gods for example, by doing something terrible and you
want to be spared, you would also be expected to bring a piece of this white material.
In a way, the society itself is organised according to ancient bureaucracies, and these
bureaucracies are hemmed in by two extremes. TTie extremes are really to do with the
preoccupation with birth and with death in metaphoric terms, but also in quite literal
tcrm.s. These two central preoccupations also have around them, almost as a sort
of barrier between them and the living, a barrier between them and the everyday
particular kinds of colour. What is interesting is why birth only has one colour and
death three; I suppose if you have lived in a society which is perennially on the point
of danger because the tribe itself is so used to constantly being attacked, death becomes
mucb more important, in a way, than birth.That might partly explain it, but it is still
interesting to think that there are societies in which, from the Egyptian Book of the
Dead onwards, death has probably meant more than life, but in a paradoxical way.
The only reason why that is the case is because people use death as a kind of
yardstick for life so that the fascination of death is not an entirely morbid one.
In many ways it is a kind of affirmation of life, because what I think people are trying
to do there is to understand the boundaries of life and in doing so reap the most
rewards from it.
I
One of the things which is interesting to find out about red, apart from being
associated with this transition from being a cannibalistic society to being a much more
civilised one, is the fact that for a long period of time the colour red was also associated
with the menstrual cycle. Traditionally women used red cloth as a menstrual cloth.
The only time that one saw red was at those times in the month when the cycle was
obviously in operation, and then one would see bits of red hanging on lines and so on.
I think if you take tbe obsession with blood as a sort of sacrificial offering to the God
with this very private drama of the menstrual cycle, then between the two of them
these rites effectively managed to banish die colour red into a kind of intimacy, the
intimacy of myth, or the intimacy of women's lives, the sohtude of women's lives, and
effectively kept it there.
One saw very, very little public everyday display of the colour red, as a tie, a costume,
without some attempt to disguise the fact, that here is red in its full splendour as it were.
One rarely saw an example ofthat. I remember - being somebody who has lived in this
country for almost 25 years, and having become increasingly sensitive to the question
of colour and the importance of it - being taken aback at a wedding on a recent visit
where 1 saw somebody dressed in a sort of pink, which from a distance could be
2IH. John Akomfrah. Testúmeni, 19H8
219. Flmina Castle. Cape Coast. Ghana. 1988
John Akomfrah Interviewed by Lina Gopaul
175
construed as red. I think on the whole a lot of people, older ones especially, probably
still find that slightly disturbing. I am not saying that in a way red is still banished
or anything, but it seems to me tbat certain colours achieve a kind of tahoo value
or status and once they do that you are effectively in the realms of metaphysics
and it is very difficult to then wrestle colour away from that dimension and give
it significance in the everyday. I think in a way the colour red is hemmed in by those
two dramas in Ga society.
It is interesting to note that the national (lags for a large number of countries in
Africa have the colours red, gold and green. There you find attempts made by
national government at the point of nationhood to give another kind of expression to
the colour red, to give it a more national expres.sion without attempting to rob it of
its ethnic, spiritual or metaphysical value. I remember reading somewhere that in fact,
when the colours in the Ghanaian flag are broken down, red indeed talks about blood.
It is about the blood that we have shed when we have fought for nationhood. It is a
very easy transition in that sense to make because of course for hundreds of years
Ghanaian women have shed, literally shed, blood for that country. On the other hand
I think the difference between the two is important to establish because if the colour
is capable of speaking nationally in that way, it also means then that in a way people
are not prisoners ofthe earlier, more private ritual. Given another kind of authority
that is capable of organising itself around a colour in a way in which people don't feel
threatened by, it is then possible for people to inhabit a world in which their loyalty to
tribe and loyalty to nation can be organised by the same symbol, the same colour
without any problems.
176
EXPEDITIONS:
ON RACE ANO NATION
BLACK AUDIO FILM COLLECTIVE
NOUGHT: THE MOMENT
August 1891
Picture me there, a dazed missionary, listening to those dream tellers. Listening and
wondering, listening and wandering, with one foot in the grave.
We await classification; we are not traders, not raiders, therefore, he cannot get at
us, cannot 'place' us. The only category he can conceive is that of'the people who live
by doing nothing'.
He is a withered old man, disconcerted, scrutinous, quizzing incredulously,
with one foot in the grave.
ONE:... AND THE ARCHIVE
Expeditions i.s an engagement with the mythologies around which national identity is
secured. The central concern is to investigate the fictions of national character as they
are produced through the excesses of colonial fantasy.
Expeditions follows the operations of colonial discourse in its living-death throes
(Thatcher's 'swamping' speech), its moments of transmutation (Gaitskell's hopes for the
new Commonwealth), and its morbid multiple births - Amritsar, Liverpool 1919, Bahia
1808, South Africa 1951, London 1981.
It is a poem on remembrance, and the art of forgetting anew.
TWO:
NAMING THE MOMENT
Expeditions prioritizes archival reading. A kind of returning to the source, privileging
archival moments as instances whereby we can grind the tempo of colonial discourse
almost to a halt, paring its parts down into a genealogy of colonial narratives. An inventory
of such moments might include the following;
(l)The zoological/Cuvierial moment. Best exemplified in the ciassificatory works of
the French biologist Cuvier,Thomas Carlyle's 'Discourse on the Nigger Question', and
the speeches and writings of Enoch Powell.
(2)The eugenic/Darwinist moment, in which the two necessary examples are
Edward Long's two volume History of Jamaica, and the statistician Francis Galton's
177
pronouncements on selection of character.
(3)The eviingelical/expeditionary moment. Consider here the 'Missionary Research
Series' published during the 1880s, and the eve of 1601, when Queen Elizaheth I signed
and sealed the charter of the East India Company which raised the curtain for Britain's
Indian Empire.
(4) The millenarian/redemptionist moment, in which we turn our attention to the
writings of the abolitionist society: Wilberforce and Sharpe, p¿irticularly, and the
memoirs of Captain Crow of the Kitty Amelia, 'the last English slaver to sail legally'.
THREE: YOU WILL BE MINE
I8B2
Twilight over the Niger, a remembrance: 'My dream, as a child, was to colour the map
of Africa red.' Sir George Taubman Goldie, standing before the Niger, which he liked to
think of as his own.
He sees us reading. He awakes as from a nightmare to discover that the whole of his
past experiences have returned. And even as he lapsed into half-sleep, we recorded and
transcrihed his fantasies. He sees us reading.
Colonial discourse is an anxious rhetoric. And this anxiety is precisely to do
with its negation of its pretensions to civility. This ambivalence perpetually performs
a displacing, splitting function - just when we thought the European was a creature
of Enlightenment, we discover him to be a barbarian.
1889
Dr. D. Crawford, FRGS, traveller for twenty-two years without a hreak, in the long
grass of Central Africa, looks at a photograph of an African with her hands cut olT. The
good doctor pauses. With slow, unshakable resolve he says, 'it is not the hands that steal,
but the heart'.
In looking at colonial discourse through specific moments, it is possible to identify
key rhetorics through which notions of a national character are defined and reworked.
Rhetorics of becoming, rhetorics of loss .,.
In the settlement of Virginia, begun by Sir Walter Ralegh, estahlished by Lord de la
Mere ... these attempts completely failed. Nearly half the colony was destroyed by
178
savages ... and famine. The rest, consumed and worn down by fatigue ... deserted the
colony and returned home ... in despair ...
... there we can see the colonial discourse as the supreme overinvestment in the
minimal demand. It simply states, 'I want you.'
i\
... then again, the circulations of power and authority with which tbat demand is
made are always excessive: 'I want your hody, your soil, your labour, your soul, your
love.' A conflation of land and flesh, fear and desire.
FOUR: THINKING BLACK
'Remember, you are the stranger.'
January 1900
Frederick Lugard, the 'father of Nigeria', begins his governing of the new colony. 'The
vast majority of the inhabitants were not only completely unaware that they had been
allocated to Britain, but were ignorant of its very existence.'
Expeditions looks at how colonial discourse builds an orature of identification
between social subjects and narratives. Between myth parading as essence, and essence
parading as national character, is the oratorical 'We' and 'They' of nationhood's
discourse of colonial mastery: Thinking Biack.
''
In Thinking Biack, the Portuguese can invest in distilling a sp>ecific rum, aptly called
'Nigger Killer', for export to Africa.
'
In Thinking Black, a nineteenth-century ethnographer sits by the window of his
Bloomsbury study. On his desk, photographs of two African women. He scribbles across
one, 'A typical mop bead-dress', across the other, 'Mere harharism disgusts ~ it is the
unnatural union of savagery and civilization that is ugly and painful.'
In TilinkJng Black the illustrator/writer of'The ABC of Baby Patriots' reaches the
ninth letter: "T is for India, Our land in the East, where everyone goes to shoot tigers
and feast.' Reaching the letter 2 3, a baby patriot reads; "*W" is the word of an
Englishman true: when given, it means what he says he'll do.'
TTie father of Nigeria continues with flat surety; 'They cannot know who they are,
or what they are.'
,
BLACK AUDIO FILM COLLECTIVE
SIGNS OF EMPIRE- BAFC
1) Signs of Empire
2) An investigation into Colonial fantasy
3) In the beginning
4) The textual
5) The archive
6) Imperialism
7) In the beginning
8) The winter-lands of narrative
9)
10)
11) The impossible fiction of tradition
12)
13) The treatise
14) In National identity
15)
16) A the decanted autobiography of empire
17)
18)
19) The rhetoric of race
20)
21) Fissure in popular memory
22)
23) The anxieties of colonial rhetoric
24)
25)
26) Business
27)
28)
29)
30)
31)
32)
33)
34) Trace
35)
36) Condensation
37)
38) Fetish
39)
40) Erasure
41)
42) Signature
43)
44) ñxation
45)
Chorus
Expeditions: On Race and Nation
179
220.Trevor Mathison, Reece Auguiste, John Akomfrah,
Visions and Hefisians course, 1984
221. Contact sheel. Twilight City, 1989
222. Script, Signs of Empire, 1982-84
2 2 3 - 2 4 . Contact sheet, Twiligbt City, 1989
BLACK AUDIO FILM COLLECTIVE
180
FIVE: BEYOND THE SEA: A NEW BRITAIN
The delirium of becoming: a moment caught between myth and history.
What we need to ask is, what regime of truth governs these sentiments?
Now known as KongaViuitu, Dr. D. Crawford, FRGS, author of Thinking Black,
gives the game away. Having stood for twenty-two years in what he calls 'the malarial
mouth ofthe Congo', Doctor Crawford has this to say about the native:
Take the negro now, and watch a curious thing. I mean that hard, impersonal stare
of those bottomless-eyed natives, not the intense penetrating thing of Europe. You might
be something worked on tapestry or painted on a china cup, so impersonally does
he look at you.
The good doctor has discovered himself and, consequently, England.
There, in that monster mouth ofthe Congo. Yawning seven miles wide and
vomiting its dirty contents into the blue Atlantic. TTiere, I say, you see the sad and
symbolic story ofthe decadence on the west coast of Africa. For the fearful fact has to
be faced that all things European degenerate in central Africa — European provisions go
bad, Europeanfrxiits,European dogs degenerate. So too, European men and women.
The grace of unbecoming: between force and meaning, a moment, caught.
SiX: DO NARRATIVES DiE?
Signs of Empire and Images of Nationaiity trace the conglomerate of .signs which
structure national identity, in their transformation from old chains of signification,
to the geopolitical indiscretions which organize contemporary subjectivities. New jokes
are spoken through old; old fictions are reborn as morbid truths.
1981
I
London. QC Sir Ronald Bell (RIP) hisses quietly on the BBC Panorama studio set. On the
screen behind him, film footage of civil disorder in 1980s Britain. His lips part in a smile
to the camera and the rotting teeth belong to Sir Patrick Lugard. They gesture in ghastly
unison to the screen;
''
If you look at their faces ... I think they don't know who they are or what they are.
And really, what you're asking me is how the hell one gives them the kind of sense
of belonging young Englishmen have.
I'm sitting in my front room. I look at his face on the screen. His face looks back at me.
Seeing only partial presence, I am reminded of Fanon's words:
Not only must the black person be black: s/he must be black in relation to the
white man.
August 1891
They don't know who they are, or what they are ...
The desert stretches before the missionary. He continues to sit and listen to the wind
whistling through the sand. 'Through them, we know what we are not, and therefore
what we are is always unstable.'
He sees dancing figures as the sands eat into him. 'What is this, if not the desert
turning poet?'
181
ON WRITING
WHO NEEOS A HEART
225.
Edward George, Portsmouth Polytechnic, 1981
226, Contact sheet,TTie Manor House location shoot,
mo NttJsA Heait. Ropion. Hertfordshire. UK, 1991
JOHN AKOMFRAH
216
The individual is not the sum of his common impressions but of his unusual.
Gaston Bachelard
When we started the research for this film I felt the need to write something down
which summed up the spirit of the project: a private memo to he used as a guide
for our search. So I wrote this down:
a. What is the film ahout — Michael De Freitas, his loves, passions, influences,
shortcomings and failures.
h.Why? Because whether we like it or not all the above provide a significant picture
of the turbulence which engulfed, sustained, gave feature and figure to black life
in England in the 1960s,
In getting to know Michael we are beginning the hard work of self examination.
To do this we need to privilege ambiguity, complexities and contradictions.
Halfway through the research I began to think that our focus was misplaced; that we
shouldn't just be looking at Michael. So then 1 tried to understand by writing the following:
To make a biographical film is to ask to be possessed; it's like asking to be haunted hy
the traces and deposits of another life. The film becomes a way of reliving experiences;
you the film-maker accept the responsibility for living another life all over again. You ask
the dead to surrender to you their right to oblivion. You go into their crypt because
you want to become them. But this process is necessarily incomplete. All you do in fact
is inherit their'voice'. You are possessed by it.The problem is that since that 'voice' is
necessarily caught between the past and the present it is always in the process of becoming.
It never quite surrenders its independence, never quite yields to you. That is its power,
its magic. Now when you understand this you do one of two things. You either pretend
you're still in charge; still telling the 'true story' and you end up making a dishonest
film like Scandal. Or you decide to do 'something else'.
In Who Needs A Heart, Edward George and myself set out to do 'something else'.
The first (thing) was to write a script which dealt with the enigma of Michael X
by looking at him through his impact on other relationships and lives.
In searching for the truth of the story of Michael X we had found it impossible to
separate the man from the legend. Much of what we assumed to be real events turned
out to be a mixture of myth and hearsay.
i 82
Mkliwl de Fmlas lu
icHnEL X
In- MidM-l AUhil Malik
238
What we found was not a story but a sort of illustrated history of gestures. Gestures
which a group of real men and women — black and white — used to plan their lives.
We gradually came to understand that Michael De Freitas, alias Michael X, alias
Michael Abdul Malik was very important in the inventing of these gestures.
So Who Needs A Heart shifted away from a political biography of Michael X
to a more archaeological project on gestures involving: sex, crime, jazz, religion,
rhetoric, uniform, romance and race.
We decided that each scene would explore one or more of these gestures as it was
being formed or invented; that we would place the playing out of this drama of gesture
in recognisably 'domestic' settings; that we would allow these gestures to define the
course our characters would take. The only limits we placed on this freewheeling
process were:
1 .That each of the characters we came up with had to be created out of the month
of viewing and interviewing that we had done.
2. Each one also had to be based on a facet or nuance of Michael's persona.
After that we started writing.
227. Erie Hobshawm, Bartdlis, 1969
228. Michael Abdul Malik, from Michael de Frettas
to/Hichael X, 1968
229. George Jackson. Biood in my Eye, 1971
230. ]o Durden-Smith, Who Killed George Jackson?
Fantasies, Paranoia and the Revolution, 1976
2 3 1 . Hakim Jamal, From the Dead Level:
.Ualtolm X and Me, 1971
183
NOTATIONS OF COLLECTIVE
INVENTIONS FOR
WHO NEEOS A HEART
JOHN AKOMFRAH
POI
1965
(didn't realise Naomi wa.s a pastor).
P2I
1965
Rehearsing to music(?) of the period.
P23
1965
What's going on? It's about constructing each other's identities.
place in a church? He can't afford an organ.They're liberated to
the degree that they can all go to the church and do this? Scope of
'innocence' a belief that communication across boundaries is possible.
It's significant that Naomi and Sydney don't go.
The first level we are confronted with is that of Artifice/Ambiguity.
#67
The moment of the film is ambiguity - an ambiguity of place - about
Church - public space / held - public space - cross burning.
Church of love / Church of hate.
who belongs where — a moment of flux. People figuring who they're
going to be on a day-to-day basis.
(break)
The group then started talking about memories of how they dealt
with race/difTerences/racisms - a divergence.
Shift from racist figure to becoming the person who 'made it'.
Entrance into church fluid movement.
Why is he sketching Sydney in the church? What's going on there?
Jack's rhythm - as a photographer - quick - in and out - essentially
predatory. Painter's rhythms — contemplation ~ why does he go out
if he doesn't have to go out {as an artist)? Does he go to the field
as a painter or a black .supporter?
It's important for the action to stand for it as it is. Not as a
# 68
The sixties as moment for free-thinking expression, sexual liberation,
yes or no. Is that what's happening here? Why does the scene take
prescription for further action.
184
Break
of this film is about the moments before and after speech.
Cross-fertilisation of racist ideas between US and UK.
Ian: There's a difference between how you enter the time in the 60s
to how you do it in the 70s.
Anecdotes about racists who still think of Britain as still this massive
space of empire.
What will I be seeing when I see this film? People doing things.
The silence won't be noticeable.
The psychological make-up of the figure who makes the speech.
Powell was right.
They agree it's more worthwhile to talk about character interaction
than poing through each scene.
'
Painter has to change between painting as politics and painting
as painting or marry both.
And that characters introduce themselves to each other.
ian would like a chalk board to work out the relations of one
character to another.
Cassie still thinks contemporary blacks are the first to think
of themselves as UK black. Part of which is cultivating a sense
of cultural and political largesse.
Faith: negrophile; Louie's her link to black culture. He doesn't take
her that seriously. Is he a painter masquerading as a political activist?
He's wary of her, because she's a journaHst (this is about crossburning scene).
Trying to hold a tension between a culture of mediocrity and a
culture of possibility / culture of expression.
'Our parents expressed themselves through their children' - no that's
the moral and ethical pivot of the film.
He doesn't seem serious about (1) the cross burning — he's more
interested in fronting on Faith; (2) News on TV of Malcolm's death
- he's more interested in Faith.
Cassie's insistence on celebrating our parents' achievements.
Cassie's trying to work out the coffin kissing scene. John offered
a solution, a cruel action with a kind motion. Cassie doesn't find
Millie's action of getting Naomi to kiss Louie's coffin justifiable.
While celebrating emergence you have and think about the meaning
of that emergence.
The process of being cut down or being made small.
Louie and Naomi - bad for each other? Their relationship starts
and ends with blood.
Opportunities being missed — governments and ideas being formed,
that's the process, that's the palette; that circularity.
We're going back in time stybsdcally, but we're still staying here.
Commonwealth of feeling, fleeting moment.
Simmi: works for spivs, Jack has her own house, Millie rents
a room from Simmi.
This is about the options that were available at the time.
Jack: is he responsible to his profession, himself, his friends?
Simmi: where did that come from?
Jack has dilemma — what does he do when he sees the eviction.
He's genuinely into the black cause, but his whisky swigging is it like Louie's cynical laugh, is it Dutch courage? Is Jack an art
photographer or a journo-photographer? He lives behind his camera.
There's something painful about it for him. What is he going to do
#76
A fraternity of doers. Simmi.
Why is the news delivered like that? By faith.
Naomi: family before politics? church before politics?The silence
1965
234
232. Swiíty, rejected puster for Who NeedsA Heart, 1991
233. Mo Sesav as Simi, Kwabcna Man.so as Louis,
Who Needs A Heart. 1991
234. Mo Sesay as Simi, Kwabena Manso as Louis,
Who NeedsA Heart, 1991
235. Naomi's beads, scriptures, candle, Wbo Needs
A Heart, 1991
236. Caroline Burghard is Faith, Who NeedsA Heart, 1991
186
NOTATIONS OF COLLECTIVE INVENTIONS FOR WHO NEEDS A HEART
with the photographs - he's going to put them in his 'unpublished'
file. One day in the fijture he will publish it.
He will take a picture because he doesn't want to lose that moment.
He's old money, he's from that strand of white society, successful,
who aligns himself with the black cause among ether causes.
He's made a break with his past, he's given money to causes.
Assuage his guilt.
Bring the question of his money up in the TV interview.
What drives him — integrity or commitment, or journalistic
opportunism? He is a man who takes photographs - he's documenting
the movement. In '65 he's doing this for England - that's where his
head would he at.
Simmi lets Jack in because he's impressed by him and his money
and his knowledge of the movement and drugs.
Regarding jack's mixed race child: the wife left him.
1965
Simmi — the reality of his world is cold cash money. He doesn't ask
where his employers are from - because if he asks too many questions
his world will collapse.
,
Simmi and Louie are friends - fi-atemity of thieves, they need each
other - an interdependency. Simmi is Louie's link to the street.
Simmi is shrewd but misinterprets things: dangerous. He is the
movement's calling card. He can hold his ovni: and is thus valuable.
Millie's eviction.
#79
Simmi takes money from Naomi. She might not like him for that but
he could also give her and Sydney work.
#80
Party - the fun part of Faith and Louie's relationship.
#81
Abigail's appearance as jack's sister; Ian has his doubts about her.
She seems a bit of a red herring. Maybe they'd be better set
as ex-lovers, a perfect class match. Too difficult to establish
without speech. General: compared to everyone else, Naomi
and Sydney are very straight people - when they play music together,
John Akomfrah
187
Naomi - suffocating mother figure, either overbearing or helpful.
The Manor House: the big party/wake (1966-68). Why does Jack
take pictures of pregnant women before going to the funeral?
It's just part of what he does (Cindy and mum in funeral year,
hang picture taken by Jack, this is suggested by Ian).
Why does Sydney get so wrecked? He hasn't done any drugs.
#24
Saturday: for the first time the characters have choices — Syd.
Sydney isn't sure music is the most important thing. Naomi confirms
this for him.
