Erasing, Obfuscating and Teasing out from the Shadows: Performing/installing the camps’ (in)visibilities
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PRJ_Disappearance_Weinstein_AM.pdf
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Final Accepted Manuscript
Author
Weinstein, Beth MAffiliation
Univ Arizona, Coll Architecture Planning & Landscape ArchitectureIssue Date
2020-02-17Keywords
Internment campsperformance art
Installation
invisibility
architecture
labor
Practice-based research
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Show full item recordPublisher
TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTDCitation
Beth Weinstein (2019) Erasing, Obfuscating and Teasing out from the Shadows, Performance Research, 24:7, 23-31, DOI: 10.1080/13528165.2019.1717861Journal
PERFORMANCE RESEARCHRights
© 2020 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.Collection Information
This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at repository@u.library.arizona.edu.Abstract
Three practice-based investigations discussed in this essay—Razing Manzanar II, States of Exception, and Palimpsest—correlate two seemingly separate conditions of invisibility. One is invisibility produced through the making and unmaking of spaces of internment or detention called forth through governmental utterances. The other is hidden labour, specifically related to architecture and built environments. These performance-installations reflect upon government-mandated, and now-demolished, camps and the labour occurring there. The sites of study include World War II-era Japanese American internment camps in the American West, where interned citizens wove camouflage for the US Army, and the Centre d’Identification de Vincennes (CIV) in Paris used to detain French Algerian labourers during their war of independence. Most traces of the Japanese American camps are now invisible—razed long ago—but are acknowledged by government. The camps situated within the Paris city limits are also invisible, but not simply by erasure; they are obfuscated by government obstacles to locating them, with the CIV’s whereabouts, the city’s largest intentional camp, remaining elusive. While seeking to render sensible, or knowable through the senses, these internment camps, and the camp as a recurrent condition, my practices of installation and performing spatial labour also explore rendering visible otherwise-invisible labour. My labour is architectural, employing the discipline’s instruments, such as drawings and models. These labours take cues from Eyal Weizman’s Forensic Architecture (2017) and age-old techniques of descriptive geometry and shadow projection. Juxtaposing these concerns problematizes both the now-razed architectures that once disappeared whole populations and (hyper/in)visibility (Kunst 2015) of spatial labour. Performed and installed spatial labours of erasing, obfuscating and teasing out of the shadows are the three modes of rendering the invisible visible I examine in this essay, arguing that the performative nature of the explorations is critical to rendering sensible what the artefacts normally conceal.Note
18 month embargo; published online: 17 February 2020ISSN
1352-8165EISSN
1469-9990Version
Final accepted manuscriptae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1080/13528165.2019.1717861