Exhibition

Yto Barrada: Moi je suis la langue et vous êtes les dents

Modern Collection – Project Space, Lisbonne, Portugal
08 Feb 2019 - 06 May 2019

Yto Barrada,

'Untitled (Unruly Objects. Thérèse Rivière Mission © musée du quai Branly Jacques Chirac)', 2016. 24 slides. Photo: Courtesy of the artist

Yto Barrada, 'Untitled (Unruly Objects. Thérèse Rivière Mission © musée du quai Branly Jacques Chirac)', 2016. 24 slides. Photo: Courtesy of the artist

The starting point for Yto Barrada’s project is the unique and tragic figure of Thérèse Rivière. In the 1930s, the French ethnologist traveled to Algeria, to the Aurès mountains, to study the Berber Chaouis people.

Yto Barrada is a Franco-Moroccan artist whose work is heavily influenced by narratives of history and identities, especially that of Morocco, in its relationship with the colonial and post-colonial past, a geography where the South and East converge in their relationship with the West.

The artist presents a set of works at the Project Space, some which have never been seen before, that explore and pursue her interest in the unique and ‘tragic’ historic figure of the French ethnologist Thérèse Rivière (Paris, 1901-1970).

Between 1935 and 1936, Rivière went to Algeria to study the Chaoui Berber ethnicity, in the Aurès region of the country. The notebooks, drawings and photographs produced by the ethnologist, together with the materials and objects she collected, which focused on the everyday lives of women and children, were forgotten, ‘erased’.

These are the ‘silenced’ narratives and objects that Yto Barrada rescues – that she consumes and regurgitates –, in a gesture of identification and resistance against the dispossession of words (of language), either those of the colonised subject or ones based on gender inequality, as seen in Objets indociles (above).

Into this fabric of history, Yto Barrada weaves family narratives, those of her own family, in a constant to and fro between history and individual memories, like in the photographs and notebooks of her grandmother (Telephone Books, below) who, unschooled, created a language composed of graphic symbols to identify and record her family contacts.

.

Modern Collection – Project Space
R. Dr. Nicolau Bettencourt , Lisbon

https://gulbenkian.pt