Re: Naomi - everyone thought Sydney, not Naomi, was the pastor.
Trevor (Sydney) didn't realise he and Naomi were married.
Everyone thinks Sydney and Naomi are going to make it. They're the
centre of attraction - hecause oftheir music. (They seem the most
stable couple; in the '60s anyway). Slowly Sydney ends up a bar-room
pianist is beyond me (John).
Sydney hands the keys to Naomi as a mark of atonement. Sydney's
the only one who Millie is going to flip, so he's the one who takes her
out. It is then he decides to use the music to other ends and the kids
become the means by which perfectibility could be reached.This is
when he and Naomi start doing their own thing. They're together
physically, but there's a chasm between them. They love each
other - but not entirely.
Have you ever asked your parents if they love each other?
TTïey absent themselves from each other. The quality of experiencing
that drift away from each other is a good thing to try and register
that loss. That feeling of someone turning and walking away
is palpable.
Abigail has a feeling of contempt for Dominic having deserted her.
She wants him but wants revenge too. She doesn't hide this, that shift
from feeling you have to hide this in '65 to the feeling of not having
to hide it in '70 is a sort of shift to feminism.
It's important that the characters aren't repressed, that they act
on the repressions they know about so the repressions they don't
know about can come through. Re: Faith to Louie after making
love and Faith loses her virginity, and Naomi makes Faith kiss
Louie's coffin. When Faith attacks the white woman at the funeral.
If the characters can do that they can visihly contract and shrink,
flow and be static.
There's a scene missing between 68 and 74 where we can see where
they put into motion the decisions made after 68 and the party:
each character has to assert the decisions they would enact later in '72.
Best to see the film as a series of family snapshots, this is a way
of having a history they can remember rather than an external history.
It's good to chill out in our characters for half an hour - Faith.
Action Man: pull the string out the back and it talks.
Kids watching This is Your Life' while eating chips out of paper
with sauce and ketchup.
Louie and Faith's lovemaldng scene. Too descriptive (let the characters
make love as they would, not as you'd imagine them). It has to be
worked out and be part of the characters' process of getting
to know each other.
They'd like to act the periods out chronologically.
Day of concrete studies (Archive video on sixties, can Trevor borrow
it for the day?)
John wrote the pieces while listening to the music. The pieces work
around the music. (Structure: spent first week going through script)
Street scenes — scenes up to Manor House start on page 2 3
(Day of concrete studies - week)
Sixties — written in Messiaen sacred and secular music
(for pages 23—25).
Sydney plays Mes.siaen (evenings continue going over character
elements - informal meetings)
NOTATIONS OF COLLECTIVE INVENTIONS FOR WHO NEEOS A HEART
188
Actors exercises for #23. Millie doing Dominic's portrait.
TTiey've worked hard to get to be with each other. Millie
(Cassie feels very self-conscious but is prepared to try) is relaxed,
she's gotten here.
Mon—Wed: small groups of characters in individual scenes.
The actor has to choose external and internal characteristics.
It's pointless doing the scenes with stand-in actors.
It is helpful if the director tells tbe actors hov\' he's going to shoot.
They spend the rest of the morning: women working together/
the men working out character relations.
Go through the traffic of the actors just seeing each other.
Building relationships.
Structure of room is off-putting.
The men work their relationships out chronologically (flashback).
TTie space has to be right.
Tbe bit that isn't in the script.
Ian: tell me how you are going to shoot it.
Naomi; because characters are interlinked it's a very good way
to get to know each other but it is hard to rehearse like this without
props or dialogue. Maybe improvising would be better in group
or one-to-one situations. Too intimate/voyeuristic.
Cassie: set up private and public spaces, discover and work through
the internal and external parts of character in those spaces.
Ian: more direction.
|
Naomi: need to build up relationships with actors what they
do between scenes.
Trevor: do some improvisation 'prior' and 'after' scenes for the scenes
in the script. Do it to the music (what do the characters do before
and after the scenes?)
In 69-71 : this is when they change a hell of a lot.
'65 period of innocence/idealism (as it goes on you are forced
to become realistic) they're in their mid-20s; Simmi 23; Jack 25;
Kwabena 25.They begin with a generosity of spirit; openness
and camaraderie.
Sydney and Naomi come off the boat straight into music college.
They've never had to decide what they want. Going to England
with them down or what.T^ey don't know anything about themselves
yet. Sydney starts playing Messiaen radically religious. All the
characters are radical and it's this quality that connects them.
Kindred spirits.There's something attractive about how they interact
that draws Simmi to them — he's street.
Kwabena: he'd like to do that, but without hearing the music.
It may be the fact that Jack has a black baby that draws Louie,
Sydney to Jack. Simmi and jack knew each other through draw.
Simmi is introduced to Louie and Sydney through Jack.
Cassie: give yourself the opportunity to work with the music.
Louie and Jack - both from well off families that link them.
Options
1 Direct them
2 Go through it per character
Being from the Caribbean they need a guide to England. Hence Jack.
Things revolve around Jack, he's the centre of knowledge iind activity.
3 Do textual work
Go through situations and build up a vocabulary between characters.
Couple groups — very productive.
There's a reciprocity.
Jack's wife leaves in 64. He was too weird. The whites move out
when the blacks move in. Jack stays so when Louie and Sydney
move in. Jack's there (Colin Maclnnes figure).
V
I
John Akomfrah
191
(n Nigeria a gay Irish chief.
Jealousy isn't enough.
60s life becomes a revelation to Sydney. The pump house party
is a movement of experimentation and cultural possibility.
Jealousy keeps it simple.
In 65 Jack is leading things. By 66 things change (park scene).
66: Party and Funeral.
Millie's collapse marks the start of the rift and the end of the 60s
between the men. We see them after that split. They all feel
a sense of shame. It pushes them back into real life; Louie goes back
to his art and family; Simmi mayhe goes away - how easy it is for him
to change - he relocates. Jack is now estranged from his aristocratic
past and his friends. Small-time photographer. Sydney goes back
to Naomi, he knows the only way to use his new music is to teach.
Louie goes to jail. (Can't piay gospel again).
Millie/Cassie — Millie thinks she can win at this game, she deddes this.
Innocent because she thinks anything is possible. She believes in this
as a good thing. She does have an awareness of the limits of the
possibilities open to a black woman in 65: Dominic represents
a possible opening. She loves Dominic. When we first meet her, her
work is still open to her. Thinks about herself primarily as an artist.
The world they inhabit. They ignore the potentially disruptive
effects of the outside world on their lives. They're creating a world
for themselves.
The vibe on the street changes between them.
Millie beueves in the relationship. She knows 'race' and 'gender'
were there. Did she ignore them? They were intangibles. Her art,
her relationship, her love are tangible and immediate.
Jack and Simmi's relationship changes. Jack is now dissipated,
Simmi is now into 65.
There was no base for a black woman to deal with questions of'race'
and 'pender'.
The sisterhood between the women starts in 71.
What would have been important to Millie? What she and her friends
were doing - individual pursuits. Painting and Dominic are the most
real things.
Millie acts as the catalyst for their changing.
Kwabena/Trevor doesn't understand the Millie character - her role.
If there was a fraternity of artists, Millie would surely be a part of it.
Her presence only makes sense when she's dead. The women
understand her. They have a more intimate relationship with her.
(Millie dies)
Afternoon session on the women.
They'd spend the latter part of the morning going through
character relations.
When Abigail sees Millie and Dominic together she feels like
she's not being included in the 'new world' they represent.
(NB: Abigail and Simmi get it on after the 1st party?)
What do Naomi and Sydney get up to in the two-year period?
Faith: What's the most real important thing for Faith? She's been left
home to follow a journalistic career. Meeting Louie. Introduction
of a new cultural scene. She just went for it. Didn't go to college.
She's 20 in 65.
Millie: Cassie has a problem with Millie being an art student, feels
better about her coming from a lack; being an artist in spite
of herself. Prefers evening classes. She's not prepared for where
she is.Thinks she's not quite up to it.
Faith: persuaded via friendship with Naomi?
Does she marry after child is bornPYes.
Do they get married after party?Yes, 1971 .That's when Louie
does the painting.
NOTATIONS OF COLLECTIVE INVENTIONS FOR WHO NEEDS A HEART
192
Would have introduced Faith into her church rituals etc.
Abigail: debutante, not married long to Dominic, doesn't work,
socialite, what is important to her?
Millie represented a different line of politics to Louie. She thought
of Malcolm X as a tTiminal figure. Louie believed in him.
Infatuated with Dominic. He represents a flirtation with risk.
He's a David Bailey sort of figure. His movement runs out in 68,
peace and love, his bravado and cunning out of place — post-68
riddled with doubt and uncertainty.
Mille had become a cult-nat after 68. What would bring her back
to Faith and Naomi?
Naomi and Sydney post-68. She wants Sydney to stay with her.
Mental hospital scene only Dominic goes to see Millie.
He does but not in the way she wants. She stays with church decides
to get well into it. Black religion becomes meeting point for
Naomi and Millie.
Millie's into it because it's part of her cult nationalism.
She moves from Dominic to Simmi because he still represents that
Nietzschean figure. Self-made man.
Louie's important - but only up to a point.
The three women meet every Friday. Cigar scenes. The three women
are in control, chilling out. It's not a healing/therapeutic number.
It wouldn't be cruel that they're doing this while Louie's breaking
his Michael X pictures; they broke with that scene in '68.
She would have just turned up to her dad's with Dominic
alreadv married.
She could have come here on a draftsman traineeship (something real)
learn and go back. She became distracted by the possibilities of selfexpression: a possibility.
Naomi: into her music which is important. So is building a home, being
practical. Works at the club at night. She's contented with things
as they are in so far as her life is concerned, uncomplicated.
Had their first child in 66. Both enjoying their discovery of music.
Sydney has decided to stay in England. Maybe she wants to go back.
They're already married - respect from man. She knows he is a good
man. Sees her future here.
She had an obligation. She came here with music scholarship.
Never goes back - feels guilt over it.
I
1968
Millie is nomadic.
68-72
Or maybe they're heing cruel: the man in whose name so much
damage was done to them has died and Louie torn up over it.
They wouldn't he overly concerned - the women have passed
that moment.
Is there a connection with the women's ritual and Louie's actions?
Millie and Naomi ask her to go see what he's doing, she can't do
anything, she wants to carry on because if she does go to him she
will have returned in a particular sort of way, which she doesn't
want to do.
The bead throwing is consultation.
Millie is still not comfortable in cult-nat, still unsettled, needs
a gesture to externalise this imsettled condition. Louie's action
would trigger off her uncertainty 72—5 her cult-nat phase.
Between 65—68 would she have been living low?
Would Dominic have played the two women ofl^of each other?
NB: Millie - here return to roots signals the end of her breakdown.
Faith and Naomi would have discussed what to do about their men.
Naomi goes to religion, leaves the kids to Sydney, he raises them,
gives everything to religion. She and Sydney no longer even sleep
in the same room.
John Akomfrah
193
Tuesday
Cassie would like to go through the chronology of her character.
Caroline; would like to go through place with Louie and do her own
research into the journalist part of her job.
Naomi; one-to-one studies, maybe a group piece at end of week.
Caroline off for day researching.
Naomi and Sydney afternoon.
Millie, Abigail, Dominic - morning.
Simmi - some point in the day.
Thursday morning; Cassie and Jay will meet on iocation, then maybe again on Sunday.
2 Î7. Mo Spsay ax Simi, Ruth Gemmeil as Abigail,
Who Needs A Heart, 1991
2 38. Jay Villiers as Dominic, Ruth Gemmell as Abigail,
Who Needs A Heart. 1991
2Î9. Cas.sie McFarlane as Millie. Who Needs A Hean. 1991
How would Jack and Dominic have met? He was doing Dominic's photosession for an
album. Jack doesn't like Dominic. He's happy - revenge - about Simmi and Abigail.
Simmi goes for Abigail - a way of getting closer to Jack. Jack would get Simmi to look
after Abigail - stop her from getting drunk, while Dominic is dancing with Millie,
Jack can still treat Abigail as Maclnnes wouîd've treated a wbite interloper in the Grove;
he'd try and get her out both because he's worried for her and because he wants the
Grove to remain his turf.
Abigail and Simmi would've been going on since the pump house.
Dominic is at the height of his popularity, at the pump house.
Jack introduces Simmi to Abigail, gives Simmi his point of entry and grounds his
bravado, when he kisses her.
NB: Jack drives Faith to Louie's funeral instead of her taking a cab. (He'd be maybe in
one other shot).
Abigail's look would be more calculated.
o
Millie and Jack: how they met; she was at art scbool, went to jazz club with fellow
hipsters. Dominic sees her. Jack obviously hangs out in these places.
Sc. 73. jack invites press to club for interview iastcad of going to TV studio. The
Michael X question still comes up. The interview takes place at a fundraising gig.
Why is Millie wearing a blk power symbol in I97S?
Is Millie with Jack and Louie on the blk power question?Yes.
NOTATIONS OF COLLECTIVE INVENTIONS FOR WHO NEEOS A HEART
194
NB: Ian and Cassie are adrift without that ten pages.
NB: Jack doesn't have to dissipate. His future depends on whether he does a Chris
Blackwell, whether the family fortunes have not been squandered.
RE Sc 89. ian says; it's confusing that the hearse arrives at the party because the party
should be separated from the funeral?
Why are the KKK men also the hearse men?
Simmi would also have thrown her out because she's going out with a guy.
RE: painting scene. They're both posing. There has to be something sexual to it.
Sensuality, eroticism, inquisidveness - their crossing into each other's representative
areas must have happened before this scene.
'i
Start with ambiguity & expose the literal. Everything leads to their going to bed without costumes; before this they can indulge in the ambiguity and exchange.The
ambiguity is inscribed into the texture of the piece.
They have a bottle of champagne in the bedroom.
Millie goes to the party in a mask.
Simmi wears knuckle dusters, blk beret, grey suit, polo neck, Chelsea boots. Loses
knuckle dusters in early seventies.
Dominic's losing Abigail. He's reliant on her financially. Unsure whether to go back to
Abigail or help Millie.
I
Dominic would've introduced Abigail to the world of the street. Jack would've kept her
out ofthat world.The scene in the pump house; Jack would not have expected to see
Abigail there.
Some obscure '60s one-hit wonder represents Dominic's hit. Heard fleetingly.
Sc 67. Scene of ambiguity and exchange. What else could be going on?
It's about choices - playing with the idea that they can choose who they want to be
(Cassie).
Two prehistories for this scene.
DOMINIC
Flamboyance of Jagger, persona of Géorgie Fame, working class BG of David Bailey.
Hybrid. Sixties version of new aristocracy. A bit of rough. That's why Abigail likes him.
Millie's getting patronage from Dominic. His wealth is her wealth. It's not just love. For
Dominic it's image - exotica. It's a great image for him. His rationale for doing things is
V. simple.
All the people who in the sixties are on the way up are bunt out by the seventies. They
all seem to want something outside of themselves.
The women of the sixties live through a period when things were supposed to have
changed - but they didn't feel things were changing for them. They didn't feel they
could say so.
Abigail gains from this.
Millie helieves that things are moving for her; she sees her affair with Dominic as part of
the 'new thing'. They are attracted to the idea of each other.
RE: hospital. Dominic goes to see Millie because he feels guilty, it's his remorse that
turns Abigail oíT him. He wants a future with Abigail but she's off with Simmi now. She
won't divorce him though.
Everything Dominic does is a pose. It's not that he's a total cunt, but he's close - and for
a number of reasons; he's paying Millie's rent. (Jay).
It'd make more sense if Millie jumped Abigail instead of Faith (but that scene's been
taken out).
Abigail and Dominic - married for two/three months. They are in the manor house.
Jack having Abigail as his sister gives him a tangible history beyond the Grove. Family
was plantocracy. Abigail; debutante at 18. Finishing school. Born maybe in the
Caribbean (or Africa?). Sent to Europe. Jack would've been raised there.
The family would've left after '62.
Sc 76, 78, 79. Scenes of Millie being kicked out.
Something has to be resolved in Millie's mind when she dumps the stuff on the car;
why isn't Dominic there? She has this conversation in her head; she doesn't care that
he has his own rationale for not being with her. She just wants him. Millie ruins the
painting in a fit of pique - unresolved, determines to go for him. She's more resolved
- playing to win.
He hasn't chanped.
John Akomfrah
195
Dominic introduces Millie to Abigail.
fn
^
Simmi provides Abigail with her release. She's quite taken by being kissed by a black
man. Part of this jealousy is that Millie is black.
Millie works as a waitress in a jazz club?
¿<
Why does Millie spit at Simmi when he turfs her out? Unconsciously she thinks he
shouldn't do it but doesn't know why she thinks this. She knows there are other ways of
doing this.
^
Trevor's research; listening to Bill Evans, watching '60s videos, reading Miles Davis
autobiography.
The lovemaking scene; they try and 'sync up', but it's too late.
Get the kids in for Saturday; don't forget to remind John.
MOE/SIMMII
So Simmi is young and naive. Millie's nervous breakdown is the turning point in his life.
He leaves everything bebind. Comes back in '75, independent of spiv bosses.
He doesn't need to make a jump in his character for his changes to be apparent. His
attachment to jazz is emotional. He's still got his bravado. He doesn't feel sorry for
himself. He agreed to join Jack's world on the basis of friendship.
Abigail would be attracted to Simmi because he still has his bravado, no self-pity.
Simmi need never touch a book in order to appear redeemed.
Abigail & Simmi's relationship; they always meet in front of Dominic. It's her way of
humiliating him.They do the do then part.
She brings Simmi books.
Sc 43;The kiss; sensual, passionate.
Simmi's relationship with Jack post '68 remains the same. The scales of the relationship
are changing. They meet now and then but they don't talk about the street. Have a
smoke, play a few records.
Simmi is an emotionally mature person now.
NB: What De Niro has four hours to say in Once Upon a Time in America, Simmi has
to sav in an hour.
NOTATIONS OF COLLECTIVE INVENTIONS FOR WHO NEEOS A HEART
196
Abigail; she wouldn't leave Dominic for Simmi but she does have an attraction to him.
He has something that Dominic has lost.
o
character relations: Millie - Dominic - Abigail - Simmi. How do people pull in and
out of each other's orbit?
TUESDAY
Morning: Naomi and Sydney
They appear in scene 68 (church), 79 (home), 80 (nightclub entrance), 82 (Sydney at
piano), 84 (1965 bar), 85 (Naomi pregnant in painter's studio), 90 (Sydney in tuxedo
at Manor house), 91 (Sydney in tuxedo being initiated into manor house circle), 93
(tux remains while he plays the piano; this is the beginning of Sydney's costume changes).
93 is also the start of Sydney's shift from sacred music to secular music,
experimental music.
If there were other musicians about it could make Sydney's transformation more
graphic; it could also reflect his joining a new community — he'd feel a contradictory
tug. He's found his voice in an immoral place.
Sydney made sense to Trevor when John played him a piece of music by Bill Evans.
He's innocent of the BG of immorality. It hits him that he's in all this filth, so he would
go home.
Se. 94 (Manor house lawn. Sydney lashes out.Takes Millie into the ambulance).
Sydney plays 'AsTime Goes By', 'My Foolish Heart'. Only Simmi would listen, but
Sydney can't take him on board because of what he's done to Millie, and he probably
doesn't notice Simmi, nor does he realise his complicity in the event.
Between 91—4 we move from 1966 to '68.
Sc. 95. Sydney goes back to Naomi. He's wiped out.There's no reason for her to take
him back after two years. She's incredibly strong, she takes him back, but it's her game
now. She knows he's kidding himself when he tells her to look after his keys.
NB: She wouldn't put the keys in her knickers. Maybe she leaves them somewhere goes off to her bible. She's overwhelmed by his desperation. She vocalises her difference
from him (quoting from the bible?) but it makes no difference.
The pain of taking the key back is that it's too late. They try and reœnnect in bed and fail.
John Akomfrah
197
Sc. (Pastor's corridor/in, bedroom) scene will be resolved on Sunday.
1965. Louie and Faith; additional information for their scenes.
Awkwardness: when Faith comes to interview Louie in his house.
They dance to the record and feel awkward.
(Kwabena) felt awkward backed out of the flat.
FAITH/LOUIE
Things which are now meaningful:
A. Paintings in the studio are because ( 1 ) they worked on them together. They do action
painting/writing together. (2) Sentimental value. Because they started and watched
them when they were painting the house. (3) Discovered their character with them.
HO, Notes for .script. Who Needs A Heart. 1991
241. Cassie MrFarlane as Millie, jay Villiers as Dominic,
Who Needs A Hean, 1991
242. Kwabena Minso as Louis, Who Needs A Heart. 1991
B. Louie painting overall because they wrote each other's names on it. They have
known happiness together. (1) Faith's articles were written in that room.Tapes played
together in the room were Sonny Boy Williamson, Little Richard, Studio One. (2)
Naomi and Sydney come over to the house.
FAITH/LOUIE; THE DRIFT
Louie is losing Faith to Naomi.
Naomi stands in Louie's light when he is painting. Naomi sees evil and confusion
in Louie's paintings.
Naomi is taking away Faith — the human torch, Louie's flame.
1965. Sc 72. Bedroom Sc. should have love and rage. Start angry but end on a laugh.
1965 Sc 80. The fight in the bedroom should lead to laughter and merriment and them
helping each other with costumes and make up.
MILLIE
Swimming pool - she's alone; she's still suffering but the other woman (Naomi) thinks
she is being cured.
After mental institution she will not have much to do with macho figures
i.e. men in black politics.
— She would be a separatist figure.
198
ON THE BORDERLINE
JOHN AKOMFRAH
The exhibition in question would be a body of photographic work in whicb a notoriously
public figure - the Black body — will feature in a series of elaborate mises-en-scène from
what would appear to be home movies, enigmatic dramas constructed tableaux-like
which dispelled with finitude by heaping all manner of doubt on the propriety and
legality of the said body to speak durable and universal truths about its alleged
'condition'. A vernacular would be intact but it would be 'formidably strange'.They
would be bodies in a frame brought into being by a series of bastard allegories, bodies
which simultaneously call upon and fiercely rebuke notions of location, ethnicity and
identity as a priori certainties, which 'outside' regimes of truth - progressive or otherwise
- could prescriptively rally to a 'cause' without having first agreed to participate in
formulating tbe 'untidy' rules of the game.
