2024

An Afro-Indigenous Reawakening: The Year in Review

From the first indigenous Brazilian Pavilion in Venice to an Afro-indigenous reawakening, these are some of our 2024 highlights.

Whether the commodification of indigenous culture production is wholly positive is an entirely different question that deserves its own PhD dissertation, especially when so much of indigenous epistemology is inherently anti-capitalist and community-driven. Regardless, there were marvelous sights at the 60th Venice Biennale including MAHKU’s larger than life installation on the façade of the Giardini international pavilion, which functioned as an emblematic gesture. The Brazilian pavilion itself was renamed Hãhãwpuá (the Pataxó name for the territory) to welcome its first ever indigenous representation. I personally interviewed curators Arissana Pataxó, Denilson Baniwa, and Gustavo Caboco Wapichana, who told me about the process behind selecting Glicéria Tupinambá, who herself invited others to join in. The curators spoke in a collective voice and memorably told me that above all: “community is more important than the work itself!”

Community building coupled with the decolonial movement taking hold across the continent is something that we at C&AL engage with faithfully. This year, we launched the series Afro-indigenous which looks at the long-overlooked intersection between these two identities in the context of Abya Yala/Pindorama. Some of these include a feature on the 79-year-old sculptor from Minas Gerais, Maria Lira Marques, written by Maya Quilolo; and my interview with 29-year old painter of digital worlds, Johan Samboni from Cali.

We carried out several critical writing workshops on the American continent including places such as Santo Domingo with Centro Cultural BanReservas and Universidad Autónoma de Santo Domingo; Kingston with Jamaica Art Society; and Dallas. In addition, we held our first Caribbean-focused workshop online together with the Caribbean Cultural Institute at the Pérez Art Museum Miami – in three languages!

Our network on the continent is expanding rapidly and that’s something we want to cherish and hold up. For this reason, several of our articles are written by participants from our workshops. To name a few, these include a piece on Tessa Mars and Haitian spirituality by Ervenshy Hugo Jean Louis, on Ismael Davi and Exu by Matheus Morani, on carnival body and territory by Rachel Souza, and on Keila Sankofa and Afro-indigenous time-space construction by Kariny Martins.

Capitalizing on our extensive travels across Abya Yala/Pindorama, we launched the series Studio Visits where we visit artists in their creative spaces for an intimate exchange. So far you can experience the visit to the studios of Anaïs Cheleux, a Guadeloupean photographer, and Julianny Ariza Vólquez, a Dominican artist who explores Caribbean identity through Indigenous, Afro-descendant, and feminine lenses, both brought to you by our Managing Editor Marny Garcia Mommertz.

Speaking of the Caribbean, this year we sadly lost Caryl* Ivrisse Crochemar, the Martinican curator and founding director of espace d’art contemporain 14N 61W. He was a committed supporter of C&, connecting us to many across the region, and took part in our series of talks at 1-54 Forum in 2020. We will continue to salute and celebrate his life and work.

To finish off I’d like to remind you that when you support our work by becoming a Moon Member on the C& Patreon you’ll receive an exclusive C& Collector’s Box, featuring every single C& América Latina Magazine and C& Magazine print issue!

Will Furtado is C& América Latina’s (C&AL) Editor in Chief.

explore