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Here, Low, In This River Bend

Here, Low, In This River Bend

Tuesday, October 22, 2024

5:30 PM–7:00 PM
Auditorium
(See the event location map)
Get directions to the Clark
In this Research and Academic Program lecture, Adrian Anagnost (Tulane University / Clark Fellow) charts a cross-cultural history of visualizing territoriality in the lower Mississippi River Valley and the Gulf of Mexico. Among Indigenous inhabitants, the area that would become New Orleans was known as Bvlbancha—the land of many tongues, or many waters. This region was located at the threshold of land and water and, by the eighteenth century, at the borders of empires—where multiple approaches to territorialization overlapped. For this lecture, Anagnost brings together Indigenous Plaquemine material culture with environmental history, European cartography and artistic practices, and embodied approaches to land management.

Adrian Anagnost is associate professor of art history and core faculty of the Stone Center for Latin American Studies at Tulane University. Anagnost's research and teaching is centered on the persistence of colonial spatiality for modern urbanism and contemporary art across the Americas. Author of Spatial Orders, Social Forms: Art in the City in Modern Brazil (Yale University Press, 2022), which examines the politicized intersections of art, architecture, urbanism, and landscape in Brazil during the 1920s–1960s, Anagnost was also the co-leader of a 2021–22 Mellon Sawyer Seminar on comparative commemorations, exploring art, memory work, and activism surrounding the continued spatial legacies of slavery and displacement in sites including Bvlbancha/New Orleans,Tenochtitlan/Mexico City, Mi'kma'ki/Nova Scotia, and Cibuquiera/St Croix. At the Clark, Anagnost will be completing a book on landscape, colonialism and ecology at the Gulf of Mexico and pursuing research on contemporary art’s preoccupation with Amazônia. 
 
Free. Accessible seats available; for information, call 413 458 0524. A 5 pm reception in the Manton Research Center reading room precedes the event.

Image: Attributed to Ignace-François Broutin, Carte particulière du cours du fleuve Missisipy ou St Louis, à la Louisiane, depuis La Nouvelle-Orléans jusqu'aux Natchez (detail), 1731. Bibliothèque nationale de France

 

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