Imagine this scenario:
In the future there will be a
Black photographic
exhibition on the theme of
displacement. It vnl! be
about a particular body
Like a fuzzed video image on pause these would be impossible frames; they would
try to freeze in an instant what they have been and what they could be. Bastard allegories,
yes. Liberal sensibility, no way! Critical dystopias maybe, but that is only because these
works would distrust too many things in the present to give the future a blank cheque
- Benjamin's'Ángelus', Dcrrida's 'Always Already'.They would be emblematic and
enigmatic. Tbey would flirt with the transcendental as a yearning without the voodoo
or the magic. In any case they would know that the voodoo or the magic were strictly
speaking unnecessary because tbey would have already localised enigma and codified
it as an affliction deeply rooted in that body in tbe frame.
At this point our future exhibition will meet its first accusation of heresy. What
people would want to know is whether what it contains arc mcrelv 'outside thoughts'
and, if they are, whether these thoughts could be contained in the photographic frame.
The problem is that few of these photographs will be framed.
burdened by an excess of
signs; a body literally
framed as a figure of
torment and bliss,
of dangerous knowing
and celebrations.
Displacement would so strategically occupy the nodes between the public and the
private by needling one with the hubris of the other witb such a relish that the ensuing
riot would necessarily call into question this most supreme of rationalist demarcations.
Because displacement will not be the first expedition to this border country, the more
mature among us could quite easily choose to 'ghettoise' its new gestures as a 'return',
a repetition. Tbis would be a mistake. Why? Because every theorist worth their salt
knows that every new charting or re-mapping of this borderline necessarily produces
new configurations of power and desire. It is a border which always beckons with
promise; promise is the temptation, the seducer.
199
The exhibition will feature a number of photographers. One of these would be
Rotimi Fani-Kayode.
This desire to mix what Wilson Harris calls 'Blind joy and sadne.ss and the sense of being
lost with the nearness of being found' is an attempt to say something else.
Imagine another scenario - the intercultural magazine Artrage declines to publish
more than one photograph by Rotimi Fanl-Kayode. With no irony intended it justifies
this decision by saying that 'To have published more of Rotimi's work would have
needlessly offended many more people than it would appeal to: It would be to set
the cat amongst the pigeons but ultimately to very little avail.'
These floating, prodigal sensibilities with their subversive flamboyance, their riotous
play with boundaries are saying in effect that when we discover things have limits and
ends we are not consigned to a miserable and permanent sojourn in the wilderness.
They know there are people around who fear these ends but for them that's where the
fun begins. They are committed to a saying made a very long time ago somewhere in
Egypt — 'Philosophy either came to us in disguise or was given to us hy á thief. It is
these sentiments which would probably cause distress.
Foucault once made the point that at their most fervent moments transgressions
were like flashes of lightning. We recognise them for what they are when we instantly
register what they are not - darkne.ss. In that instance of their birth darkness guarantees
these electrical charges their shape and clarity. But conversely lightning also forces the
night to see itself for the first time. How else do we understand the process by which
a black photographer becomes too untidy, too unsuitable for a black arts magazine? It is
a process that's almost too quick to register as an event, but register we must because
we need to understand the 'other ways' through which a 'Black frame' becomes the site
of abjection; the scene of horror. If the curatorial tastes which organise selection of works
for a magazine stipulate that photographs should not 'set the cat amongst the pigeons to
little avail' it is then not too difficult to see how works which valorise ambivalence
as a key code for 'knowing' would be deemed 'inappropriate' by such tastes. So it is
important to say now that displacement will not happen without ambivalence in place.
While we are on the subject of appropriateness, let u.s be clear about something
else: the future displacement exhibition will call attention to its ethics of gesture because
it sees the black body as a vessel for contest. But this truism will be a detail in its case
because the works will be organised by a series of bio-economics which shamelessly
flaunt their lack of divinity by pointing out something else that we've all suspected: this
body has limit.s and ends. And every time they tell you this they are in effect also saying
that somebody else is lying.
'Let us pervert good sense', Deleuze once said, 'and allow thought to play outside
of the ordered table of resemblances.' If you listen very carefully you will probably hear
the poet Essex Hemphill say the same thing in Sankofa's Looking for Langston. If you are
even more attentive you will hear both of them say that playing outside is a tricky thing.
You can always be accused of showing off. So let's get another thing straight. When
these toiling, 'protean' bodies insist on speaking in the name of themselves it is not out
of a sense of vanity. Narcissism is 'always already' in them so showing off is no big deal.
Elaine Scarry has made the point that the rarity with which pain is represented
should make us pause for thought especially when we realise how agile art has become
in framing and thereby conferring visibility to other forms of distress; these distresses
now have a referential content, they are now susceptible to objectification; in flight,
as it were, from a real of inexpressibility. Think of Omette Coleman. Alice Walker
or Burning Spear and you could reaÜse how central these 'figures' are for black advertisers.
There arc things which should not be spoken of lightly and one is that displacement
is about empowering. It wants to arm itself with the ability to make tangible that which
elided expression in the earlier debate on black representation. And in that sense it is
the 'worlding' of a particular form of awakening in which the body placed under duress
by a willingness to construct it anew yields other potentials but in so doing also gives
rise to distress. It is through this putting into Hight of such a monstrous double that
we will come to recognise the works in displacement. Welcome to the exhibition.
2 4 3 - 4 4 . Contact sheet, Rotimi Fani-Kayode tableau,
Twilight City, 1988
(GHOST THE SIGNAD
EDWARD GEORGE
,TOO O«*IC^»8.^*«»«^^»
. Com«Rw
201
Signal I. January 15th, 2057. Somewhere in the mountains of the moon. He had been
was changing. It was no longer threatening; no\y it was soothing.'I he melody was pure
able to keep the story ol his grandfather's madness a secret.
H,(), and how wonderful it was, gently singing itself into his skin. But did it not scald
That's how he managed to got hiinsflf ihis fairly lucrative job in a hotel in the
mountains ot the moon as a programmer in a small time retro drum'n' bass lounge
band (ghost the signal), entertaining Japanese and American business travellers relaxing
after a long dav overseeing the mining of the moon's frozen lakes.
The slorv- Martli 12th, 1998.The p.svt hiatrii- ward ot a north London hospital.
A young man presents a tirtular burn on his chest to tho nurse. Rather a deep «ound in
fact. He explains to the nurse that he is a child of the moon, but that he tore himself away
trom it as the .silence and the blinding light became unbearable and then landed on tarth.
When (lut stioiud iurtlur, tie admits the storv is tmt true. What actually happened
was this: he was standini; in the bathroom when suddenly he heard someone singing. He
didn't like the song but couldn t say why. He said that it felt like somebody was mocking
him. Hi' wondered how that guy might have got into his bathroom and where he might
be hiding now.
when be was baptised.
When (jueslioned further, the voung man admitted the story was not true. The
moon had given birth to him and he got the circular burn when he tore himself away
trom it. Much later, be realisetl the voice he'*! beard in the bathroom that night was his
oyvn. When he was alone he yvould sing to himself, and as his confidence grew he would
sing lor anyone who wanted to listen. Husking by day and hillabying bis children to
sleep in the evening, singing became the source of his joy. He passed his love of music
on to bis son, wbo pas.sed it down to bis son, who passed il down to his son, yvho is
now sitting in an empty hotel lobby somcvybcre in tbe mountains of the moon, looking
u|i at the stars antI wondering what his grandfather would ha\r said about it all.
Signai 2. April lOth, 1936. Koyston, Georgia. Sunset on a highway.Two white women
are standing <m tlie roadside.Tbeir tar has broken down.They se<' a hlatk man approaching.
Later they tell the police that he threatened them with a knife and pushed one of them
1 le sat on the edge of his bathtub and listened intently. If only he knew where the
voice was coming from
bim?The young man shook his hi-ad and said it reminded him of when he w-as a child,
then he could do .something. But the longer he listened, the
into tbe ditch. Betöre be knows it. Lint Shaw, a 'strapping 45 vear-old negro an<l
larmcr', as the local newspaper dcscriiies him, winds up in the prison of Danieisville,
more innfusi-d hf became, unable to locate the voice exactly - hearing it everywhere and
Georgia, yvaiting ti ial for the charge ot attf m|)te(l injury. Wbc n a hundred outrage<l
nowhere.Till- wnnis also bctanu' intrcasinylv blurry, the more he tried to iollow tlierii.
white men attempt to raid tbe prison in order to implement tbeir own idea of justice,
o '
Somehovy the song rang a bell; it forced him back into a past his memory couldn't
Shaw is briefly relocated to another prison in Atlanta. Later, be is returned to
Danieisville.
at'cess, yet continued to bayc a presence inside him strong enough to cause deep feelings
ofshanif. He would hayc l()yc<l to leayc tbe bathroom, lock the door behind him, ncycr
During the night of Shavy's trial, forty white men storm the prison.Tbey drag Lint
to rL'tiirn to this horrifying pUfi-. Hi- could wash himself at the sink in the kitt hen! But
troni liis tell (gbosl the signal) thiwn to the scene ol the alleged incident. Tortv guns and
that was absolutely ridiculous. Instead, he began to scratch off the tiles and the plaster
rifles take aim and fire. Attorwards, tbey lynch him from a pine tree not far from his
in thf bathroom. When he was done, the bathroom resembled a battlefield, but he still
(drill. TIK' iull()wing morning his tarnllv, afraid tor their lives, refuse to identify his body.
c'ouldn t iitui wluTf the song was coming from. When the young man yvas asked to
Signal 3. Texas, November 27th, 1936. A roying young man walks into a recording
describe the voice in inorr ilft.iil. In- said: spitelul, slimy, very sneering. When asked
studio, a sback with J lurid painted sign, which says 'The' American Recording
who he ihniight it might \x\ in- said 'Tbf DCAÍI". (ghost the signal)
Corporation'. Robert Johnson doesn't know it, but he has already made historv.
The music wore him ilowii, and .i slow creeping scnsi' ol shame, crawling through
tiri'il Mai-i us i\'menibers ibat Robert J()hnson was one of the' first African-American
the cracks in his skin, tn.uk' him k't-l dirty inside. He took his ulotlu's oil, turned on the
musicians who wen- no longer horn intii slavery. Johnson's generation
shower, and let it run. Under the scilding water hf realised where tbe song was coming
the turn ol the twentietb lenturv
from: it wasn't a person; it was the showei\ the water itseit.
parents - heing pni¡)erly ni Snutli<rn plantation owners
born amund
sinldcTily experienced a treednm to move thai their
bail never known. Hence,
this generation's music is no longer born nf or against dreadful circumstances in
He would have tiirtud the taji off and smashed the shower lo pieces, but the voice
202
particular - against racism, lynching, or the levy on the crops. According to Marcus,
the blues protests against life itself.
Marcus doesn't specify whose life he's talking about, but it is probably enough
to point out that the men and women from Johnson's generation who sang the blues
were the 'first Afro Americans who were able to leave their hometown, their families
and church ties, but ahove all their workplaces and plantations behind them oftheir
own free will. And mayhe at the same time get away from those looming desires to
form close bonds with somebody that would only have constrained their soul and their
urge to be free not to speak of the horror of coming into existence, the horror of
those who are suddenly thrown into daylight. What a frightening freedom...'
Here now in Texas is the vagabond Robert Johnson, who gives the world of work
the slip all the better to drift across the Mississippi Delta to NewYork and Chicago and
back. He brings with him a handful of new songs, all bearing witness to the dangerous
friendship with the shadowy figure, the only person capable of making Johnson's Goddamning soul shiver at his wild idea of an escape, of complete freedom, from this world
of unlimited reverence: the Devil himself- who also .sits in the studio, keeping an eye
on the old, rattling recording devices.
Johnson sits in front of the microphone, dears his throat and his head. Bony fingers
pluck a skeletal phrase from his guitar, and he starts to sing. It's a song about Johnson's
dealings, his friendship almost, with the Devil, and his indifference towards the fate of
his immortal soul ('...I'm going to beat my woman until I get satisfied', he sings, and
somewhere in a bedroom, blood on his fists, his own voice, drowning out her screams,
the only screaming he hears is his own, the sound of a man falling into an abyss, of
himself, of hlack on black violence, a black hole of sound, v^ith nothing to cling to
- not her, not the world - not even himself. Indeed, a terrible and terrifying freedom.)
...because at the time the question of knowing how you were viewed in the white
world - as other than, less than, or just not human at all, the question of being other
than human, was less a matter of intellectual inquiry than one of life and death. It's
unlikely that Johnson, roving and rambling through the centres of segregation in the
southern states of the USA, knew nothing of the lynching and murders of countless
black people such as Lint Shaw. Presumably, those were precisely the stories that made
him want to be as free - or better yet - freer than white people could be themselves,
when he was. And in a world where whiteness provided the limit of what it meant to be
lully human, it might at least be possible that the exce.ssivc, new sense of freedom
(GHOST THE SIGNAL)
Edward George
203
experienced by a renegade like Johnson, could finaliy mean being sometbing more
than human. Maybe he bad (ghost the signal) the following thought - however
fleetingly: 'What could it mean, what would it take, to become superhuman...'
While he was dozing on the back seat of the overland bus late at nicht, sucb
thoughts - well who knows - were probably not completely alien to him. He guarded
his nocturnal affairs with the King of the Underworld like a treasure: '...to really bave
Judgement Day in one's grip. (Tofinallyhave done with HER) ...What a thought...'
And maybe during his travels across tbe South, looking out a train window,
contemplating the fields passing by, the clouds moving in front of the sun, casting
shadows on a small hamlet near Royston, watcbing policemen cutting a corpse from
a tree, he says to himself: 'We!l now, if that's the highest achievement of humankind..,'
Signal 4. A highway side somewhere in the Deep South, 1938. Robert Johnson's ghost
rises from beneath the ground and boards a Greyhound bus (ghost tbe signal). He takes
his place on one of the back seats, next to an elegant, stocky man in his mid-forties,
a Baptist preacher, a Reverend by the name of Martin Luther King Senior. A child, a
somewhat impassive looking boy with a moon shaped face, accompanies the Reverend.
He is nine years old and his name is Martin Luther King Junior. Robert Johnson's ghost
carefully studies tbe boy's face while he is looking rather absent-mindedly at the grey
sky. When the clouds suddenly disappear, making room for a clear blue sky, Robert
Johnson's ghost is suddenly overwhelmed by a wave of mourning, for himself and
for the boy.
Signal 5. December 2nd. 1956. A bus .stop in Montgomery, Alabama. Robert Johnson's
ghost wakes up at the back of a bus. The quest for freedom - particularly in its futurological
and post-human, ontological and technological, political and fantastical forms - all deeply
rooted in black music to the present day - finds its absolute, unconditional voice, both
when Robert Johnson wakes up at the end of his journey to his first appointment at
the American Recording Corporation, and when his ghost wakes up, again, at the back
of another bus, on December 2nd, 19S6.
Johnson has been dead for eighteen years, it will be another twenty years before be
will become famous. However, particularly during that long interval, Johnson may well
have wanted his old evil spirit ~ immortalised on 'Me And Tbe Devil Blues' — to ride
the buses all the way across America, and ail the way dowTi through the deep South.
Now then. On the morning of December 2nd, 1956, what raises the ghost of
Robert Johnson from his sleep are the massed ranks of the local press and television
(GHOST THE SIGNAL)
204
news teams, noisily documenting an elegantly dressed black man, who has decided
to sit at the front of the bus beside a white person. Dead Boh didn't know it, but at
that moment he witnessed the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King's first victory for
the Civil Rights Movement.
Dreams evoking political activism in some, and sonic fictions in others, with black
audiophiles spinning them further out, take place in parallel universes (even if they
sometimes overlap) separated by a line as fine as the line separating the world of the
living from the world of the dead...
o
Dr. King could not know that the ghost sitting behind him had started, years
before King was born, to come up with a number of difficult questions ~ admittedly
not always thinking, but always feeling them through to the very end - that
interrogated the relationship ol freedom to mobility, body to soul, in music, in the
voice, in the space of the song, in the body in the world, inside and outside the song.
The quest for absolute freedom, the capacity to evoke and illuminate darkness,
would influence the work of other artists from the segregated world, most of whom
had not heard of Johnson or, on that day in November 1956, of Martin Luther King.
But they were no less determined to shed their old identities for new ones
Signal 6. July 12th. 1956. Transition recording .studio, Chicago, Illinois. Sun Ra, born
Herman Blount in Birmingham, Alabama, the jewel in the crown of segregation,
is leading his band often musicians through 'Sun Song', the last track on his first
eponymous LP.
Many years later, his passport will identify him as 'Sun Ra', born on Saturn, a place
even more hostile than the Birmingham experienced hy Ra's generation, those born in
the years of the First World War.
By the mid-nineteen-fifties, Ra had already made a name for himself in jazz circles,
but was considered a little eccentric, if one was being polite. In a world where black
people were not allowed to sit at the front of a public bus and had no right to vote,
the idea that they would one day even live on other planets must have seemed more
than eccentric...
Looking back, though, Ra's project seems to be the poetic anticipation of a
transformation, where the lost highways haunted by Johnson's restless old evil spirits
and the endless streets walked by Martin Luther King have mutated into a kind of flight
path for astral journeys into the 21st century.
Edward George
20S
While the Civil Rights Movement was beginning its profoundly terrestrial struggle
for the symbolic goal ofthe freedom to sit where ever one pleased on a bus, Ra was
developing his no less political, cosmológica! goal, the freedom to roam the universe.
'Space is my planet.., It's mv home.'
Tofinallyhave done with this God.To finally abandon the search for a place in this
world. To become something other than human, here and now, while also hailing from
some far away land, from ancient Egypt, Africa before the slave trade, and from somewhere
out there too, from deep in the harsh winds of Saturn, stopping over here and then
continuing the flight. The moment of black radicalism's shift into a new phase of civil
protest, as if walking was going to change the world, is foreshadowed, prefaced,
by Sun Ra's cosmologically themed poetic vision ofthe future.
It was a remarkably productive cosmology, resonating deeply in African American
culture and beyond, during and after Ra's life. The futurological trends in black music
after Sun Ra invariably and repeatedly threaten to undermine the unity of the eternal
terrestrial hell that is black pop. 'Sun Song' sounds neither particularly alien nor
futurological but it is Sun Ra's first attempt to illuminate a flaw in black music by the
light ofthe interstellar background of a technologically sophisticated, impossibly extraterrestrial future.
Thereby he reinvents himself, as a legend, a myth, a mystery - homosexual and a
self-confessed secessionist from black and white America in his private life - a
declaration of difference, an insistence on refusing to accept this world as his home.
With 'Sun Song', Sun Ra leads black music to the gates of an audiophilic
futurology that will voice the necessity and the impossibility of that freedom already
suggested in Johnson's few nightmarish, fantastic, startled blues songs. A totalising
heterosexual cosmos with homoerotic echoes, sometimes enabling new (sonic) fictions
ot the self and sometimes functioning as a connective tissue cosmos and community.
New bodies, new machines. Hence, George Clinton's Mothership, the Funkentclechnophilic permutations, the numerous personae, or Lee Perry's studiocentric
transformation of the metaphor of the Biblical Ark of the Covenant to the Black Ark,
a pun, a cosmo-thcuphonic echo and inflation ofthe gold-plated case with the two
tablets stating God's Ten Commandments, and the name of Perry's recording studio,
and with Black Art, the name of one of his record labels. Hence, the incessant
conjurations of an impossible sound environment - meteorological changes, atmospheric
shifts, the rendering of signal as trace; hence, the innumerable voices and layering
206
(GHOST THE SIGNAL)
and thickening and dissolution of spaces rendered as traces of their former selves.
Recording makes ghosts of us all, and doubly so in the dub. Later on, Ultramagnetic
MCs/KooI Keith, and then....
Signal 7. Wasiiington Gardens, Jamaica, 1976. Maybe Lee Perry really did see the Devil.
He is sitting on the patio of the Black Ark, ruminating with singer-songwriter Max
Romeo about the most effective way of dispensing with Old Nick. Max and Lee agree
on the magical-cybernetic iron shirt. Those who wear it have to chase Satan away into
the remoteness of outer space 'to find another race' - and this is how they put it in their
epic'Chase the Devil': 'Lucifer son of the morning. I'm gonna chase you out of Earth.'
In his low-budget .studio, Perry produces a unic^ue music developed around a kind
of heresy, a rewriting, a relocation, a blurring of the word of God into the apocalyptic
mysticism and political demands of the Jamaican under-classes, that He may speak
through their voices, make Himself present through their songs. The devices of
songwriting and record production as low-tech media necromancy. The Ark is also a
time machine, shifting the sound of black misery and suffering to a time before slavery,
to the days of Noah where: 'everything was safe in the Ark' ; a machinery of divine
redemption; 'down in tbe dungeon, that's where I used to break my bread...' a sonic
mythic-time machine, controls set for the days before the days of Moses.
Thus, Perry also creates a series of sound environments that do not refer to any
place outside of the Ark (or is there a place in this world that souncis üke the spaces he
creates? Imagine: down in the slave castle dungeon, first location of becoming chattel/
becoming in-human.) Perhaps it's a world Perry carries around inside himself, the
world in the flesh, the body as the space of a theo-technological evocation of the
cosmos at the beginning of time, as it was created by the Creator of all creation an
eternity ago, an aesthetic response, a memory machine, a technology for coming to
terms with the vicissitudes of history, using a journey which dissolves historical time
into the time of myth.
... In the end. Perry set fire to his studio and seemed to have suffered a nervous
breakdown. Difficult to say which preceded which. Tbe last song be recorded in the
Ark was 'City Too Hot'. Mixo-meteorological overload (ghost the signal).
