黑料不打烊


Vishal Jugdeo: Caribbean Television

11 Nov, 2023 - 23 Dec, 2023

In Vishal Jugdeo鈥檚 second presentation at Commonwealth and Council, the artist premiers the first episode of Caribbean Television, a project delving into the legacies of colonialism and indentureship in Guyana, drawing in this instance, from the artist鈥檚 family history. The single channel-video, Deo鈥檚 Moon employs the artist鈥檚 signature multifarious storytelling, laying bare the shifting subjectivities and power dynamics of the filmmaker and the film鈥檚 participants. In it, Jugdeo wrestles with myths and traumas accumulated against the backdrop of Guyana, whose histories and divided cultures have formed its own latticed identity, alongside and despite, dominant global narratives.

Filmed with an uneasy gaze, along Guyana鈥檚 rivers and shorelines, in markets and bars, Jugdeo seeks understanding and comfort in a place that is both foreign and familiar. The artist鈥檚 uncle Deo鈥攁 storied man of politics and culture鈥攁cts as docent, guiding Jugdeo and the viewer through histories, songs, and nightlife, only later revealing his own agenda. Jugdeo and his cousins, Shalini and Dharani, strive to make sense of their own queerness through their Caribbean lineage while debating the very ethics of Jugdeo鈥檚 work. To what extent can the exchange between filmmaker and subject be mutually beneficial? Do the subjects feel exploited? Or seen? Is the filmmaker a native informant? Or is he the steward of an archive of untold stories?

In laying out and embracing these contradictory feelings and ideas, Jugdeo eschews traditional narrative structures and resolutions in favor of a syncopated Caribbean rhythm. As images and ideas switchback and wind, truths and realities shift both for the filmmaker and his subjects: cruising becomes a mechanism of ethnography and binding social contracts are born from family lies. All the while, Guyana acts as the ultimate enigma, evading and muddying assumptions of race, class, and gender. Untethered from such bonds, perhaps the queer, diasporic gaze offers a way to make sense of the seemingly ineluctable cycles of trauma.



In Vishal Jugdeo鈥檚 second presentation at Commonwealth and Council, the artist premiers the first episode of Caribbean Television, a project delving into the legacies of colonialism and indentureship in Guyana, drawing in this instance, from the artist鈥檚 family history. The single channel-video, Deo鈥檚 Moon employs the artist鈥檚 signature multifarious storytelling, laying bare the shifting subjectivities and power dynamics of the filmmaker and the film鈥檚 participants. In it, Jugdeo wrestles with myths and traumas accumulated against the backdrop of Guyana, whose histories and divided cultures have formed its own latticed identity, alongside and despite, dominant global narratives.

Filmed with an uneasy gaze, along Guyana鈥檚 rivers and shorelines, in markets and bars, Jugdeo seeks understanding and comfort in a place that is both foreign and familiar. The artist鈥檚 uncle Deo鈥攁 storied man of politics and culture鈥攁cts as docent, guiding Jugdeo and the viewer through histories, songs, and nightlife, only later revealing his own agenda. Jugdeo and his cousins, Shalini and Dharani, strive to make sense of their own queerness through their Caribbean lineage while debating the very ethics of Jugdeo鈥檚 work. To what extent can the exchange between filmmaker and subject be mutually beneficial? Do the subjects feel exploited? Or seen? Is the filmmaker a native informant? Or is he the steward of an archive of untold stories?

In laying out and embracing these contradictory feelings and ideas, Jugdeo eschews traditional narrative structures and resolutions in favor of a syncopated Caribbean rhythm. As images and ideas switchback and wind, truths and realities shift both for the filmmaker and his subjects: cruising becomes a mechanism of ethnography and binding social contracts are born from family lies. All the while, Guyana acts as the ultimate enigma, evading and muddying assumptions of race, class, and gender. Untethered from such bonds, perhaps the queer, diasporic gaze offers a way to make sense of the seemingly ineluctable cycles of trauma.



Artists on show

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