Maryam Jafri »
Independence Day 1934-1975
Exhibition: 30 Jul – 8 Oct 2016
Sat 30 Jul 16:00 - 19:00
IMA - Institute of Modern Art
420 Brunswick Street . Fortitude Valley
QLD 4006 Brisbane
+61-7-3252-5750
Tue-Sat 12-18
This first solo exhibition in Australia of Maryam Jafri's work presents fifty-seven photographs from her project Independence Day 1934–1975 (2009–ongoing) form an installation that documents the first independence day ceremonies in former European colonies across Asia, the Middle East, and Africa, between 1934 and 1975.
Sourced by the artist from twenty-nine archives housed in countries such as Syria, Kenya, Senegal, India, Malaysia, the Phillipines, and Algeria, the photographs are arranged into a grid according to the characteristics of the ceremony, creating a sense of a repetitious ritual. Elements including the swearing in of a new leadership, the signing of relevant documents, the VIP parade, the stadium salute, the first address to the new nation, are all supervised and orchestrated by the departing colonial power. Thus despite disparate geographic and cultural contexts, striking similarities emerge through Jafri’s process of arrangement and juxtaposition.
The artist calls the project a ‘collection of collections’. Uniting conceptual art and cultural anthropology, it exemplifies her research-based practice.
Taken as a whole Independence Day 1934–1975 reveals a political model exported from Europe and in the process of being cloned throughout the world. Although a great deal of research has been done on both the colonial and the post-colonial eras, this project aims to introduce a third, surprisingly neglected element into the debate: that twenty-four-hour twilight period in-between, when a territory transforms into a nation-state.