He has long since recovered, replacing the studio with his voice, a logorrhetic,
polylogue, multiplying, dispersed across time, a resounding of the self-'Little Moses
Lee Scratch Perry, the Millionaire Liquidator' - through which Time and transformation
of the body announce themselves. A sciencefictionalisingof space and hody: 'I am the
241
245.The Human American Eaele, Camp Gordon,
Atlanta, Georgia, 1918
2+6-47.The Mojave desert. Southern California,
The Last Angel of History, 199S
248. John Akomfrah holding a record sleeve of Nothing
¡s, Suii Ra and His Band /rom Outer Space during location
shoot, M»)jave Desert, Southern California, The Last
Angel of History. 1995
249. Memory Rootn 4ÍI. 1997
250. CD cover, Dr Octagon. 1995
251. W. E. B. DuBois, The Souls of Black Folk. 1903
Edward George
207
robot-computer/My name is Genesis/I am a machine/A living dream/of the past/ADBC/before Christ...' Becoming more than human...
Signal 8. AD 3000. The laboratories of Dr. Octagon. Octagon knows seven different
ways of travelling through time. Although most people decide in favour of slow but
reliable ultra-wave time convector, the good doctor prefers the warp speed method.
Octagon keeps a record on every trip. At the moment, he is somewhere in the early
twentieth century, in the study ofW.E.B. Dubois. Dubois has fallen asleep at his desk.
Octagon reads the manuscript Dubois is working on: 'The negro is the Seventh Son,
already born with a black veil and with a kind of second-hand view of this American
world - a world that does not really provide him with se If-awareness, but only makes
perception possible by revealing a different world. It is weird to have a double
consciousness, the feeling of only perceiving oneself through the eyes of others.' Dubois
is peacefully snoring (ghost the signal). Octagon reads the lines again, and wonders why
he landed exactly where he did.
... the signal) Dr. Octagon knows that his name gives rise to the supposition that he
is a m u Iti-schizoid personality. Octagonal states of consciousness over Dubois's radically
bipolar equation. That's not a problem. His genealogy gives rise to suspicions of far
greater monstrosities, far removed from humankind. Enter Octagon's 208-year-Gld
uncle Mr. Gerhik, aka Sharkman.
Signal 9. Hollywood Boulevard, Los Angeles, sometime in the future. Sharkman is
regarded as a highly-strung type of, er, guy, notorious for dismemhering owners of
small shops, then sparing the journalists who arrive later. Possessed of magic abilities,
Sharkman is able to vanish into thin air and breathes easily under water. And while our
century - as Dubois commented - is still marked by the differences of a fairly limited
range of skin colours, in the third millennium, the colour of skin presents a capacity
that mainly serves to escape from the cops. Bloodthirsty Sharkman turns transparent;
he is made of refracted light, glistening in all colours of the rainbow. He has the skin
of an alligator, sometimes shimmering purple, sometimes orange and sometimes green,
seven hydraulic eyes without pupils, grey hair and delicate bright-yellow sideburns.
Part shark-alligator, part human being. Far removed from humankind. A loyal flock
of alligators follows him as he roams the streets of Los Angeles, human blood on his
soles. Gerhik's nephew. Dr. Octagon, is the 'God of the rebel army (...) with the special
task to return from the future every time'. Maybe it runs in the family — just imagine
uncle Sharkman wading through the murky waters of the past, through the marshland
OR.OCTAGOH
(GHOST THE SIGNAL)
208
of the Deep South into Royston in 1936. The murderous racists are tearing down the
prison walls of Danielsville and Lint Shaw knows that his final hour has come. Suddenly,
looming up from the shadows, the ghastly figure of Sharkman, monster of revenge.
What terror the mere sight ol him brings to the lynch mob, what horrific pain he
inflicts as he severs limbs from joints, tough grey skin glistening dark with blood. And
what sounds the lyncb mob make as Sharkman's loyal army of alligators tear the guts
from their stomacbs.Those screams.... (ghost.... i
Signal 10. The summer of (996, an apartment in downtown Los Angeles. Kool Keith
Thornton tells the press that he runs an escort agency offering personal services. He
talks a lot about porn and porn stars. Rumour has it he's been away for a bit, resting at
the Bellevue Mental Hospital. Speculation, pure spectUation. While most rappers still
aim for as much bard and dirty social realism as they can squeeze into a rhyme, Keith
opted for the science-fiction alternative as early as 1986. Already on his first album that
be produced with the Bronx-based rap group, Ultramagnetic MCs, Kool Keith was
extolling the virtues of travelling at the speed of thought.
Dr. Octagon, one of bis many alter egos, had already been introduced on the
Ultramagnetic cut Smoking Dust. As with Ra, Perry or Clinton, the doctor presents a
limit and a new start for black sonic fiction — a sexually obsessed time traveller on the
quest for freedom of mobility and for his own sense of self, a search for a way past the
limitations of belonging to an alien world, which started with Robert Johnson's walk
with the Devil.
Thornton's Octagon figure appears at a strange moment in the history of hip-hop.
Gangsta rap had reached its zenith and the music's writerly concerns had been reduced
to feuds between New Yorkers and Los Angeles-based rappers, which culminated in two
brutal, lethal acts of black on black violence. Tupac Shakur and Christopher Wallace, aka
Biggie Smalls, aka The Notorious B.I.G., were both murdered around the time Octagon
appeared on the scene. You'd think a double murder would be enough to mark the
beginning of the end of Gangsta rap as a lucrative cash cow for the music industry...
Thornton, Wallace and Shakur were all born around tbe late sixties and early
nineteen-sevenües. They are the children of the generation that grew up during tbe
Civil Rights era and from which came the Black Panther Party, the radical, armed,
political group formed in the wake of Martin Luther King's assassination in 1968.
Signal II. April 3rd, 1968 (ghost the signal). Night in a hotel room, Memphis,Tennessee.
Doctor Martin Luther King junior i.s tired. He closes his eyes and falls into a deep
sleep, where he dreams his last dream...
After King's assassination, there were a lot of discussions about his dream of a postracist America, and the end of that dream. Even before his death. King had warned the
young rebels of the dangers of picking a fight with an enemy whose military power was
strong enough to wage a protracted war in Vietnam,
But King's idea of non violent protest died the day he was murdered, subsumed
by a wave of armed resistance by tbe Black Panthers against the police and the FBI.
When the Panthers were destroyed, their children (for example Tupac, whose parents
bad both been Panthers) founded the hip-hop nation. For them, sleep - the state
of greatest vulnerability the path into the land of dreams, the place of hauntings
— was the enemy, what rapper Nas called 'the cousin of death'.
Against this backdrop of dreams deferred, brutal loss, and unanswered rage,
Thornton projected the phantasmagorical figure of Dr. Octagon into the future.
Thornton/ Octagon is a stranger in this world. Trapped in the rule of melanin, one
eclipses the other, withdrawing from 'Earth people', confessing with an almost boisterous
sadness: 'Space is my planet, I live there, I eat there, bathe there, wash there.That's my
home', and sounding as if there were times when he didn't feel at home anywhere,
neither in their skins nor in the world outside.
Signal 12. Night time on an uncertain date in an uncertain location somewhere in the
Deep South. On a path leading to a shady intersection. Octagon observes the figure
of Robert Johnson shivering in the dark. The two men speak. He attempts to warn
Johnson against his aim of making a friend of tbe Devil, pointing out to jobnson where
this pact will lead him, the two men argue and go their separate ways. The Doctor turns
back, but even warp speed cannot prevent him from arriving a few milliseconds too late
- the deal has been sealed with a handshake. From now on, there will be a lively,
troubled exchange between the Devil and black musicians: darkness sounding the
insecurities of black masculinity.
Signal 13. North London, winter, 1997 (ghost the signal). The following words have been
carved into an old brick building: Tabulaeium Questionis Nomag.
He has just turned nineteen and was born in Tottenham. He has not made a record
yet. Doesn't really know how that works. But he would like to make one, that's why he
took the job in the supermarket a few streets down, and is now saving for the equipment.
He'd rather start small, practising at his friends' places. He has already put his wildest
times as a thug behind him and if asked, he says that he doesn't miss them.
fcdward George
209
In the past, he sometimes did things that he shouldn't have done. He doesn't even
talk about that with people whose respect he rates. A bad thing, no matter how far back
in the past, can take on a life of its own in the present. Talking just keeps things from
dying: the less said the better. And besides - everybody knows that some of that stuiF
still haunts him.
ft went like this. It was midnight and he and his friends had a plan. Earlier that
evening they passed a house that was surrounded by high walls with a green wroughtiron gate. Looked like a fortress. The doorframe was hand-plastered and in its top left
corner there was a little statue: a little cross-legged Devil, his mouth twisted to an
evil grin, arms stretched out in a macabre welcoming gesture.
The boy climbed the wall, risking a glimpse beyond it. In the garden, he discovered
the silhouette of a wooden cross as tall as a man. The cross was stuck in the ground the
wrong way round, upside down. He and his friends had seen enough horror films and
read enough sensational reports in the press to know what that meant. Satanists.
They made a plan.TTiey would break into the house and show the Oevil worshipper
what was what. For a few seconds it seemed like a great idea, but then they thought
about what else they might discover once inside...
2S2-2S3. Greenwood, Mississippi,
Memory Room 451, 1997
254, Greenwood, Mississippi, Martin Luther King:
Days of Hope, 1997
255. Mojave desert. The Last Angel of History, 199S
They dropped the plan quickly. But it seemed to the boy that the few seconds of
doubt had opened up a gap, allowing the Devil to slip through in secret, now changing
the boy's fate through a kind of an almost mute murmuring voice that he couldn't figure
out or shut up.
After a few weeks, the hoy and his friends were just hanging around near a burntout car wreck in the council estate near Broadwater Farm, watching the crack dealers at
work, when two other hoys came running towards him. They were chased by a group of
moustachioed middle-aged white guys with their knives drawn. His impulse was to run
too, and that's what he did. The men chased him through the estate, up to the second
floor of one of the flats, and cornered him at the end of the exterior balcony. To escape
his captors the boy would have to jump ten metres to the ground. Down below was
nothing but concrete, with a small patch of grass a bit further to his right. His friend
jumped first and landed on the grass.
Later on he said that he had felt as if he had been swallowed by darkness while he
was falling. The doctors said that he had been very lucky. He landed head first on the
concrete, but somehow his hands protected him, cushioning the fall. He could have
310
suffered serious brain damage, or a broken backbone. He would have been paralysed
for life. But all he lost was his pride and a few of his teeth.
He had to stay at home for one and a half months, his leg was put in plaster and he
had wires in his mouth and throat in order to allow everything to heal. He felt absolutely
rotten. He could only eat soup and mashed potatoes - and even then only u.sing a straw,
and his mother had to feed him because he couldn't move his hands.
After they'd taken off the cast, the doctors also rammed screws and metal particles
into his arm, all the way from his forearms to his wrists, he says. He looked like a defeated
super villain from a comic strip. Glaring, lethal laser bolts shooting from his arms at the
push of a button were the only things missing.
But the sole after-effect was that his hands were no good for beating up people any
longer.They were too weak now. So now he's stacking shelves in the supermarket, saving
and waiting. He's more interested in music now, the stufl that's not even played by the
pirate stations. He really only likes the stufT that people who claim to know about jungle
definitely don't like, he says. And if he goes out, he only does it to listen to something.
He records the stuff, develops new skills, because he says that one day he also wants
to make music.
(GHOST THE SIGNAL)
312
EXHIBIÎION HISÎORY
3Sé.
BAFC,
1987
213
December — January
1988
July 30-September 7
fromTïvoWoWds, Whitechapel Gallery, London, UK
The Elusive Sign, Museum of Contemporary Art, Belgrade, Serbia
Museum of Contemporary Art, Zagreb, Croatia
Expeditions
1990
1987
January 24 - March 11
March 25-April 12
At ibe Edge: Air Gallery, London, UK
Expeditions
June H
July 19
Tbe Irtjage Employed:The Use of Narrative in Black Art,
Cornerhouse, Manchester, UK
Instead of Dreaming
December
Tbe Elusive Sign: British Avant-Garde Fittn andVideo 1977—1987,
Tatc Gallery, London, UK
I lündswortb Songs
1988
April
Tbe Britisb Art Sbow, McLellan Galleries, Gla.sgow, UK
March 30 - May 20, Leeds City Art Gallery, UK
June 14 -August 12, Hayward Gallery, London, UK
Twiligbt City
February 8
Royal Ontario Museum,'Ibronto, Canada
Testatnent
October
Between Imagination Si^Reality: First ICA Biexmial of Independent Film andVideo,
London, UK
Twilight City
1991
.September
The Elusive Sign. Forum Stadtpark, Graz, Austria
Hochsbule fur Gestaltung Linz, Austria
January
Identity and Consciousness: (Re)Presenting the Self, Dunlop Art Gallery, Retina, Canada
Handsworth Songs, Twiligbt City, Testament
Image Forum Festival, Shibuya,Tokyo, Japan
November 6 - 1 7
1989
February - March
The Elusive Sign, Museum BoijmansVan Beuningen, Rotterdam, Holland
September 1 1 - 1 5
The Elusive Sign, European Media Art Festival, Osnabrück, Germany
The Hybrid State Films, Anthology Film Archives/ Exit Art, New York, USA
Testament
1992
April 9
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden,
November 23
Smith.sonian Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Washington DC, USA
Grierson Seminar and Festival, Saline To The Documentary,
Wbo Needs A Heart
Art Gallery of Ontario, Canada
Handswortb Songs
November
Arrows o/Desire, The 2nd ICA Biennal of Independent F-ilm & Video, London, UK
A Toucb of the Tar Brmh
214
1993
Aprii 1 3 - 1 9
John Akomfrah, Film-maker in Residence, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, USA
April 1 4 - 2 2
Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, USA
Handsworth Songs, A Toucb of tbe Tar Brusb, Wbo Needs A Heart, Testament
August
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, USA
Seven Songs for Malcolm X
September 23
Carpenter Center for Visual Arts, Harvard University, Cambridge,
Massachusetts, USA
Handswortb Songs
1994
September
museum in progress, LOTprojekt, Vienna, Austria
Tbe Migrant's Tale: A Sympbonyjor our Time
contributing to mobility, @art gallery. University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Seven Songs jor Maleolm X
EXHIBITION HISTOHY
September—November
Nature TM
Shedhalle Gallery, Zurich, Switzerland
Handsworth Songs,Twiligbt City
December
San Francisco Museum Of Modern Art, San Francisco, USA
Seven Songs for Malcolm X
1996
January
Ikon Gallery, Birmingham, UK
Pervaiz Khan, Felix de Rooy, Trevor Mathison
Tbe Garden OfAllab
February 5 - April 10
Mirage: Enigmas of Race, Difference and Desire,
Bonnington Gallery at Nottingham Trent School of Art and Design, UK
The Black Room
December 21 — February 9
Motbersbip Conneaion, Stedelijk Bureau, Amsterdam, Holland
Tbe Last Angel of History
June 5 - September 29
AfriccThe Art ofA Continent, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, USA
April 28
Cine City: Film and Perceptions of Urban Space 1895 — 1995, The Getty Research Institute
for the History of Art and the Humanities, The Getty Center, Los Angeles, USA
Twiligbt City
Testament
September - October
Steirischer Hebst, Graz, Austria
Testament
1995
September
May 12-July 16
Brooklyn Museum of Art, New York, USA
.Mirage: Enigmas of Race, Difference and Desire,
The Last Angel of History
Institute of Contemporary Arts/ International Institute of Visual Arts, London, UK
Tbe Black Room
September
The Gettv Research Institute for the Historv of Art and thr Humanities,
October
Los Angeles, USA
The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, USA
Twilight City
Seven Songs for Malcolm X
215
October
Ufe/Live: ¡a scene ortistique au Royaume-Uni en 1986a
¡996,
November 16 - December 15
> redirect, Kunstlerhaus, Stuttgart, Germany
Musce d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, France
The Last Angel oj History
Handsworth Songs
June 21 — September 28
1997
Documenta I ¡_Plaiform 5: Kassel, Germany
I 5 December 1996 2 February 1997
The Face Lift of Europe, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, Holland
The Last Angel of History
Handsworth Songs
2004
june 21 - September 28
April 3 - May 29
Britannia Works, British Council, Athens, Greece
Documentü ¡0 Exhibition, Ka.ssel, Germany
Handsworth Songs
2006
1998
February 3 - April 23
February 6 - March 6
Making History: Art and Documentary in Britain from 1929 to Now, Täte Liverpool, UK
Coiour Screens: Film andViJeo hy African,/Uian and Caribbean Artists in Britain,
Handsworth Songs
Tisch School of the Arts, NewYork University, USA
june 20
The Last Angel oj History
GhostingiTbe Role oj Tbe Archive within Contemporary Artists' film andVideo,
2001
Arnolfini, Bristol, UK
February 15 -April 22
The Short Century: Independence and Liberation Movements in Africa 194S-1994,
Handsworth Songs
October 6 - December 17
Museum Villa Stuck, Munich, Germany
The Secret Puhlic:Tbe Last Days ofthe British Underground 1978-1988,
Testament
Kunstverein, Munich, Germany
May 18-July 29
The Short Century., Martin Gropius Bau, Berlin, Gi-rmany
September 8 - December 30,
The Short Century, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, USA
Testament
2002
February 10 - May 5
I'.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center and The Museum of Modern Art,
NewYork, USA
Testament
Handsworth Songs
r
216
SELECTED
FILMOGRAPHY
257. BAFC aftfi- winning Tho Grierson Award. 1987
2S7
217
What follows is a partial, though
si^ificant, filmography of festivals and
public screenings that can be found in
ihe Collective diaries and bookings file.
It is necessarily partial because many of
the Collective's screenings and festival
showings did not warrant the formality
of a booking; but it is also fragmentary
because it only docToments the bookings,
.screenings and festivals handled directly
by the ColIetlivcThe term filmography is
intended to include artistic projects carried
oui in 35mm slide tape and digital video
as well as Super 16mm and 35mm film.
It is organised in five distinct categories
of production in order to form a
chronological account of moving and still
image work.The sequential structure
of the Hlmography fails to disguise the
simultaneous conditions of production
of the majority of BAFC projects; at any
one moment, several projects were
underway; the categories are therefore
to be understood as porous rather than
absolute. Reading the filmngraphy in
conjunction with the exhibition history
of the group what emerges is an account
of a complex group practice ihat functioned
collectively, autonomously and in small
configurations. One might approach
what follows as a biography of a singular
cinecultural practice, one that registers
a shift from a phase of documentation,
research and alternative pedagogy into
a phase focused around film production
fed by continuous research that always
left room for parallel projects, inside, and
outside, of the membrane of the group.
Compiled by John Akornfrab, Lina Gopaul,
David Lawson and Sakkv Bannor and edited
by Kodwo Eshun and Anjalika Sagar.
The first category of the filmography
consists of works conceptualised,
researched and directed under the
editorial control of the Collective.
EXPEDITIONS ONE: SIGNS OF EMPIRE
EXPEDITIONS TWO: IMAGES OF
NATIONALITY (1982-84)
35mm Kodak tape slide. Sound.
44 minutes.
Director: Black Audio Film Collective
Producer: Black Audio Film Collective
Selected Screenings
Briti.sh Film Institute Summer School:
Images uf Fmpire, Stirling, UK,
August 1984
London Filmmakers Co op, London, UK,
November 1984
London Film Festival, London, UK,
November 1984
Watershed Arts Centre, Bristol, UK,
March 1985
Big Broad and Massive: Black Youth Arts
Festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK,
March 1985
Cinema Action Workshop, Swiss Cottage,
London, UK, April 1985
St Martins School of Art, London, UK,
june 1985
Institute of Contemporary Art, London,
UK, April 1985
Society for Education in Film and
Television Conference, Bradford, UK,
July 1985
Chapter Arts Centre, Cardiff, UK,
January 1986
Camherwell School of Art, London, UK,
Januarv 1987
HANDSWORTH SONGS (1988)
1 6mm colour film. Sound.
59 minutes.
Credits
Director: John Akomfrah
Producer: Lina Gopaul
Screenplay: BAFC
Camera: Sebastian Shah
Camera Assistant: Edward George
Additional I'hotography: John Akomfrah
Roy Cornwall
Sound: Trevor Mathison
Assistant Sound: Avril Johnson
Rostrum: Douglas Hines
Production Assistant; Claire Joseph
Production Assistant: Reece Auguiste
Additional Crew (Birmingham):
Don Shaw
Joseph Burgundy
Studio Crew (Photographs)
Camera: John Matheson
Grip: Glyn Fielding
Lighting: Dalton Campbell
Sets: Trevor Mathison
218
Studio Crew (British Icons)
Camera: Edward George
Trevor Mathison
Lighting: John Akomfrab
Props: Lina Gopaul
Voice-over: Pervaiz Khan
Meera Syal
Yvonne Weekes
Music: Trevor Mathison
Additional Music: Boys Own Battery
Robert Johnston
Supervising Editor: Brand Thumim
Editor: Anna Liebschner
Assistant Editors: Avril Johnson
Rosalind Haber
Video Editor: Hugh Williams
Optical: N. Gordon Smith
Howell Optical Printers
Studio Facilities: PCL Film Studio
Post-production Facilities: BAFC
Dubbing Mixer: Peter Hodges
Processed by: Buck Film andVideo
Laboratories
Publicity: Edward George
Publicity Organiser: David Lawson
Titles: Richard Morrison (Plume Design)
SELECTED FILMQGRAPHY
BBC
Britisb Movietone News Limited
Central Independent Television Limited
Granada Television Limited
Pathé Film Library
Yorkshire Television
Additional
The Grand Prize, Kaleidoscope
International Film Festival,
Stockholm, Sweden, October 1986
Tbe Kodak Newcomers List, London,
UK, November 1986
Material
A.Y. M. (Birmingham)
Ceddo Film & Video Workshop
Macro Film & Video
Selected Screenings
2nd Birmingham Film and Television
Festival, Birmingham, UK, October 1986
Tbe First Paul Robeson Prize for Cinema,
FESPACO Pan African Film Festival,
Burkina Faso, March 1987
The John Grierson Award for Sodal
Documentary, British Film Institute,
London, UK, September 1987
London International Film Festival,
London, UK, November 1986
Tbe Sodal Issues Prize, Barbara Myerhoff
Film Festival (Anthropos) Los Angeles,
USA, 1987
Havana Film Festival, Cuba,
December 1986
Tbe Pascoe McFarlane Memorial Award,
London, UK,1987
Metro Cinema, London, UK,
January 1987
The Documentary Award, National Black
Programming Consortium, Columbus,
Ohio, USA, November 1987
Î7th Berlin Film Festival, Germany,
February 1987
Toronto International Film Festival,
Canada, September 1987
Interviewees
Handsworth and Aston Welfare
Association
Asian Youth Movement (Birmingham)
Sachkhand Nanak Dham
Mr. McClean
Soho Rd. Sikh Temple
Archive Source
Archive Film Agency
Birmingham Central Library
Selected Awards
FESPACO X Pan African Film Festival,
Burkina Faso, February 1987
Black Film Festival, Atlanta, USA,
September 1987
Melbourne Film Festival, Australia,
July 1988
Oberhausen Film Festival, Germany,
April 1989
TESTAMENT(I988)
16mm colour iilm. Sound,
77 minutes. BAFC in assodation
with Channel Four.
