When museums use artists to deal with their colonial histories, the outcomes can really feel superficial or clumsy. Centuries of violence can’t be mended with a single challenge, significantly when hampered by the short-term nature of residencies and momentary exhibitions. For When Our Rivers Meet, the product of Beatrice Glow’s residency on the New-York Historic Society, the artist does to not tackle the entire historical past of Dutch colonialism in North America. As an alternative, utilizing their collections to mark the four-hundredth anniversary of New Amsterdam’s founding, she focuses on how town’s basis has been commemorated prior to now, presenting herself as the most recent in a line of interpreters.
It’s a sensible, manageable alternative for a broad theme. She attracts closely on the archive of the 1909 Hudson-Fulton Celebration, which marked the three hundredth anniversary of Henry Hudson’s voyage up his namesake river and the one hundredth anniversary of Robert Fulton recreating it. Referencing the parade floats and tableaux made for the two-week celebration, Glow, with collaborators of Dutch, Indigenous, and African heritage, created extravagant parade floats that replace and reframe this colonial historical past. She makes use of VR applied sciences to make these floats and produces them with 3D printers, leading to extremely detailed plastic polymer sculptures. These artworks are enjoyable: “Revolutions to Love Our Extra-Than-Human Kinfolk,” made with NYC-based Matinecock artist Tecumseh Ceaser, turns Renaissance allegories of the 4 Continents right into a carousel, lowering the colonial stereotypes of America, Africa, Asia, and Europe to absurd and childlike amusements.
Glow performs nicely along with her supply materials, however struggles at instances to face as much as it. The pictures of the 1909 floats are simply as surreal as her artworks, depicting shifting islands with tableaux of the “buy” of Manhattan and ships being constructed, and a illustration of the Croton Aqueduct as a Greek goddess. A small room comprises a VR movie that fashions the parade floats as an precise procession by means of town, displayed alongside an 18th-century pop-up peepshow of “Constantinopel” [sic] from the NYHS assortment. The latter, a paper cutout Orientalist fantasy, is one other neat analogue to Glow’s digital confections, however it’s an odd alternative for a present that’s a lot about New York, and the movie hardly enhances her parade float sculptures. As well as, the movie is eight and a half minutes lengthy, however there’s no seating within the tiny room, and it’s too cramped to get comfy and expertise it totally.
Glow additionally makes use of AI in “Hallucinating within the Afterimage of Empire (after Claes Janszoon Visscher),” overlaying a 1652 map with generated pictures of Dutch colonial exports. The comparability between the almost-real weirdness of machine-generated pictures and the fantastical illustrations on early fashionable maps is self-consciously witty: Simply because the maps’ unique decorations reveal their creator’s prejudices and assumptions, the AI mannequin can solely repeat the colonial sources that it’s been educated on. Frustratingly, it’s not that simple to see how implausible the “hallucinations” of the AI illustrations really are, between the distortion of the material it’s printed on and the reflection on the glass. However placing any reservations concerning the ethics of AI picture making apart, it’s a crafty method to attract a parallel between the experimental applied sciences of the previous and people of in the present day, because the work gently nudges the viewer to contemplate the connections between expertise and colonialism.
Progress so usually comes hand in hand with exploitation. Whereas Glow gestures towards that relationship, she stops in need of analyzing the results of her personal flirtation with AI instruments, and the catastrophic environmental harm related to their water consumption and carbon emissions. I discovered this work much less compelling than the parade sculptures, or Glow’s gaudy gilt child rattles, coated within the symbols of the Dutch West Indian Firm, which function an allegory for the colonial histories we inherit. Her capacity to convey consideration to the extra outlandish moments in New York’s colonial historical past is refreshing, and the prints and images from the NYHS collections displayed listed here are nicely chosen and interpreted. On the entire, it’s a intelligent present, however one which takes on an enormous and messy historical past with a contact that’s typically too gentle.
Beatrice Glow: When Our Rivers Meet continues on the New-York Historic Society (170 Central Park West, Higher West Facet, Manhattan) by means of August 18. The exhibition was organized by Rebecca Klassen, curator of fabric tradition.