Credits
Director: John Akomfrah
Producer: Lina Gopaul
Producer: Avril Johnson
Director of Photography: David Scott
Additional Photographv:
Jonathan Coliinson
Camera Assistant: Edward George
Sound: Trevor Mathison
Production Managers: Lina Gopaul
AVTÍI Johnson
Production Assistant: David Lawson
Assistant Director (UK): Reece Auguiste
Editor: Brand Thumim
Assistant Editor: Saquib Asghar
Additional editing and sound editing:
Monica Henriquez
Casting: John Akomfrah
Lina Gopaul
Avril Johnson
Stills: Edward George
Grips (UK): Mick Duffield
Glyn Fielding
Continuity: Avril Jobnson
Props/Costumes: Lina Gopaul
Avril Johnson
Make-up: Lina Gopaul
Ghana Advisor: Kwate Nee Owoo
Ghana Film crew supplied by:
Gbana Film Industry Corporation
Lighting Services (UK):
Len James Electrical
Rostrum: Ken Morse
Spedal Effects: Les Latimer
Howell Optical
Peerless Camera Co.
Post-production Facilities: BAFC
Dubbing Mixer: Peter Hodges
Dubbing Studios: Glentham Studios
Negative Cutting: Frank Clarke
Titles: Plume Design
Transport (UK): Brian Coleman
Transport (Ghana): Yaw Baba
Production Accountants: Lina GopauJ
219
Avril Johnson
Louise Westaway
Archivai Service: Archive Film Agency
BBC
Ghana Fiim Industry Corporation
National Film Archive
Royal College Surgeons
Visnews
Original Music: Trevor Mathison
Voice-over Script: John Akomfrah
Edward George
A.ssociate Producer: Jonathan Curling
Cast
Abena: Tania Rogers
Rashid: Evan.s Hunter
Danso: Emma Francis Wilson
Mr. Parkes: Frank Parkes
Sergeant: Errol Shaker
Corporal: AlexTetteh-Lartey
Women singers: Jamestown Dirge Singers
Boys group: Fra Fra Boys
Man in boat: Oko
Man in river: Dela Williams
Abena's parents: Bankic Family
Woman in Institute: Cleo Dorcas
Ahena's Researcher: Fati Ansah
IVivate: John Atta
Selected Screenings
Semaine de la Critique, Cannes
International Film Festival, France,
May 1988
Rimini International Film Festival, Italy,
August 1988
FESPACO XI Pan-African Film Festival,
Burkina Faso, February 1989
San Francisco International Film Festival,
USA, March 1989
Salute to the Documentary, Montreal,
National Film Board of Canada,
June 1989
37th Melbourne International Film
Festival, Australia, June 1989
Festival des Films du Monde, Montreal,
Canada, August 1989
Prix Italia, Perugia, Italy, September 1989
Telluride International Film Festival,
USA, September 1989
Metro Cinema, London, UK,
September 1989
Uppsala Film Festival, Sweden,
October 1989
Toronto International Film Festival,
Canada, September 1989
International Film Festival of India,
Calcutta, India, January 1990
Selected Awards
Special Jury Award for First Drama,
India, 1988
Grand Prix, Rimini Cinema International
Film Festival, Italy, August 1988
Special mention for the use of archive
film and music, FESPACO XI Film
Festival, Burkina Faso, March 1989
Honourable Mention, San Francisco
International Film Festival, San Francisco,
USA, March 1989
Special Jury Prize, African Film Festival,
Perguia, Italy, April 1989
Honourable Mention,Vues D'Afrique,
Montreal, Canada, 1989
TWILIGHT CITY (1989)
16mm colour film. Sound.
52 minutes.
BAFC in association with Channel Four.
Credits
Director: Reece Auguiste
Producer: Avril Johnson
Lighting Cameraman: Jonathan Collinson
Additional Camera: Shangara Singh
Assistant Camera: Edward George
Sound: Trevor Mathison
Associate Producer: Lina Gopaul
Production Manager: Avril Johnson
Production Assistant: David Lawson
Trainee Production Assistant: Hilda Sealey
Location Manager: Avril Johnson
Editor: Brand Thumim
Sound Editors: Brand Thumim
Joe Boatman
Stills: Edward George
Rotimi Fani-Kayode
Grips: Carl Ross
Drivers: Peter Spencer
Wendy Simpson
Voice-over: Amanda Symonds
Models: Denis Carney
Robert Taylor
Researcher: Reece Auguiste
Post-production Facilities: BAFC
Studio Facilities: PCL and Star
Productions
Rostrum: Ken Morse
Dubbinp Studio: Glentham Studios
Dubbing Mixer: Peter Hodges
Laboratory: Buck Film Labs
Negative Cutter: Frank Clark
Titles: Plume Design
Film, Processing: Universal Film
Laboratory
Production Accountant: Avril Johnson
Stills Archive: Guildhall Library
Foster Associates
London Docklands Development
Corporation
The Royal Academy of Arts
Archive Sources
BBC Enterprises
British Movietone
British Ga.s
Educational and TV Films
National Film Archive
AR Television PLC
GPO Film and Video Unit
Thames Television
Imperial War Museum
Index Stock Shots
Original Music: Trevor Mathison
Voice over script: Edward George
John Akomfrah
220
SELECTED FILMOGRAPHY
Interviewees
Paul Gilroy
Gail Lewis
George Shire
o
Homi Bhabha
Rosina Visram
DavidYallop
Andy Coupland
Savriti Hensman
Femi Otitoju
Selected Screenings
Mannheim Film Festival, Germany,
Ottober 1989
The Josef Von Sternberg Award,
Mannheim International Film Festival,
Germany, October 1989
The Gold Hugo for Best Documentary,
Chicago International Film Festival,
Chicago, USA, October 1989
Documentary Award,The National Black
Programming Consortium, Columbus,
Ohio, USA, November 1989
International Documentary Association
Award, Los Angeles, USA,
November 1989
Melbourne Film Festival, Australia,
October 1989
Special mention in Diaspora Section,
FESPACO XII Film Festival, Burkina Faso,
March 1991
Chicago Film Festival, USA,
October 1989
MYSTERIES OF JULY (1991)
Bilbao International Film Festival,
Spain, November 1989
London Film Festival, London, UK,
November 1989
ÎOth Festival dei Popoli, Florence, Italy,
November 1989
Documentary Festival of New York, USA
FESPACO XII Fan African Film Festival,
Burkina Faso, 1991
Selected Awards
The Grand Prize, Melbourne
International Film Festival, Australia,
lunc 1989
16mm colour film. Sound.
54 minutes.
BAFC in association with Channel Four.
Credits
Director: Reece Auguiste
Producer: Avril Johnson
Assistant Director: Antony Meyer
Lighting Cameraman:
Christopher Hughes
Camera Assistant: Seamus McGarvev
Sound'.Trevor Mathison
Associate Producer: Lina Gopaul
Production Manager: Avril Johnson
As.sistants to Producer: Dcvika Banerjee
Hilda Sealy
Production Designer: Kevin Rowe
Cast
Art Dept. Assistant:
William du la Murnine
Production Assistants: Raymond Oaka
David Lawson
Jamie: David Ruben
Grip: Judith Stanley-Smith
Gaffer: Keith Osbourne
Sparks: Nigel Dobson
Steve Shepperd
Runner/Driver: Louise Shaw
Stills: Liam Longman
Editorial Consultant: John Akomfrah
Dubbing Editor: Michelle Baughan
Dubbing Mixer: Peter Hodges
Dubbing Studio: Glcntham Studios
Laboratory: Buck Film Labs
Negative Cutter: Frank Clarke
Special Effects: Studio 1
Titles: Flume Partners
Catering: CTB Coleman
Archive: BBC Enterprises
Photographs: Camera Press Network
Lennox Smillie
Voice-over Script: Reece Auguiste
Edward George
o
Production Company: BAFC
Research Consultant: Rashid Meer
Researcher: Reece Auguiste
Composer: Trevor Mathison
Additional Music; JohnnyT.
Requiem 2000
Editor: Joy Chamberlain
Young Girl: Annette Crooks
Young Boy: Sebastian Adams
Adolphe: Rabaak Adoti
Woman Mourning; Beverly Andrews
Mourner in Cemetery: Ian Foider
Violinist: JohnnyT.
Narrator: Peter Straker
Police Officers: Edward Anthony
Neale Birch
Phillip Childs
Mark Laville
David McEwan
Damián Wild
Guillaume Lcmoinc
Blair Peach: Nick Sadler
Parminder Atwel: Tariq Alibai
Museum Visitors: Kimberly Palmer
Venu Dhupa
Keith Palmer
Narrator: Peter Straker
Interviewees
Mrs L. Stewart
Raju BhattTony Ward
Parminder Atwal
Celia Stubbs
David Ransom
Gart'th Pierce
Barnor Hesse
Chief Supt. Twist
Supt. Paul Mathias
Jercmv Corbyn M.P.
221
Selected Screenings
The Robert Flaherty Film Seminar, Wells
College, Aurora, USA, August 1991
Edinburgh Film Festival, UK, July 1991
Toronto Festival of Festivals, Canada,
September 199]
Chicago International Film Festival, USA,
October 1991
Ochos Negros Festival, Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil, October 1991
Viper Film Festival, Lucerne, Switzerland,
October 1991
London International Film Festival, UK,
November 1991
32nd Festival dei Popoli, Florence, Italy,
November 1991
Oberhausen Film Festival, Germany, 1993
Selected Awards
Special Mention, Diaspora Section,
FESPACO XII Film Festival, Burkina Faso,
1991
Special Jury Prize, Images Caribes Film
Festival, Martinique, 1991
WHO NEEDS A HEART (1991)
16mm colour Him. Sound.
78 minutes.
BAFC in association with
Chaiinel Four/ ZDF.
Credits
Director: John Akomfrah
Producer: Lina Gopaul
Script: John Akomfrah
Edward George
Casting: John Akomfrah
Lina Gopaul
Casting Assistance: Sarab Bird
Associate Producer: Avril Johnson
Production Coordinator: Lina Gopaul
Assistant to Director: Reece Auguiste
Assistant to Producer: Da\'id Lawson
Production Assistant: Raymond Oaka
Production Company: BAFC
Unit Production Manager: Avril Johnson
Production Designer: Paul Cheetham
1 st Assistant Director: Tonv Meyer
Location Manager: David Lawson
Production Accountant; Lina Gopaul
Director of Photography: Nancy Schiesari
Camera Operators: Martin Shepperd
Mick Duffieid
1st Assistant Camera: Seamus McGarvey
Patrick Morgan
2nd Assist^lnt Camera: Hilda Sealy
Video Inserts: David Scott
Assistant: Edward George
Sound Mixer: Trevor Mathison
Sound Assistants: Maurice Hutchinson
Edward George
Continuity: C. Sutton-Osborne
Gaffers: Dean Williams
Keith Osborne
Sparks: Steve Shepperd
Grip: Judith Stanley-Smith
Production Designer: Paul Cheetham
Assistant to Designer: Patrick Bill
Storyboard: Karen Kelly
Property Master: Claire Russell
Action Props: David Lawson
Set Painter: Graham Johnston
Louis' Paintings: Keith Piper
Millie's Paintings: Claudette Johnson
Costume Designer: Katy Mcphee
Assistant Costume Designer:
Alice Normington
Make-up ArtLsts: Alison Edwards
Lindy Shaw
Hairstylist: Donald Simpson Kent
Film Editor: Brand Thumim
Sound Designer: Trevor Mathison
Sound Editor: Michelle Baughan
Dubbing Mixer: Peter Hodges
Assistant Film Editor: Joanne Boatman
Assistant Sound Editor: Janice Cheddie
Researcher UK: Johanna
Janice Cheddie
Researchers USA/Jamaica/Trinidad:
Lina Gopaul
Avril Johnson
Negative Cutter: Frank Clarke
Titles: Plume Partners
Design Coordinator/Publicity:
Edward George
Violin Instructor: Johnny T.
Unit Stills Photography: Liam Longman
Unit Drivers/Runners: Jake Nava
Guillaume Lemoine
Runners: Kodwo Eshun
Orson Nava
Yvette Narlock
Laboratory: Bucks Motion Picture
Laboratories
Cast
Faith: Caroline Burghard
Sydney: Treva Etienne
Abigail: Ruth Gemmell
Naomi: Caroline Lee Johnson
Louis: Kwabena Manso
Millie: Cassie McFarlane
Jack: Ian Reddington
Simi: Mo Sesay
Dominic: Jay Villiers
Young Boy: Paul Fitzmaurice
Louis' girlfriends: Samantha Harvey
Tracey O'Connor
Young violin player 1 : Chanteíle la Rose
Young violin player 2: Danielle Sdllitoe
Louis' heavy friend: Errol Shaker
Rent collector/spiv: Matthew Whittle
Selected Screenings
London Film Festival, UK, November
1991
Bombay International Film Festival, India,
February 1992
Santa Barbara Film Festival, USA, March
1992
BAFC Retrospective, Antenna Cinema,
Conegliano, Italy, March 1992
222
Sydney International Film Festival,
Australia, June 1992
Melbourne International Film Festival,
Australia, June 1992
BAFC Focus: Blackhght Film, Festival,
Chicago, USA, August 1992
Viennale, Austria, October 1992
BAFC Retrospective, Carthage Film
Festival,Tunisia, October 1992
Jamaican Film Festival, Kingston,
March 1993
SELECTED FILMOGRAPHY
Photography: David Scott
Sound; Trevor Mathison
Video Camera: Mick Duffield
Graphic Designer: Paul Bond
Production Assistants: David Lawson
Alexandra Briggs
SEVEN SONGS FOR MALCOLM X (1993)
Production Secretaries: Avril Johnson
Raymond Oaka
Researcher: Jefferson Bannis
Assistant Editor: Michelle Baughan
Dubbing Mixer: Peter Hodges
Editor: Robert Hargreaves
Series Producer: Sam Organ
Director: John Akomfrah
Producer: Lina Gopaul
Writer/Researcher: John Akomfrah
Writer/Researcher: Edward George
Selected Awards
Interviewees
Grand Prix Archive Usage, National Black
Programming Consortium, Ohio, USA,
November 1991
Jury Award, 39th Sydney Film Festival,
June 1992
Patsy Birch
Colin Birch
Alison Birch
John Birch
John Conteh
Gary Christian
Ann Quarless
George Quarless
Ray Quarless
Christine Quarless
A TOUCH OF THE TAR BRUSH (1991)
Selected Screenings
16mm colour film. Sound.
39 minutes.
BAFC for BBC TV.
Bombay International Film Festival, India,
February 1992
Best Film Sound Track, City Limits 1992
Best New Drama, Chicago Film Festival,
1992
Grand Prize, Stockholm Film Festival, 1992
Credits
Director: John Akomfrah
Producer: Lina Gopaul
Writer; John Akomfrah
Days of Independent Film, Augsburg,
Germany, April 1992
16mm colour film. Sound.
53 minutes.
BAFC in association with Channel Four.
Credits
o
Director of Photography: Arthur Jafa
Production Designer: Susan Dowlatshahi
Editor: Joy Chamberlain
Director: John Akomfrah
Sound Design/Recordist:
Trevor Mathison
Lighting Technician: Malik Has.san Sayeed
Production Manager: David Lawson
First Assistant Camera: John Bentham
Second Assistant Camera: Hilda Sealey
Additional Production Design:
Gary Simmons
Video 8 Camera: Hilda Sealey
Electricians: MikeVasquez
Tony Santos
Assistant Film Editor: Julian Macdonald
Production Assistant: Raymond Oaka
Production Trainee USA:Vera Ritsuko
Calloway
Production Helper USA: Kym Ragusa
Lighting Trainees: David Flynh
Unit Drivers: Cj^rille Phipps
John Ribeiro
Title Design: Chris Akklis
Cast
Reading the Autobiography of
Malcolm X: Giancarlo Esposito
Reading the Commentary:
Toni Cade Bambara
Reading the FBI Files: Coco Fusco
Malcolm X: Darrick Harris
Malcolm's men: Danny Carter
Martin Boothe
Byron O. Hurlock
Edward George
Malcolm's mother: Tricia Rose
Malcolm'.s father; Theodore L. Cash
Young Malcolm: Olamide Faison
Young girls:Tiffany Nelson
Tiffany Täte
Interviewees
Wilfred Little
Dr. Betty Shabazz
Spike Lee
Greg Täte
Hassan El-Sayeed
Yuri Kochiyama
Thulani Davis
Robin Kellcy
Patricia Williams
William Kunstler
Imam Benjamin Karim
A. Peter Bailey
John Henrik Clarke
Peter Goldman
James Farmer
Jan Carew
Malcolm Jarvis
223
Selected Screenings
Fihn Festival of Black Culture, Paris, 1993
Seattle International Film Festival, USA,
May 1993
Best Feature Length Documentary, image
D'Ailleurs, International Festival of Black
Culture and Music, Paris, January 1994
Sydney International Film Festival,
Austraha, June 1993
Melbourne International Film Festival,
Australia, June 1993
Locarno International Film Festival, Italy,
August 1993
Robert Flaherty Seminar, Aurora, USA,
August 1993
World Film Festival, Montreal, Canada,
September 1993
Toronto Festival of Festivals, Canada,
September 1993
Festival Dei Popoli, Florence, Italy,
September 1983
BAFC Retrospective, Human Rigbts
Watch International Film Festival, New
York, USA, April 1994
Selected Awards
Certificate of Merit: History/
Documentary, Chicago International Film
Festival, 1993
Winner, Historical Documentary and
Community Commendation, National
Black Programming Consortium Award,
Obio, 1993
Best Feature Length Non-Rction Film, First
Award Winner, Prized Pieces Film
Festival, Ohio, November 1993
THE MOTHERSHIP CONNECTION (1995)
Video. Sound.
30 minutes.
Channel 4/ZDF/ Arte.
THE LAST ANGEL OF HISTORY (1995)
Video. Sound.
45 minutes.
ZDF/Arte.
Credits
Director: John Akomfrah
Producers: Lina Gopaul and Avril Jobnson
Production Manager: David Lawson
Writer/Researcher: Edward George
Researchers; Kodwo Eshun
Floyd Webb
Production Assistant: Raymond Oaka
Camera Operator: David Scott
Sound Recordist: Trevor Mathison
Rostrum: Bunny Schendler
Digital Animation: Pervaiz Khan
Dubbing Editor: Peter Hodges
The Sound Designers
Editor: Justin Amsden
Original Music: Trevor Matbison
Cast
Edward George:The DataTbief
Interviewees
Juan Atkins
Mike Banks
Octavia Butler
George Clinton
John Corbett
Carl Craig
Samuel R. Delany
Kodwo Esbun
Goldie
Ishmael Reed
A Guy Called Gerald
Bernard J. Harris Jr.
Derrick May
Nichelle Nicbols
DJ Spooky
Greg Täte
Selected Screenings
Bombay International Film Festival,
February 1995
EYZ Kino, Berlin, March 1996
Cbromapark, Berlin, April 1996
Toronto International Film Festival,
September 1996
Amsterdam International Documentary
Film Festival, Amsterdam, December
1996
Rotterdam International Documentary
Film Festival, January 1997
Selected Awards
Transmediale Award for Best Video/ TVProduction, Berlin 1997
Prix Paul Robeson For Cinema,
FESPACO XVII Pan African Film Festival,
Burkina Faso, 1996
3 SONGS ON PAIN. LIGHT ANO TIME
(1995)
Video. Colour. Sound. 25 minutes.
Arts Council of England.
Credits
Director: Edward George
Director; Trevor Mathison
Producer: David Lawson
Script; Edward George
Photography; Mike Duffield
Writer/Researcher: Edward George
Original Music/Sound Recordist;
Trevor Mathison
Editor: James Edmonds
Dubbing Mixer: Peter Hodges
On-Line Editor: Bill Ogden
On-Line Edit Assistant: Kirsten Sudbury
Rostrum: Ken Morse
Camera Operator: Mick DufHeld
Production Driver: Kim Best
Lighting Electricians: Mark French
Jason Berman
Arts Council Supervisor:
James van der Pool
Production Company: Black Audio Films
Sponsor: Arts Council of England
SELECTED FILMOGRAPHY
224
Interviewees
Kathrin Brinkman
Brenda Agard
Mora Byrd
Sonia Boyce
Rita Keegan
Donald Rodney
Diane Simon
Marlene Smith
Production Company: Black Audio Films
MEMORY ROOM 451 0 9 3 7 )
Video. Colour. 22 minutes.
ZDF/Arte.
Cast
Preacher: Brian Bovell
Mother: Jo Martin
Prisoner: Cyril Niri
Daughter: Claire Perkins
Zoot Suit: Mo Sesay
Aliens: James Akinghola
Patricia Gibson Howell
Laura Sampredo
DaniellaWol
Credits
Director: John Akomfrah
Producer: AVTÍI Johnson
Writer: Edward George
Production Manager: David Lawson
Director of Photography:
Jonathan Collinson
Additional Photography: Dewald Akeuma
Sound Recordist:Trevor Mathison
Wardrobe: Ajays
Hairstylist: Gigi
Editor: Liz Green
On-Line Editor: james Cooper
Dubbing Mixer: Peter Hodges
Animation: Trevor Mathison
Pervaiz Khan
Gary Stewart
Narrator: Cyril Niri
Production Trainee: Selina Francis
Original Music: Hallucinator
Archive: Black Audio Films
Commisioning Editor (ZDF/Arte):
Selected Screenings
1st Jeonju International Film E^sdval,
Seoul, 2000
Mumhai International Film Festival, 2006
DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING:
DAYS OF HOPE (1997)
Video, Colour.
60 minutes.
BBCTV/ Arts and Entertainment
Channel USA.
Production Manager: David Lawson
Writer: Edward George
Editor: Nick Follows
Executive Producer: Tim Kirby
Interviewees
Harry Belafonte
Howard Baugh
Taylor Branch
Rev. Marcus Wood
Betty Moitz
Rev. JohnT. Porter
Jean Jackson
David Garrow
Andrew Young
Harris Wofford
Rev. James Lawson
Dr. Wyatt Walker
Dorothy Cotton
Georgia David Powers
Selected Screenings
Toronto International Film Festival,
September 1997
GANGSTA GANGSTA: THE TRAGEDY
OF TUPAC SHAKUR (t998)
Credits
Director: John Akomfrah
Producer: Lina Gopaul
Narrator: Hugh Quarshie
With special thanks: Avril Johnson
Dubbing Mixer: Peter Hodges
Sound/Composed Music:
Trevor Mathison
Photography: Dewald Akeuma
Video. Colour Sound.
45 minutes.
Channel Four.
Credits
Director: Edward George
Producer: Avril Johnson
Narrator: Burt Caesar
Sound Recordist: Trevor Mathison
Original Music:The Fratelli Brothers
Dubbing Mixer: Peter Hodges at The
Sound Designers
Rostrum: Ken Morse
Camera Operator: M. Watts
On-Line Editor: Clive Mattocks
Editor: Lisa Harney
Associate Producer: David Lawson
Production Company: Black Audio Films
Interviewees
Connie Brück
Buckshot
Cheo Coka
Billy Garland
Dru Ha
Andre Harrell
Rob Marriott
Charles Ogletree
Kevin Powell
Cathy Scott
Mutulu Shakur
Watani Tyehimba
225
The second category of BAFC work
consists of mt'dia research projects, only
sections of which were ever made public.
The substantive body of these projects
remained internal to the group where
they functioned as resources of knowledge
production to be reconfigured for
multiple projects.
pain' the research project was conceived
as a series of semi-autobiographical
explorations of colonial and post-colonial
subject conditions. The initial points of
narrative departure for the film were the
autobiographies of members of Black
Audio Film Collective.
A Long Way From Home
Coming Sunday (1982-85)
(working m i e ) ( l 9 8 4 - 8 6 )
An investigation into Afrodiasporic
rituals of worship via 35mm slide,
video and sound.
Based on the life of the Jamaican poet,
novelist and Trotskyite activist Claude
McKay (1889- 1948), this project was
conceived as a documentary drama that
would explore McKay's political and
literary work in colonial Jamaica, the
Harlem Renaissance, the Soviet Union
and Harlem where he returned to live
in obscurity.
Different Desires (1983-85)
Variously described as a film on 'race
and labour', 'an investigation into the
machinery and history of colonial terror'
and 'a study of Pentecostalism as a political
space'. Different Desires might be
described as a media research project
hi The Garden of Heavenly Rest (1989)
constituted around the political economy
A film about the life of folklorist, novelist
of the surplus underclass. Auguiste
and voodoo priestess Zora Neale Hurston
developed a script around these notions,
(1891- 1960), the project was conceived
elements of which eventually found their
as a geografJiical journey on the notions
way into the remarkable voice-over script
of Afrodiasporic spirituality and the
for Handsworth Songs; the Bnal sequence in
embodiment of black life in letters.
Handsworth Songs, in which Claire Joseph
The film was to feature novelist and
is seen walking away from the camera,
poet Ishmael Reed who would navigate
was filmed initially for Different Desires,
Hurston's extraordinary life, from rural
Florida, the Harlem Renaissance and New
The Body in Pain (1984-88)
Orleans Voodoo ceremonies concluding
Afilmabout the black body as a cultural
with herfinaljoumey to an unmarked grave
text upon which are inscribed zones of
in a segregated cemetery in Fort Pierce,
pain both personal and public, invariably
Florida called The Garden of Heavenly Rest.
described as a film about 'memory and
The Forest of Things (1993)
Centre, Covent Garden in 1984.
A research project on the reverberations
Theatre of Black Women (1984)
of the 1989 Satanic Verses affair that sought
Documentation on the work of Patricia
to configure the controversy as a 'forest
Hilaire and poet Bernadine Evaristo,
of stories'.The film was conceived as a
founders of Theatre of Black Women.
series of 14 self-contained mini-essays
Photographs taken during rehearsals were
and micro-dissertations that performed
developed as slide film which were then
a juxtaposition of multiple experiences
inscribed and projected.
and perspectives, thereby highlighting the
condition of disjunctive temporality that
C.L.R. James (1985)
characterised the entire affair.
Documentation of an interview with
The third category of work consists
of documentations of events that were
either commissioned, invited or selfinitiated. In its early years, the Collective
functioned as a mobile archival unit, ready
to document events as and when they
occurred. Indeed Handswortb Son^s began
its life as just such a document; its evolution
into the work we know today, and its
consequent success, made subsequent
archival projects more difficult.
TUC: Black Sections (1984)
Documentation of the 1984 Trade Union
Congress held in Blackpool that focused
on the debates over black representation
within the Labour Party.
The Trial of Dedan Kimathi (1984)
Documentation of NgugiWaThiongo and
Micere Githae Mugo's 1976 dramatisation
ofthe 1957 trial ofthe Kenyan anticolonial revolutionary, staged at the Africa
C.L.R. James, the Trotskyite theorist,
essayist, activist, novelist and dramatist,
(1901 - 1989). Granted to BAFC at the
offices ofthe Race Today Collective,
Railton Road, Brixton, on February
2Dth 1985. Screened at the ceremony
for the naming ofthe C.L.R. lames
Library, Hackney 1985.
The Black and Asian Miners Support
Group (1985)
Documentation of benefit event hosted
by the Black and Asian Miners Support
Group to raise money for miners during
the strike of 1985.
Black Artists, White Institutions
Conference (1985)
Documentation of conference held
at Riverside Studios, Hammersmith,
London, on November 5th 1985 on the
political economy and institutional
frameworks of Afrodiasporic and Asian
cultiiral production.
226
SELECTED FILMOGRAPHY
Race and Technology Conference (1985)
On Duty (1984)
Documentation of one-day conference
held in Camden, London hosted by
activist and researcher Rashid Meer.
16mm colour film. Sound. 52 minutes.
Channel Four
Les Mystères des Voix Bulgères (1987)
The Collective listened closely to
the music of Les Mystères des Voix
Bulgères throughout 1986 to 1987.
The documentation of the first live
performance in London of Les Mystères
des Voix Bulgères was commissioned
o
by producer Joe Boyd.
Syllables of Revolution (1987)
Documentation of a tour-day programme
of events in honour of American poet and
activist June Jordan, with guest speaker
Angela Davis. Filmed at Battersea Arts
Centre, London, in September 1987
In the fourth category of production,
the artists of BAFC worked, either
separately or collaborativciy, in a
consultative or advisory capacity on
projects initiated by other film-makers
and artists or sometimes by the Collective
itself; the Collective here acted as the host
organisation for a specific project, pro\idinp
a support structure for the artist; in film
vernacular, the group could be .said to
have 'warehoused' these projects.
Set during the National Health Service
dispute of 1984, On Duty is a dramatic
reconstruction of the struggles and
strengths of black ancillary workers in
hospitals facing short stafRng and closures.
Director: Cassie McFariane
Producer: Julian Henriquez
Script: Michael McMillan
Consultant: John Akomfrah
Set Designer: John Akomfrah
Set Designer: Trevor Mathison
Assistant Sound: Isaac Julien
Emergence (1986)
I6mni colour film. Sound. 18 minutes.
Channel Four
Parmar's debut documentary explored
notions of diaspora aesthetics and cultural
translation through the practice of four
female aesthetic activists: conceptual
artist Mona Hatoum, poet Audre Lorde,
painter Sutapa Biswas and poet Meiling
Jin. Aside from its script. Emergence bears
the signature of BAFC in Mathison's
radical concrete sound design, its diagonal
framing, its use of shadow and its interest
in interference patterns that disrupt the
stability of the image.
Director: Pratibha Parmar
Producer: Avril Johnson
Consultant: John Akomfrah
Script: Edward George
and Pratihha Parmar
Sound: Trevor Mathison
In the National Interest? (1986)
16mm colour film. Sound. 52 minutes.
Channel Four
Produced in association with Derry Film
and Video, Sankofa, TUTV, Open Eye,
Sheffield Asian Film and Video, Trade
Films, Bia.sedTapes, Faction Films, Albany
Video, Women in Sync, Films at Work,
Belfast Independent Video, Another View,
and Acüvision Studios, Black Audio Film
Collective look at the conflicts in British
society between individual and law and
ask why the law clashes so often with
notions of democracy and justice.
Race, Education and Society: The Burden
of Representation Part Two; Film
Documentary feature that explored
the multiple ambivalences, tensions
and antagonisms at work in the volatile
musical cultures of Jamaican dancehall
and American gangster rap. Black Audio
Films were the first independent
production company to work with the
prestigious BBC television documentary
series Arena.
Production Company: Black Audio Films
Director: Isaac Julien
Producer: Una Gopaul
Consultant: John Akomfrah
Script: Edward George and Isaac Julien
Music: Trevor Mathison
Director of Photography: Arthur Jafa
Black Cabs (1994)
Video. Colour. 30 minutes. Channel Four
A portrait of life behind the wheel;
moments from a job that negotiates the
defiant parochialism of the evervday.
and Video Makers (1992)
Documentary for the Open University
that examined the notion of representation
in cultural practice.
Presenter: Kobena Mercer
Interviewee: Pratibha Parmar
Interviewee: Lina Gopaul
Interviewee: Reece Auguiste
The Darker Side of Black (1994)
16mm colour film. Sound. 59 minutes.
BBC2
Director: Ruppert Gabriel
Production Company: BAFC
Producer: Lina Gopaul
The fifth category consists of work
commissioned by production companies
outside of BAFC.T^s includes sound
de.sign and scores composed for cinema
by Trevor Mathison, film directed by
Reece Auguiste, film produced by
Avril Johnson and film directed
by John Akomfrah.
227
Once Upon A Time (1991)
t6mm colour film. 30 minutes. BBC2
A bedtime story told by Grace, a young
African mother, to her two children
becomes the metaphor for the mother's
own life. Metaphor gives way to irony;
fable is contrasted with the mother's
qu<ïtidian routine, as character, location
and situation become zones of imaginative
inhabitation.
Director: Ian Roberts
Sound:Trevor Mathison
Moment of Sacrifice (1992)
Beta SP. 16mm colour film.
Sound. 60 minutes.
Documentary about four AfricanAmericans and their efforts to transform
their rural community of Marianna,
Eastern Arkansas, USA.
Writer/Director: Reece Auguiste
Messin' Up God's Glory (1993)
Ifiniin colour him. Sound. I 5 minute.s.
Film poem that combined allusive
imagery with scenes of women's
oppression in an oblique statement
on the practice of female genital
mutilation in contemporary Africa.
Director: Afua Namiley-Vlana
Producer: Avril Johnson
Lush Life (1994)
Video. Colour. Sound. 30 minutes. ITV
Documentary poem set in Northern
England in which poet and dramatist
Cheryl Mann travels to Hulme,Toxteth
and Glossop to meditate with fellow
artists on questions of belonging.
Director: John Akomfrah
Fathers, Sons and Unholy Ghosts (1994)
16mm colour film. Sound. 11 minutes.
Channel Four
Drama on the struggles of a young man
learning to be a father whilst coming
to terms with being a son.
Director: Danny Thompson
Music: Trevor Mathison
Edward George
Voices in the Dark (1996)
Video. Colour. Sound. 60 minutes.
Channel Four
Historian Carlo Ginzburg navigates his
most celebrated work, Tbe Cheese and
the Worms, in which a sixteenth-century
miller from a small village in Italy was
denounced for his heretical views and
burnt at the stake.
Director: John Akomfrah
Speak Like a Child (1998)
35mm colour film. Sound. 77 minutes.
British Film Institute
Fictional drama of the cxjmplex relationship
between three young friends, Sammy,
Billy and Ruby, whose lives are altered
irrevocably by an event that spirals
out of control.
Director: John Akomfrah
Production Company: British Film
Institute
228
SELECTED
BIBLIOGRAPHY
1983
Akomfrah, John, 'Black Independent
Film-making; A Statement by the
Black Audio Film Collective',
Artrage, 3/4, Summer
1984
Akomfrah, John, 'Notes on On Duty\
unpublished
Holland, Patricia, 'On Racial Difference:
Hall, Stuart, 'Song of Handsworth Praise',
Notes Following the BFI Summer School
The Guardian, January 1 5
Echoes of Empire', unpublished
1986
Auguiste, Reece, 'Black Audio Film
Collective', Third Eye: Strugglefor Black
and Third World Cinetno, Race Equality
Unit, Greater London Council
Hebdige, Dick, 'Digging for Britain; An
Excavation in Seven Parts', in Tbe Britisb
Edge, Boston ICA: MIT Press, reprinted
in Houston A. Baker, Jr., Manthia Diawara
and Ruth H. Lindeborg, eds, Black Britisb
Cultural Studies. A Reader, Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, pp. 120—62
Akomfrah, John, 'Paul Robeson:
Black Audio Film Collective, 'Programme
Politics and Films',Triangle, Birmingham,
Outline',The Positive Image Fihn
unpublished
Programme
1985
George, Edward, 'Introduction,
Handsworth Songs, BAFC, New Socialist,
Reflections of the Black Experience',
January, p. 45
Akomfrah, John, 'Programme Notes',
Struggles for Black Community,
Akomfrah, John, 'Programme Notes',
Anti Racist Film Programme Cinema
Circuit
Auguiste, Reece, 'Engaging Imperial
Cultural Histories: A Report on the
Culture', The Guardian, January 19
Mercer, Kobena, 'Past in The Present,
Greater London Council Race Equality
Unit and Brixton Art Gallery, p. 3
Association of Black Workshops
Film Programme
Howe, Darcus, 'The Language of Black
O'Pray, Michael, 'Black Audio Film
Collective', in The Elusive Sign: Britisb
Mercer, Kobena, 'Third Cinema at
Avant-Garde Film andVideo
Edinburgb: Reflections on a Pioneering
Arts Council of Great Britain, Britisb
Event', Screen, 2 7 / 6 , November-
Council, p. 15
December, pp. 9 5 - 9 6
Parmar, Pratibha, 'Handsworth Songs',
Women's Review, 14, p. 44
1977-1987,
Rushdie, Salman, 'Songs doesn't know
the score', Tbe Guardian, January 12
Williamson, Judith, 'To Haunt Us',
1985 BFI Summer School', unpublished
1987
New Statesman, New Cinema, January
Black Audio Film Collective, 'Expeditions',
Butler, Alison, 'The Half Open Door',
t988
The Independent, Film andVideo Monthly,
Akomfrah, John, 'Culture and
October, pp. 14—17
Representation', Undercut, 17, Spring,
Training', Sheffield Independent Film,
George, Edward, 'When I Am Queen,
pp. 3-8
unpublished
You Will Be Too: interviews and
Auguiste, Reece, 'Handsworth Songs;
Moments, Real and Imagined:
Some Background Notes', Framework,
a supplement', unpublished
35, pp. 5-8
Screen, 26/3—4, May-August, pp. 157—65
George, Edward, 'New Directions in
Gopaul, Lina, 'Which Way Forward?',
Black Independent Film-makers
Conference, National Film Theatre,
Gore, Leslie, 'Reel Life', The Face,
Bassan, Raphael, La Revue du Cinema,
unpublisbed
November 1987, p. 40
July/August, pp. 27-36
229
Fusco, Coco, 'Black Filmmaking
Täte, Greg, 'Here comes Sankofa',
in Britain's Workshop Sector',
Village Voice, Augast 30, pp. 57-71
Afterimage, February, pp. 11 — 13
1989
Fusco, Coco, 'Fantasies of Oppositionality:
Akomfrah, John, 'Colour Symbolism
Reflections on recent conferences in
in Ghanaian Society', unpublished
Boston and New York', Screen, 29 no. 4,
Autumn, pp. 80-93
Akomfrah, John, 'Third Scenario:
Theory and The Politics of Location',
George, Edward, 'Exterminators
Framework, Î6
on the Farm', unpublished
Auguiste, Reece, 'Black independents
Gilroy, Paul and Pines, Jim, 'Handsworth
and Third Cinema: The British Context',
Songs: Audiences/Aesthetics/
in Questions ofTbird Cinema, ed. Jim Pines
Independence', Framework, 35, pp. 9-17
and Paul Willemen, London: BFI
Gopaul, Lina, 'Questions of Language:
Cultural Identities', Undercut, 17, Spring,
pp. 13-15
Cubitt, Sean, 'Testament', Artrage, Autumn
Johnson, Avril, 'On Feminism,
Jackson, Lynne and Rasenberger, Jean,
Representation and Identities',
'Young British and Black', Cinéaste, XVI,
7th National identities Conference,
no. 4, pp. 24—25
England, unpublished
Kruger, Barbara, 'The Collective
Marks, Daniel,'Twilight City',
for Living Cinema', Artforum, 27,
¡nternational Documentary, Fall, p p . 4—8
no. 1, September
Petley, Julian, 'Possessed by Memory',
Mercer, Kobena, 'Diaspora Culture and
Montbly Film Bulletin, September,
the Dialogic Imagination: The Aesthetics
pp. 259-61
of Black Independent Film in Britain',
Reynaud, Berenice, 'Testament',
in Black Frames: Critical Perspectives on Black
Libération, September 23 and 24
Independent Cinema, Celebration of Black
Cinema Inc, MIT Press, 1988, reprinted
in Mercer, Welcome to the Jungle: Positions in
Rose, Cynthia, 'Digging the Feeling',
Observer, September 3
Black Cultural Studies, London: Routledge,
Sinker, Mark, 'Testament: African
pp. 53-68
Dreams of Exile', Arena, September
Pines, Jim, e d . . Association of Black Film
258. BAFC, 1989
Publishing, pp. 212-17
and Video Workshops Brocbure, BFI
2iÚ
1890
Fusco, Coco, 'Sankofa and Black Audio
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Gopaul, Lina, 'A Brief Flistorical Overview
Diawara, Manthia, 'Power and Territory:
of Black Film Workshops', unpublished
The Emergence of Black British Film
Difference and Desire, ICA/inlVA,
Collectives', in Lester Friedman, ed.,
pp. 77-78
Film Collective', in R. Ferguson, K. Fiss,
Rose, Cynthia, 'Britain's own Film Noir
W. Olander and M.Tucker, eds.,
is bringing black life to the screen'.
Discourses: Conversations in Postmodern
Art and Culture, Cambridge, MA: MIT
UCL Press, pp. 147-61
Vogue, March, pp. 256-58
Lovell, Alan, 'That was the workshops
that was', Screen, 31:1, Spring, pp. 103-08
Brush', in Between Imagination and Reality:
Tbe ICA Biennale of Independent Film
cjfií/Fíc/eo, ICA, p. 19
Wollen, Peter, 'Alternative Sounds and
Images , in Between Imagination and Reality:
Tbe ICA Biennale of Independent Film
and Video, ICA, pp. 6- 16
Wollen, Peter, 'The Last New Wave:
O'Pray, Michael, Tbe British Avant Garde
Thatcher Era', in Lester Friedman, ed.
Film: ¡926^1995. An Anthology ojWritings,
Diaspora: An Interview with John
Britisb Cinema and Thatcherism, London:
University of Luton Press and Arts
Akomfrah', Afterimage, April, pp, lO-l 3
UCL Press, pp. 35-51
Council of England, pp. 20-23
1994
1996
Auguiste, Reece,'The Migrant's Tale:
Chambers, Eddie, 'Three Songs on Pain,
A symphony for our times', LOTprojekt,
Light andTime', Art Monthly, October,
p. 14
pp. 65-66
Harris,Thomas Allen, 'Searching the
o
Sight and Sound, May, pp. 30—31
O'Pray, Michael,'ATouch of the Tar
Brush', in Arrows of Desire: New Directions
in British Film andVideo, ICA, p. 19
Wright, Patrick, A Journey through Ruins:
and Culture, Flamingo, pp. 99-109
1991
Akomfrah, John, 'Sneaking Ghosts
TEN.8, 2 no. 1, Spring, pp. 51-53
through the Back Door', Black film
Bulletin,], no. 1, p. 3
Black Audio/Film Collective, 'Expetiitions:
Akomfrah, |ohn,'Wishful Filming',
on race and nation', in Susan Hiller, ed.,
Black film Bulletin, 1, no. 2, Summer, p. 14
The Myth of Primitivism, London and
NewYork: Routledge, pp. 7 2 - 8 3
Auguiste, Reece, 'Artists from the Hell
Screen: Reports, Observations and other
Ganzerli, Marina, 'X like Malcolm,
Disturbing Things', Border/Lines, 2 9 / 3 0 ,
But "Freer", How To Make "Third Cinema"
pp. 4 - 8
Today', II Manifesto, November
Coleman, Beth, 'Consciousness Is...'
Corner, John, The Art of Record: A Critical
Village Voice, May 10
Introduction to Documentary, Manchester
A Keyhole Portrait of British Postwar Life
t993
Akomfrah, Jolin, 'On the Borderline',
Black Audio Film Collective's Wbo Needs
Modernism in the British Films of the
1992
Khan, Pervaiz, 'Black and White',
O'Pray, Michael, 'A Touch of the Tar
Marks, U. Laura, 'Ghosts of Stories,
a Heart', Cineaction, 36, pp. 53-62
Press; NewYork; New Museum
of Contemporary Art, pp. 1 7 ^ 2
British Cinema andThatcberism, London:
Bailey, A. David, Mirage: Enigmas of Race,
Banning, Kass, 'Feeding Off the Dead:
George, Edward, 'Black Body & Public
Necrophilia and the Black Imaginar)'',
Enemy',T£A/. 8, 2 no. 1, Spring, pp. 68—71
Border/Lines, 29/30, pp. 28-38
Givanni, June, 'Cinema and Liberties:
University Press, pp. 171-80
divergence or dichotomy'. Ecrans d'Afrinfue,
Cubitt, Sean, 'Footprints in The Air,
7/First Quarter, pp. 12-15
Mechanical Perception,The Media Arts,
Marks, U. Laura,'Agnostic Witness',
Aßerimage, September, pp. 5—6
1995
Alexander, Karen, 'John Akomfrah',
in A Direaory of British film &yideo Artists,
Diaspora and Sound', Art and Film,
Art and Design, pp. 72—79
Ross, Karen, Black and White Media:
Black Images in Popular Film and Television,
Cambridge: Polity Press, pp. 32—40
1997
ed. David Curtis, Luton: University
of Luton Press and the Arts Council of
Akomfrah, John, 'Storming the Reality
England, pp. 12-13
Asylum', Pix 2, BFI
Alexander, Karen, 'Reete Auguiste',
Davar, Katja, 'LovingThc Alien!',
in A Directory of British Film êiVideo Artists,
Spex, November, pp. 28-29
ed. David Curtis, Luton: University
Dyer, Richard, Wbite: K-tsays on Race
of Luton Press and the Arts Council
and Culture, London and NewYork:
of England, pp. 16-17
Routledge, pp. 82-83
Skoller, JefFrey, 'The Last Angel
Marks, U. Laura, Tbe Skin of the Film:
Eshun, Kodwo and George, Edward,
of History', Afterimage,
Intercultural Cinema, Embodiment and tbe
'Ghostlines: Migration, Morphology,
November-December
Semes, Durham, NC: Duke University Press
Mutations', in Sonic Process:A New
pp. 36-37,47--Í-9,66-76
Geograpby of Sounds, M ACRA, pp. 101-12
2001
Proctor, James, Dwelling Places: Postwar
Chambers, Eddie, 'Handsworth Songs
BlackWriting, Manchester: Manchester
and the Archival Image', in Jane Connarty
University Press, pp. 4, 16
and Josephine Lanyon, eds.. Ghosting:
1998
Cubiu, Sean, Digital Aesthetics,
Naficy, Hamid, An Accented Cinema: Exilic
London: Sage, pp. 116-21
Dietrichsen, Dietrich, ed., Loving the
Alien: Science Fiction, Diaspora, Multikultur,
and Diasporic Filmmaking, Princeton, NJ:
Princeton University Press, pp. 86—95
2002
George, Edward '(ghost the signal)',
Black Audio Film Collective, Documenta
(1997), in Loving the Alien: Science
11 - Platform 5: Exhibition, Ha^e Cantz,
Fiction, Diaspora, Multikultur, ed. Dietrich
p. 552
past', in Making History: Art and Documentary
in Britain from 1929 to Now, Täte, p. 17
The Role of The Archive within Contemporary
Mayer, Ruth, Artificial Áfricas: Colonial
Eshun, Kodwo, 'Twilight City: Outline
for an Archaeopsychic Geography of New
Eshun, Kodwo,'The Condition of Opacity
London', Wasaßri, 43, Winter, pp. 7-13
in Black Audio Film Collective's
Who Needs A Heart', in A.C. A.D.E.M.Y.,
Eshun, Kodwo, 'Untimely Meditations:
Reflections on the work of the BAFC',
NKA, 19, Summer, pp. 38-^5
1999
Images in the Times of Globalisation, Hanover
Dickinson, Margaret, ed.. Rogue Reels,
and London: University Press of New
Givanni, June, 'A Curator's Conundrum:
Oppositional Film in Britain,
England, pp. 247-54
Programming "Black Film" in 1980s-
Î94S-90,
Barson,Tanya, 'Time present and time
Artists'Film andVideo, Picture This, pp. 24-33
Berlin: ID Verlag, pp. 4-1 5
Dietrichsen, Berlin: ID Verlag, pp. 160-77
2004
2006
BFI Pubhshing, pp. 305-18
Nash, Mark, Documenta I ¡^Platform 5
Rces. A.L., A History of Experimental
Sbort Guide, Hatje Cantz, p. 36
Film and Video, BFI, pp. 105-07
Yeran, Kim, 'British Black Independent
Russell, Catherine, Experimental
Workshops: The Formation of Diasporic
Etbnography: Tbe Work of Film in the Age
Subjectivities', PhD thesis, Goldsmiths
ofVideo, Durham, NC, and London:
College, University of London
Duke University Press, pp. 264—72
2003
eds. A. NoUert, I. Rogoff, B. De Baere,
Y. Dziewor, C. Esche, K. Nieman and
D. Roelstrate, Revolver, pp. 198-207
Isaacs, Jeremy, Look Me in tbe Eye:
A Life in Television, Little Brown, p. 363
1990s Britain', Tbe Moving Image, 4,
no. 1, Spring, pp. 60—75
2007
Korte, Barbara and Sternberg, Claudia,
Akomfrah, John, 'On the National in
Bidding for tbe Mainstream? British and Asian
African Cinema/s: a Conversation',
Film since tbe /990s, Amsterdam, New
York: Rodopi, pp. 38-42
Petty, Sheila, Racing the Cuhural Interface:
African Diasporic Identities in the Digital Age,
2000
Diawara, Manthia, 'The "I" Narrator
Mount Saint Vernon University Art
Bakari, Imruh, 'A journey from the cold;
in Black Diaspora Documentary',
Gallery, Halifax, Nova Scotia
rethinking Black film making in Britain',
in Ella Shohat and Robert Stam,
in Black British Culture and Society: A Text
eds., Multiculturalism, Postcoloniahty
Reader, ed. Kwesi Owusu, London and
and Transnational Media, New Brunswick,
White, Sarah, Harris, Roxy and
New York: Routledge, pp. 232-38
NJ: Rutgers University Press, pp. 196-99
Beezmohun, Sharma, A Meeting
Givanni, June, Symbolic Narratives I African
Eshun, Kodwo, 'Further Considerations
Cinema:Audiences,Theory and tbe Moving
on Afrofuturism', Tbe New Centennial
Image, London: BFI, pp. 90-93
Review, 32, pp. 287-302
2005
of the Continents, New Beacon Books,
pp. 279-80
in Tbeorising National Cinema, ed. Valentina
Vitali and Paul Willemen, BFI
Eshun, Kodwo, 'The Futurological Turn
at the Century's End: Notes on Tbe Last
Angel of History and Memory Room 451',
Science Fiction Studies, 101
Petty, Sheila J., 'AfrofuturistVisions
in John Akomfrah's Tbe Last Angel
of History', Screening Noir, 1, no. 2
232
CONTRIBUTORS'
BIOGRAPHIES
with film, video, sound, text and curatorial practice that observe different affective
and aesthetic registers, creating platforms for discussion on contemporary art practice.
The Group's work has featured in many recent exhibitions including Juit in Time,
The Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam (2006), The Unhotnely: 2nd International Biennial
of Contemporary Art of Seville (2006), How to Improve the World: 60 Years of British Art,
Hayward Gallery (2006), Ecotopia:The Second International Centre of Photography Triennial
of Photography andVideo, ICP NewYork (2006), New British Art:The 3rd Täte Triennale,
Täte Britain (2006) and Homework III, Beirut (200S).
Jean Fisher
Kodwo Eshun
Jean Fisher studied Zoology and Fine Art, later becoming a freelance writer
Kodwo Eshun is author of the acclaimed book More Brilliant Than The Sun: Adventures
on contemporary art and issues of post-coloniality. She is the former editor of the
in Sonic Fiction (1998). His recent essays are published in A.C.A.D.E.M.Y. (2006),
international quarterly 7/iir<i 7«xt, and the editor ofthe anthologies. Global Visions: Towards Back to Black: Art, Cinema &^the Racial Imaginary (200S), David Adjaye: Making Public
a New Internationalism in the Visual Arts (1994), Re-verherations: Tactics of Resistance, Forms Buildings (2004) and in the journals Science Fiction Studies (2007), Wasaßri (2004)
ofAgency (2000) and, with Gerardo Mosquera, Over Here: International Perspectives on Art
and NKA (2003). Eshun is Course Leader ofthe MA in Aural and Visual Cultures
and Culture (2004). A selection of her essays. Vampire in the Text, was published in 2003.
at Goldsmiths College, University of London.
She currently teaches at the Royal College of Art, London, and is Professor of Fine Art
and Transcultural Studies at Middlesex University.
Kobena Mercer
Anjalika Sagar
Anjalika Sagar is founder of Multitudes, the independent news network established in
2000, dedicated to the distribution of alternative information on art, culture, tactical
Kobena Mercer is Reader in Diaspora Studies in the Department of Visual Culture and
Media at Middlesex University London, and is an inaugural recipient ofthe 2006 Clark
Prize for Excellence in Arts Writing. He has taught at NewYork University and University
media and politics informed by the multiple perspectives ofthe Global South.
Okwui Enwezor
of California at Santa Cruz and received fellowships from Cornell University and the
Okwui Enwezor is the Dean of Academic Affairs at San Francisco Art Institute
New School University in NewYork. His first book. Welcome to the Jungle (1994),
and Adjunct Curator at the International Center of Photography. He was the Artistic
opened new lines of enquiry in art, film and photography, and his writings feature in
Director of Documenta 11 and the 2nd Johannesburg Biennial. As curator, writer,
several landmark anthologies, including Out There (1990), Cultural Studies (1992), Art
and critic, Enwezor's work has been mainly focused on the critical reception
and its Histories (1998) and Theorizing Diaspora (2003). His monographs include James
of post-colonial practice in contemporary art and the effects of globalisation and
VanDer Zee, Adrian Piper, Isaac Julien, Rotimi Fani-Kayode and Keith Piper. He is
transnational politics on its methods. Most recently he curated The Unhomely: Phantom
editor of Cosmopolitan Modernisms (200S) and Discrepant Ahstraaion (2006), in the
Scenes in Global Society for the 2nd Seville Biennial of Contemporary Art (BIACS 2)
Annotating Art's Histories series on cross-cultural perspectives in 20th century art.
in Seville, Spain for which he also served as the Artistic Director; Snap Judgments: New
The Otolith Group
Positions in Contemporary African Photography, and Work Zones.ThirtyYears of Contemporary
Art at San Francisco Art Institute. He is at work on two exhibitions: Archive Fever:
The Otolith Group was founded in 2002 by Anjalika Sagar and Kodwo Eshun. The
Photography Between Document and History and Invention ofAfrica:The First Century
Group is based in London. Its work engages with archival materials, with futurity and
of Photography, 1839-1939.
with the histories of transnationality. The Group sees its work as a series of explorations
for Criticism from College Art Association.
Enwezor received the 2006 Frank Jewett Mather Award
233
LIST OF WORKS
\.-iian, of Empire. 191*2 S4
Hlük."Kudiii Film Collcctivr. illde tape,
iilitli ind whiir, sound. 22 mins.Tranifprred DVD
} . HaaJsutirih Songs, 1986
John Akomfrjh, 16 mm, txilour, munii. S9 mins.lransfcrred DVD
). rejtanKiH, 198S
John Ak(}inrrah.[6inm, ootour. sound, 77 mins.
Transrc'm-d DVD
4. Twiiighi Cay, 1989
Reeiv Auguiite, I6tnm, colour, sound, 52 minj. TransliTrcd DVD
^.Mysitnuofluh. 1991
Rtifr Augulilc, 16mm, rotour, sound, 52 minî. TrMisfcrrüd DVD
6, rtï.,'.V«JjuH(uf(, 1991
John Akt>m('r*h, I6inni. cijluur. sound, 78 mins.
Tninsfcrred DVD
7, A Touch oflhiliir Bruih, 1991
Jdhn Akumlrah. 16mm, nilour, sound. 19 mim.
Translcrrcd DVU
8, Sewn iang¡ Jar .»alca¡m X. 199}
John Akomfrali, I6mm, fulour, sound, i î mins.
TransfíTml DVD
9, ThcLüil.^nfftlofHlitorf. I99S
JiJin Akomfrah, Digibrla, tolour, tuiund, 4S mins. Transferred DVD
10, 7TirH Songs on Fain, íij^ht únJTiair. I99S
Trevor Mjlhíson. Edward George. Digibota, colour, sound.
25 niin>.Tran^(Trred DVD
11, Manin Laiho Kmg: Oayi efHtfc, 1997
John Akomfrah. Dlgibtla, colour, sound. 60 muii.
irtnsh-rrvd DVD
1 2. .Himary Roam 4SI. 1997
John AknmlVah, D^ftieti, colour, sound, 22 mini.
Tramfcmfd DVD
11. Gangaa CmySii: Tttt TragtJy if'Ripac Shaiut, 199ft
Kdwird George. DigibeU. colour, sound. 40 mins.
Trinsferml DVD
14. 77K S;<idr Hodni. 2007
N X prr.ipex Uaxrs. 7 x penpcx panel, 1 x granite plinths.
2 X wood plintha. wood casing. Ught box. piano hammer.
21Î.Î6X 12r92<Tn
S K VHrtnaa
IVrspex, SOxlOx 12.5 x 8.5cm
Vitrine I
20. Cinema anJ RIack Rrpreiroiuiion,
Screening series one, 198)
Poster, paper, black and white. 21 x 29.bcni
21. Gtifina and Hiack RepretenlotMn.
Screening series one, 198Î
Poster, paper, 42.2 Jt 52,5cm
22. Biiie rroces; Oítímu S.'TÍIE Cammuniíy'.
Screening series Wn. 198S
Transparenni mounted on lardboard. black and white,
29.6 X 20.9rm
2 Î. Ami Jiiiiet; Cinema and 'The Cummuniiy',
SiTeening series two. 1985
Statement, paper miiiinted on ¡urdboard, 21 x 29.6cm
2'1. Black anJThrJWorlJ foL-m:
Strecnine series three. October
Sutemcnt, paper mounted on hardboard. 29.6 x 21cm
25.fmi»iidnJArFUiDni
16nim film familiarisation course. 198S
AdvfrtLiement. paper, black & whitK. 21 x 29.6cm
26. The Posiiivi Imtijit
Screening serii-5 four, 1986
Postier programme, gloss, paper, colour, 29.7 x 42cm
27, Visions and Revisions
16mm film familiarisation course, 198 S
Poster, gloss, colour, 59.2 x 42.4iTn
2S.LooliingB¡ü(k
16mm lilm familiarisation course, 1985
Statement, cardboard, grey. 21 x H.icm
Í7. ne^iJnddinjnd' iwct, inHiût, MovenKnl
16mm film course. 1985
Poster, gloss, paper colour, 29.7
Vitrine 2
Î0 ïi^nio/'fijipire, I9B2-84
Word process«) script
11. Handsootih Songs. 1986
Typed script dralt
12. r«%ii/ Cay, 1989
Typed i
akotniX. 1993
Word processed voiceover commentary
H . Matbeiship Conneaians, 1995
15. Haaàmoith Son^i, 1986
Original poster, paper hidted. pcrspex frame, 151 x lO4cm
Word processed essay dr»ft
16. 7cji4imeni. 19HB
Original porter, pap'r hii-kifd, piT-ipcx frame, 101 Ï IS7cin
Word proces.'Hsl script
!7. Twilight Cuy. 1989
Original poster, paper h»ikc<l. iron frame, 77. S x 104cm
18.«merioú/yu(t', 1991
Original poster, paper backed, perpcx frame, 104 x 78cm
19. WhoNudsoHton. 1991
Original poster, paper W k e d , prrapix frame. 79 x lOScm
!5. Thru Song^ on Tlwi Fain Sought, 1995
16. Ha.r, 1997
Word processed script
Vitrine 3
il.Eipaliwns. 1982-1984
Poster, piper, 20.9 x 29.6cm
Î8. Ejpediiions. 1 9 8 2 ^
59. BAFC. 1989
Poster, paper. 29.6 x 20.7cm
Nigel Pwry/CiBAFCTnm
19. Hanéin>rth Songs. 1986
Photograph. 40.1 X 10,1cm
Poster, gloss, 2! x 29,¿cm
40. Homhworth Songs, 1986
Flyer, lard, 15.2 x 21 .Uin
41. tiaaJnrorih Saiyj, 1986
Theatrical release rtyer, paper, 21 x 14.5cm
42. Ttstament. 1988
hviutioncard, 10.5 x 14.5cm
4Î. tistomml. 1988
Publicity card, double sided, 15.1 x 25an
Vitrtne S
60. Grand Prix. Kaleidoscope International Immigrant Pdm
Festival, HandsmiTlh Songs. 1986
Glass mounli^ on wooden base, 10.5 x 4. ) x 8L7n
61 ,Tht First Paul Robeson Priiie for Cinrma,
Bmn/r mount«! on wooden base, 5.6 i 11,9 x 29.6cm
62. The John Grkr.'wm Award for Social Documentary,
44. Twihgbi City. 1989
Publicity card, matt, 14.7 x 2 Inn
Handnratth Songs. 1987
iS.MyucricoJIuly. 1991
Poster, paper, gliias, 29.6 x 21 cm
6), Proclamation. City tif AtUntj, BUck Audio Film Collective
46. »Ï1D Nteds a Hem. 1991
Envelope, paper, 22.7 x J2.5cm
Bronn' mounted on granite' block, I 1 x 8.7 X 8.7cm
Day, Ortober IS 1987
Paper mounted on card. 16.1 x22.9an
47. A Toudi ajihe Tar Brush. 1991
Postcard. 10.1 x IS.2cm
64. Certificate of Rccc^nition presented to Black Audio Film
*i. it^-cn Songs for .Malcolm X, 199Î
PtBtcard, gloss, 14.9 x 21cm
Card, Î S x 27.2cm
49. Three Songs en Pain. Time and Ughi. 199S
Publicity t,ard.glo»s. 14.9 x 21cm
50. The Last.ingel of History, 1995
Imitation postcard, îcpia tone, 12.6 i;17.6cm
Vitrine 4
51. Mathison, Akomfrah, Joseph, George, 1984
Sarah Saunders/ © BAFCTrust
HMtograph. 20,1 x 2 5 . ï a n
52. BAFC after w-innir^ Grierson Award, 1987
British Film Institute © BAFCTruat
Photograph,16.4 X 21.6cm
51. Una Gopaul, John Akomlrah duringacc^tanocipcech Tor
Grierson Award, 1987
British Film Instilute/ ® BAFCTrust
Photograph. 16.4 x 21,6cm
54. BAFC. Janice Cheddie, researcher. 1991
© BAFCTruft
Phot<^raph, 15.5 x 20.7cm
55. )ohn Akomlrah, Lina Gopaul
Colin Patterson/ © BAFCTrust
Photograph. 20.2 x 25,3cm
56. BAFC. 1987
SuMnneWalstrom/ © BAFCTrust
Photograph, 21.7 x ÏO.6cm
57. BAFC, 1989
Nigel Parry/ © BAFCTrust
Phot(igrafji,40.1xl0,lcm
58. BAFC. 1989
Nigel Parry/ ® BAFCTrust
Photograph. 40.1 x Î0. îcm
Collective, City of Boston, April 10 1988
65. Priced Pieces Annual Intcmationii Video and hlm.\»ard,
T^rihght City, 1989
Glass, prrpex mounted on wood, 14 x 22.6cni
66. Diatü^uishnt Documentary Achievement, International
Documenlari Associatiiai. Twilight Cily, 1989
Metil mounted on aluminium, p e r i ^ x , 18.4 x19.7cm
67. The Grand IVix City of Melbourm- Award for Best Film
Twilight Cuy, 1989
C»H, 27.1 X 27.4cm
68. Une mention spéciale. Vue d'AIViciue,Testament, 1989
Papt:r,28x 25. Ion
69. Golden Gate Award, Honorable Mention.Ttttnineni, 1989
'P^^^.
27.9x21.600
70. Certificate of Merit, Mth Cork Film Festival, TintigtK Qiy. 1989
Card, 22.5 X ÎO.4im
71. Prized Pieces Communit)' Choice Spedal Merit,
Serai SongsforMalcolm X. 199 î
72. CcrtificM* of Merit, Oucago ItitcnutiotuI Film Festival
Streu Songs for Matcolm X. 1991
Paper, ) 5 . 4 x 27.8cm
71. Preis fur die beite Video/TV Produktion, Truiimedia '97
The Latt Angel ofHlOBry
Card, 29.5 X 21cm
74. Prix P»ul Robeson, Festival Panafrican du Cinema
et de la Television Ougadougo. 1997
The Lan Angel of History
CaH. 22.9xl2.8cm
235
CREDITS
48. Seamus McGarvey, Reece Auguiste, Christopher
Hughes, Mysteries of July, 1991.
Liam Longman/BAFC Trust.
50. Hans Holbein,The Ambassadors, 1533 (oil on panel).
National Gallery, London/Bridgeman Art Library
69. Cohra Verde, Werner Herzog.
Anchor Bay
72. Nostalghia, Andrei Tarlcovsky,
Artificial Eye
73. Man of Marble.
Vanguard
75. Albrecht Durer, Melencolia, 1514, (etching)
Kobal Art Archive
77. Emma Francis Wilson, Tania Rogers,
Testament, 1988.
Avril Johnson/BAFC Trust.
79.Trevor Mathison,Testament, 1988.
Jonathan Collinson/BAFC Trust.
80. Lina Gopaul,Testament, 1988.
Trevor Mathison/BAFC Trust.
81. Avril Johnson,Testament, 1988.
Trevor Mathison/BAFC Trust.
82. John Akomfrah,Testament, 1988.
• Trevor Mathison/BAFC Trust.
83.Testament, Ritzy Cinema, Brixton, London, 1989.
Trevor Mathison/BAFC Trust.
All images are courtesy of BAFCTrust except as noted.
Front paper. Shooting Testament,Tema, Ghana, 1988.
Trevor Mathison/BAFCTrust.
15. Photographic Test, Expeditions, 1982.
Kilhurn Cemetery, London
Edward Gcorge/BAFCTrust.
36. Edward George and Una Gopaul, Handsworth, Birmingham,
UK, 1985.
© Pogus Caesar/OOM Gallery Archive.
38.Sebastian Shah, director of photography. Chamberlain Square,
Birmingham, UK, 1985.
© Pogus Caesar/OOM Gallery Archive.
39. John Akomfrah, Handsworth, Birmingham, UK, 1985.
© Pogus Caesar/OOM Gallery Archive.
40. Lina Gopaul, David Lawson,The Triangle Cinema, Costa
Green, Premiere of Handsworth Songs, 1986.
© Pogus Caesar/OOM Gallery Archive.
91 .The Patriot, Alexander Kluge.
Kairos Film/Kobal Collection.
94. Cabaret Voltaire, Seconds too late.
Mute Grey Area.
95.Test Dept,Total State Machine.
Cherry Red.
Kino.
201. Photographic test. Twilight City, 1989.
Reece Auguiste/BAFCTrust.
111. Rotimi Fani-Kayodc,The Milk Drinker, 1983.
© Rotimi Fani-Kayode/Autograph ABP.
202. Photographic test,Twilight City, 1989.
Reece Auguiste/BAFCTrust.
115. James Van DerZee,The Harlem Book of the Dead, 1978.
© Donna Mussenden Van DerZee.
204. Poster,Twilight City, 1989.Edward George/BAFCTrust.
122. Daughters of the Dust, Julie Dash, 1991.
American Playhouse/WMG/Gee Chee/Kobal Collection.
205. Musical visualisation for Twilight City, 1989.
Trevor Mathison/BAFCTrust.
123. Citizen Kane, Orson Welles, 1941.
RKO/Kobal Collection.
208. Outline for Twilight City, 1989.
Reece Auguiste/BAFCTrust.
138. First International Conference of Negro Artists
andWriters, Presence Africaine Special Issue, 1956,
Presence Africaine.
210. Musical visualisation, 1987
Trevor Mathison/BAFCTrust.
109.Tbe Colour of Pomegranates, Sergei Paradjanov, 1969.
139.Group photograph of delegates to the First Congress
of Negro Writers and Artists, The Sorbonne, Paris, 1956,
Presence Africaine.
146. Tbe Second Conference of Negro Writers and Artists by The
Society of African Culture, March 2S-April 1, Rome,1959 ,
Presence Africaine.
158. Photographic test. Expeditions, 1982-4.
Trevor Mathison/BAFC Trust.
213. John Akomfrah/Lina Gopaul, 1992.
Colin Patterson © BAFCTrust.
214-15. Card,Twilight City, 1989.
BAFCTrust.
Edward George/BAFC Trust.
165-66. Chris Marker, Sans Soleil, 1982
Nouveaux Pictures.
225. Edward George, Portsmouth Polytechnic, 1981.
Adrian Rifldn.
167. Chris Marker, A Grin without a Cat, 1977.
First Run/Icarus Films/British Film Institute.
245. The Human Eagle, National Library of Congress.
173. Black Audio Film Collective, Ridley Road 1989.
Nigel Parry © BAFCTrust.
174. Black Audio Film Collective, Ridley Road 1989.
Nigel Parry © BAFCTrust.
175. Black Audio Film CollecUve, Ridley Road 1989.
Nigel Parry © BAFCTrust.
97. Victor Bürgin,Today is the Tomorrow You Were Promised
Yesterday, 1976© Victor Bürgin.
Nigel Parry © BAFCTrust.
98. Alexsandr Rodchenko, Pioneer Girl, 1930, (gelatin silver
print). Museum of Modern Art, New York. Gift of Alex
Lachmann and friends of the Rodchenko family (photo © Scala,
Florence 2007) © DACS 2007
Nigel Parry © BAFCTrust.
176. Black Audio Film Collective, Ridley Road 1989.
177. Black Audio Film Collective, Ridley Road 1989.
179. Different Desires, 1983-5.
Trevor Mathison/BAFCTrust.
© Dr. Vanley Burke.
180.Trevor Mathison, Claire Joseph, John Akomfrah,
Edward George, Ridley Road, 1984.
Sarah Saunders © BAFCTrust.
103. Mysteries of July, 1991
Liam Longman/BAFC Trust.
183. Looking Black film familiarisation course outline, 198S.
Edward George/BAFCTrust.
41. Edward George,Trevor Mathison, Chamberlain Square,
Birmingham, UK, 1985.
© Pogus Caesar/OOM Gallery Archive.
IO4.The Black Room, 1995
196. John Akomfrah, Soho Road, Handsworth, Birmingham,
Trevor Mathison/BAFC Trust.
45. Avril Johnson, Reece Auguiste,Twilight City, 1989.
Trevor Mathison/BAFC Trust.
UK, 1985.
© Pogus Caesar/OOM Gallery Archive.
Institute of Contemporary Arts
46. Jonathan Coliinson, Edward George, Avril Johnson,
Twilight City, 1989
Trevor Mathison/BAFC Trust.
106. Industrial Britain, Robert Flaherty
and John Grierson, 1931
British Film Institute.
47. Reece Auguiste, Mysteries of July, 1991.
Liam Longman/BAFC Trust.
107. Listen to Britain, Humphrey Jennings, 1942.
Crown Film Unit/Kobal Collection.
105.The Black Room, 1995
212. Musical visualisation, 1987.
Trevor Mathison/BAFCTrust.
220.Trevor Mathison, Reece Auguiste,
John Akomfrah, 1984.
Lina Gopaul/BAFCTrust.
162. Poster, Handsworth Songs, 1986.
96. Karen Knorr, The Art of Living at the Cost of Others, from
Country Life, 1983-84 ® 2007 Karen Knorr.
102. Boy witb Flag, Handsworth Park, Birmingham, 1978
211. Musical visualisation, 1987
Trevor Mathison/BAFCTrust.
198. Photographic test,Twilight City, 1989.
Reece Auguiste/BAFCTrust.
199. Photographic test,Twilight City, 1989.
Reece Auguiste/BAFCTrust.
200. Photographic test,Twilight City, 1989.
Reece Auguiste/BAFCTrust.
246. The Mojave desert,The Last Angel of History, 1995.
Avril Johnson/BAFCTrust.
247.TheMoiave desert,The Last Angel of History, 1995
Avril Johnson/BAFCTrust.
248. John Akomfrab, 1995.
Avril Johnson/BAFCTrust.
249. Digital animation. Memory Room, 1997.
Pervaiz Khan/Trevor Mathison/BAFCTrust.
255. Mojave Desert,The Last Angel of History, 1995.
Avril Johnson/BAFCTrust.
256. BAFC, 1987
Susanne Walstrom © BAFCTrust
257. BAFC after winning Grierson Award, 1987
British Film Institute/BAFCTrust
258. BAFC, 1989
Nigel Parry © BAFCTrust
260. John Akomfrah, David Lawson, 2007
Trevor Mathison.
236
INDEX
260
260. John AkomiVah and David Lawson, 2007
237
A
Bhabha, Homi, 117,140,163
hiography, 18,158,181,182
collectivity, 75,113.114,121.132.12^,150
Abdul-Malik, Mithacl, 95,183
BI.K Art Group, 75,98
The Coiony, 8 4 , 9 8
Abena, 4î-t^5.49,Sl--S3,SS-S8
Bbck Arts Movement, 75
colony. 177,178
Abraham, Nicholas, S9
Black Audio Film Collective, 7,8.13-H.15.17-18,27,
The Colour of Pomegranates, 8 4
30,46,52.74-75,80.96-97,108,112,113-14.117-18,
colour, 170-175
Adjaye. David, 13
acsthctic(s). 30,74,7S,78,80,89,95- 96,
n o , 12i, 140,15Î.154,157,162,165-67
120,123,130,136, l'H)-44,146,148,1 56-57,163,166
Constructivism, 81,133
Black Audio Films. 96,1 36
Cuhism, 109,134
Aßicted Powers, Ul
black independent film, 114,l44--t-5,148,149,
152-55,157,162,166-67
Ciinvcntion People's Party, 43,49.51
Afrofuturism. Afroftiturology. 28. 96,97,99.22Ï
Black Monday, 159
Agamb«n, Giorgio, 17,35,27,iO
The BWi Room, 83,97
Agnies/J«, 57
The Black Panther Party for Self Defense. 110,208
allegory, 55,56,57
Akomfrah, John. 7,14,18.28.ÎO,4Î-H,47,49,51 -52,
55.58,74-75,78-79,81-82,85,89,94-95,97-98,114,
Blake, Jeremy, 99
Bourdieu, Pierre. 116,140
130-37,140-43,144--^5,l 7 0 - 7 ! , I 7 Í - 7 5 ,
Braithwaite, Kamau Edward, 135
181-«2,183-88,191-97,198-99,214,216.
BresscKi, Robert, 55
218-223
Brixton riots, 118,130,146
Anderson, PaulThomas, 99
Broadwater Farm, 209
Antonioni, Michelangelo, 55
Bucci-GKicksman, Christine, 57
appropriation, SO
Bürgin, Viftor, 80
archaeology, 24,30,78,117,120,143
Burke, Vanley, 81.98
archive(s)
7,1 Î,! 7,18,19,20,2 3-25,27,28,3O,44--^7,5t,74,
Butler, Ali.son, 99
81,83-84,95,98.117-120,131,140,143,156-160.176
D
Dada, 123
Dañino, Nina. 143
Daíh. Julie, 94
The DatalhteJ,
2S,96
Daughters qfthe Du,«, 9 4
decolonisation, 112,114,121
deconstruction, 106.110,114,121,123,157
Debord, Guy. 123
Deleuze, Gilles, 17,18,20,24,199
Derrida, ]ac<]ues. 35,198
diaspora, 17, 18,27-28,44,4S,47,97,t08, I Î5,153,
164,167
Butler, Judith, 88
Docklands, 23
Butler. Octavia, 140
documeniary.7,13.18-19,23,30.46.74,84,108,131,1 34,
Association of Black Film and Video Workshops, 82,141
143,156-158
/Irtra^, 82,114,140.141,199
Dofumenta XI, 13,) 30
Caharet Voltaire. 80,98
Dominica, 33,7S
Cambridge, Ricky, 98
Donnellan, Philip, 84
Canetti. Elias, 142,157.163
Dreaming Rivers, 47
autobiography. 18,19,85.195
Carter, Martin, 154
DuBois,W.E.B.,307
avant-gardefs),! 5,106,108,112 14,116,117,120.
123-123,130,140,142,154
Caruth, Cathy, 53,59
Durer, AI brecht. 55
de Certeau. Michel, 32
B
Ccsaire. Aimé, 79,153
E
Ceiannc, Paul, 106
Elmina Castle, 5S
Bachelard, Gaston, 79,181
Chambers. Eddie, 75,98,1 30,223,333
empire, 109,117.118,133,177,184
Banning, Kass. 47
Chatwin, Bruce, 55
emigration, 153
Baudelaire, Charles, 75
cinematography, 88, 94
Empift t^Sigiw, 7 9
Benjamin, Waller, 16.17,30,55-56,198
Citizen Kane, 94.9Î
Etnp¡TeWindTush, 20
Bergson, Henri, 17
Clinton, George. 28,205,208
Enwezor. Okwui. 106-33
AupULSte, Keete, 7,14,18.74-75,81.83- 84.98,
130,140-43,152-55.156-57,158-60,162-67,
317.220-22
238
epic construction, 81.82,88,97
Gopaul, Una, 7,14,18,74-75,82,98,1 ÎÛ,I4O-4Î,
epidejTnal schema, 108
145^7,170,216-21
Eshun. Koclwi), 8,12-15,28,74-99,130-37,140-41, I4Î
Gora, André, 75,98
essay-film, 19.121
Gramsd, Antonio, 75.78,98
exile, 43,45,52,57,117.221
Greater London Council, 81,82,141,167
Jameson, Fredric, 116
The Magnificent Ambersons, 95
Hjyed/fJonî, 7,79,80,81,83.117-18,140, 143,154,156,
176-78
Grierson. John. 84,157
Jamestown Dirge Singers, 57
Manet, Edouard, 106
Gupu. Sunil, 141,142
Jarrctt, Cynthia, 20
.Mar> oj Marble. 57
ExprcMonism, 88,94
H
Jennings. Humphrey, 84,85,157
Marcu.s,Greü, 201,203
J
Lugard, Lord Frederick, 80,98
Luther King Jnr, Martin, Dr, 20î,204,208
Jafa,Arüiur, 14,85,88,89,94.99
James, Henry, 74
Hall, Stuart, 27,3Ü,7S,98,118,142
Johnson. AvTil. 7,14.18.74-75,130,140,142-43,161,
216-19,231
Marker. Chris. 8,12,14,121
Marks. LI. Uura, 46,59,222
fibulat.i(m, 30,140.143
Handsworth riots, 30,22
Johnson, Claudette. 98,130
Fitii-Kayode. Rotimi. 81.84,143.198-..99
Hanilstnmh iongs, 13,19,20,22,37.30.44,58,81-84,
Jolmson, Robert, 201-04,208
Tanon, Franty.. 20,108,180
88,98,117,118-19,120-23,130-31,133,142-43,
Jones, Kellie, 110
FESPACO. 216.217,218
156-57.166,219
Joseph, Claire, 74,79,98,146
Mathison.Trevor, 7.14.18,4*,74-75.80-81.83-84,88,
94,9M 99,130,140,145,314,318-19
Julien, Isaac. 14,47.99,219
melancholia. 47,49,59
R^er, jean, 16-28
Haraway, Donnj, 30
Flaherty. Robert, 84.157
Hardt, Michael, 110
R).ster, Hal, 13,123
The Harlem Book oftbe Dead, 4 7 , 8 5 , 8 8
Poucault, Michel, 74,1 31.199
The Harlem Renaissance, 106,108.109,122,123
Four Corners Film andVideo Workshop, 81,t45
Harris.Wilson, 57,78.98,142,199
fmmewort. 78,140,142,1 56
Herbert, Zbigniew, 49,78,98
Freud, Sigmund, 24,30,49,59
Herzog, Wemer, 43,SS,57
Fmsi, Robert. 1 Î7
Hiller, Susan. 143
FiL^îco, Coco, 98,123.1 33,140,220.231
Hogarth, William, 159,160
G
George, Edward, 7,14.18,46,74,78-79,81-84. 96-97.
Massiah. Louw, 46,59
MeinecIce.Thomas, 99,143
Melencoha, 55,58
Holbein, ti^ru, 4Í
Kian. Hilda, 98
memory, 7.12,17-18,23-25,44,45,47,49,51,52-53, 55,
Keith. Kool, 206.308
57-58.94.131-33.137,150,153-54.157.170,201.206
Kellgren, Nina, 99
MmoiyHoom4Si,
15,27,28,43.95,97,218
Khao,i'ervai?:, 99,214,219,221
Kitchener, Lord, 157
Mercer, Kobena, 27,30,43-59,99,118,123,1 Ï 6 - Î 7 ,
Kluge. Alexander, 78,98, ! 20-21,123
142,220-21
Knorr. Karen, 80
Meireles, Cildo, 11 2
Kodak, 79,95,216
migration, 109,156
moiiernism,75,106,108,ll3.lt6,123,l34,331
Gabriel. Tcshome. 152
Gangsta Cangsia.Thc Tn/jedy ofTupac Shaiur. 9 6 . 9 7
Martin i.uthcr King: Dap of Hope, 9 6 , 2 1 8
identity, 28,49,74,78,81,89.98-99,106,108.121,132,
137.140.142.153.161,198
130,140-43,148-49,150-51,181.2OO-1O.318-2Î
Itnages of Nmtoadlity, 7 9 , 1 1 7 , 1 35
Gerald. A Guy Called, 97
immigration, 44,1 54
Gerima. Hailc. 1 S4
imperialism, 23.57
GcUno. Oi;iavio, 121,133
industrial Britaitt, 8 4
Ghana, I i,19,23,24,43,44.57.58,75,89,143,170,
Industrial Common Ownership Movement, 79
173,175
inlegrated practice. 81-82
Ghatak, Ritwik, 55
interpretation. 25,59,74
Gitroy, Paul, 23,120,118.120,140,142,143
intimacy, 15,l'i,81.l Î2,I74
modernity, 28,57,59,75,106,109,116,123,136
Laboratoire Agit-Art, 110
monUge, 19.46,49,51.53,58,109.121.135
labfjur, 27.28,84.11 î, 114,12 1,165,178
monument, 18,23,44,51,74.159
labour Party, 75,81,1 59,219
monuinentalily, 79,81,84,1 54
Lacan, Jacques, 43,56,59,78,132
The Mothership Connection, 217
The Last Angel of History. 2 8 , 9 6 - 9 7
mourning, 18-19,49,S2-S3,S8-S9,SS,99,170-71,
Lawson, David. 7,!4-15,18,72,74-79,98,130,140
173,203
lighting, 88.89,133
Multiplicity, 122
/.j.r(en to Britain. 84
Mulvey, Laura, 78,98
The Llamas and Tibetan Monks of the Four Great
Orders, 95
multitude, 109,110,1 12,111,123
Givanni, June, 98,222,223
Glauber, Rocha, 153
London Film Makers Cooperative. 81
.«/irertoo/yuJr, 25,41,53,83.84,143,217
Godard, Jean-Luc, 55
í.oc.tín^BWt,8l.82,98,149
Golden,Thelma, 75,98,142
Lookingfor itmj.non, 47,99,199
Museum of' Dread, 8 3,14 î
N
primitivism. 106.145,221
Spinoza. Benedict de, 94,99
proletarian publicity, 120,121
sute of emergency, 16,17,20,30. 163
nalional identily, 18.32.176.180
psyche. 45,52,57
Nfgri.Aniuiiio, 110,123
public sphere. 112,118.120,1 21.12 Î,140
N-rgniudi-, 108.109,122,123
Negi,Oskar.l30-21,123
Niíi>-Exprcssiunism, 96.97
Ncniila, Pablo. I S3
Nighi .Müll, 84
Nkrumah, Kwaane. 2î,41,44,45.4').57
No^ghia, 57
TheNutorioaiB.I.G.ÎOB
\ocehook oj a heiurn to My Sative Land, 79
T
Wajda, Andr/e|. 57
R
uhleau, 19,23,47,84-85,198
Watt, Harr); 84
Ra. Sun.28,204 05
Tarkovsky, Andrei, 55.56,57,157
race, 18,20.28, ÏO,78,95.106.108,117,121.131,
143-45,147-50,1 54,156-57,161,16Î, 165,182-83,
technologv, 17.30,88.94-95.97,99,148-49,166-67, 206
|9I,22L 22
Ranciere, Jaiques. 94,99
Reagan, Ronald, 114,121
The Red Desert, Si
representation.l7.47,SS,74,78,83.94,113-114,116,122,
Notting Hil! riots, 11 î
0
Oaagon, lîr. 207,208
Oiticia, Helio, 112
Orlow. Urirl, 98
Thi- Other Cinema. 81
The Otolith Group, 8.13-5
HI,140 46,15)- 54,161 6Î, 165,199,319
Retort, 122
Reynolds. Simon, 98
Richon, Olivier, 80
The Rio Cinema. 81
ritual. 95,170,171,173,175.192
R.Klthitl.Gabrid,99
Rod. henko,Alexsa:Klr. 79.81,98,143
RtMlnry, Donald, 15.75,98,130
Ross, Kristin. 94
Pan-Afriianism. 44.75,98
Pün.vamj. 79,180
Rushdie, Salman, 12Ï,142
Tabrizian, Mitra, 80
Teirhert, Gabi, 78,99
Testament, 19.2Î,25,27,4Î,45,47,49,51,53-58,73,89,
96.143, l70,2li-16,22l
Test Department, 80,98
testimony, 13,16,17.22,24,27,45
Thatcherism. 98,118,1 20.1 58,159,162,163,321
ThirdTelevision, ^b
Three Songs on Pam, Light and Tiau;, 15,84-85.96-98, 232
Third Cinema, 82,99,120-31,123,140,142,152-53,
162,164-66,220-31
Toiand, Greg, 94,95
Torok, Maria, 59
tran.ilation, 24,25
tramnjtionalism, 106,108,110,112-14,116-18.120.
122- 2 3 . Ï 2 Î
irauerspiel. 43.44,46,53.56.58
trauma. 17,18.20,24,27,30,44^5.49.51,52,55 57,59,
146.154
l*ara(l)ani>v, Sergei, 85
S
¡'art. Arvo. 57
Si:arry. EKiinc, 199
riví/(^/ifCl(/. 7,8.33-34,3{t,41.58,81.84,142,158.161,
IVck, Raoul. 94
Scenes of Eden, 8 5
177,313-14.217,221
IVndcrpcki. Krzystol', 57
Se^ínSonjí/or^oícoimí, 7,47,53,81,84-85,87,89,94,
IVrry, LPC. 28,205,206,208
96.214.217
rctty.Shi-ilaJ. 14.99.223
Shabaï.z,Mcnelik, 75,152
u
phantom. 57,59
Shaka. Jah, 78.80.98
photography. 81-84.95,99.140,145,150-51,198 -99
Shakur.TupaL-,! 5,96,208,218
Picasso, Pablo, 106.123
Signs of Etnpirc, 18-19,79,117,135,143.154,156,180,
lines, Jim,9«,142,197,23I
216
I'iper, Keith, 14,75,98,130
Siluationists, 110,112
I'lKil of London. 23
The Situationist international, 1 22
post-a>loiiialism. 44,47.52.108-09,114,117-18,
slavery, 20,37,28,201,206
120,123
Smith, Marlene, 75
postmodrrn. 27.80,112,152,1 Í6.142,221
Solanas, Fernando, 121,123
Tucuman Arde. 110
Undercut, 140,142,220
V
Van DerZee. James, 47,81.143
Van Gogh. Vincent, 84.106
The Viceroy of Ouidah, 55,56
Riions and Revislora, 148
visualitv, 80,88,89,95
Waiiott, Derek, 75,78,84,98,135,152,151,1 54,1 55
Who NeeéA Heart, 13-15,58,94-95,98,140.143,
181-82,183,186,188,192,194,196,213 14,217,
222-33
Wücms, Carrie Ml-, 98
Welles, Orson, 94,95
Willemen, Paul, 142,221,223
Winnic.rtt,D.W.,46
Wollen. Peter. 221
workshops. 15,81-82.98,123.141,14Î-«.146~47,
148 49,163,164,166.330-31.33i
Wright. Basil. 84
Wright, Patrick, 143.231
X
X.Malcolm, 7.47.53.81.85.87.89.94,193,314,317,233
X-Ray Spex, 81