Call to Artists: Collage Artist Residency: Plantations as Buildings, Metaphors, and Systems of Power

CALL TO ARTISTS

Collage Artist Residency: Plantations as Buildings, Metaphors, and Systems of Power

at Kolaj Institute

13-17 October 2024

A five-day, in-person collage artist residency in New Orleans

Early Deadline: Sunday, 18 August 2024
Final Deadline: Saturday, 31 August 2024
Notification: Friday, 6 September 2024

About the Residency

As part of a year-long investigation of castles as buildings, metaphors, and systems of power, Kolaj Institute will host a week-long artist residency focused on Plantations. Pre-20th century industrial agriculture in the Southern United States was organized by plantations, single crop farms that used forced labor to grow commodities that were sold on to global markets. Lost Cause historical narratives have cast these sites in a Romantic light as beacons of genteel Southern culture, but a more honest review of the historical narrative shows them to be sites of torture and imprisonment, sources of trauma. While some historians have viewed plantations as race-based feudal systems, others have worked to create more complex narratives that explain the forced migration and enslavement of millions of Africans. The story of Slavery has been widely explored in popular media and art, but the systems of power and labor created post-emancipation have received little attention. 

Proponents of celebratory history wish to remember a time of social order, but as Allen C. Guelzo wrote in Fateful Lightning: A New History of the Civil War and Reconstruction, “Alongside the Romantic image of magnolias at midnight lay a relentless economic rationality; alongside the facade of racial reciprocity lay resistance and revolt; and alongside the casual tolerance of slave labor in producing their most lucrative commodity, Southerners displayed a fierce personal independence and a resentment at condescension and control. Southerners veered between assertions that theirs was a thoroughgoing slave society, in which ‘every fibre…is so interwoven with it, that it cannot be abolished without the destruction of the other,’ and realizations that Southerners were as much participants in a liberal democratic order as any other Americans, though one inexplicably incorporating the quirk of slave labor.” The interwoven threads of Plantation culture did not end with the Emancipation Proclamation. How these threads were rewoven informs American society as we know it today. What role can artists play in making this history understood? 

During this residency, collage artists come to New Orleans and explore the history of Plantations and learn how to adapt their artist practice to pick up the unfinished work of history and make art that contributes to the civic discourse. Through interactive sessions, visits to plantations, and collaborative collage making, artists will explore their process and practice; present a slideshow of their work; receive supportive, critical, curatorial feedback about their ideas; and discuss contemporary issues. 

The residency will speak to issues of appropriation, copyright, and fair use and explore how the artist’s choice and understanding of material shapes the narrative of the artwork. Over the course of the week, artists will be challenged to make a single artwork (or small study for an artwork) that speaks to a larger body of work. Artists will leave the residency with a new perspective on their art practice. 

Prior to gathering in New Orleans, we will hold two virtual sessions where we review the program and deconstruct artist practice. On Sunday, 13 October, the group will meet in New Orleans for an orientation and review of the schedule. Participants will view the artwork in the exhibition, “Identity, History, & Place” on view at Kolaj Institute Gallery and consider the strategies artists used to include or speak to history, place, and identity in their work. On Monday, participants will visit the Laura Plantation and the Whitney Plantation with an eye towards how the history is told. Tuesday and Wednesday we will meet at Kolaj Institute Gallery for collage making and conversation. Ric Kasini Kadour will present a curatorial framework for the project. Jeanna Penn will present on how she uses history and archives in her practice. On Thursday, artists will present a single artwork (or small study for an artwork) that speaks to a larger body of work and the themes they want to explore. 

After the Residency, artists will be invited to propose artwork for inclusion in Kolaj Institute’s Castle Project, an exhibition, book, and related programs in 2025-2026 that invite viewers to consider how the history of castles, colonies, plantations, and corporations relate to one another and shape the world we live in today. 

WHO IS THIS FOR?

Collage Artist Residency: Plantations as Buildings, Metaphors, and Systems of Power is in-person and centered on collage artists who want to develop their artist practice to include using history and historic sites to speak to contemporary issues. Residencies are professional development programs, intended for self-motivated artists, regardless of the stage in their career, who want to explore a topic or working method and collaborate with others. The focused goal of the residency is a proposal for artwork that may be included in a book and exhibition.

COST

The cost of the residency is $750 per artist

Activities such as visits to plantations (transportation and entry fee) are included in the fee. Artists are responsible for their own travel to New Orleans, accommodations, and meals. A limited number of partial grants are available to offset the fees and to ease barriers to participation. Financial Aid is limited and possible through the support of donors to Kolaj Institute.

HOW TO APPLY

Submit your application HERE.

RESIDENCY LOGISTICS

Plantations as Buildings, Metaphors, and Systems of Power will have two Virtual Sessions prior to the start of the Residency, dates to be determined.

In-person activities take place at Kolaj Institute, 2374 Saint Claude Avenue, Suite 230, starting at 10AM, Sunday, 13 October to 4PM, Thursday, 17 October 2024. 

Participating artists will have 24-hour access to the space during the residency. 

Kolaj Institute stocks general collage-making materials such as cutting mats, scissors, a variety of glues, substrates, and books and magazines. If an artist wishes to use specific materials they may be shipped in advance to the Kolaj Institute Studio & Gallery.

There will be an additional Virtual Follow-up after the Residency.

ABOUT THE FACULTY

When We Walk, the Ground Shakes by Jeanna Penn
8″x12″; watercolor, India ink, acrylic, sourced imagery on watercolor paper; 2024. Courtesy of the artist.

Jeanna Penn is a contemporary artist who lives and works between Oakland and Los Angeles, California. She has been creating art for over twenty-five years in various forms including mixed media collage, soft sculpture, photography, zines and documentary film. Much of Jeanna’s work is centered around recontextualizing found imagery and documenting material histories. She received her BA in African American Studies from Morgan State University and continued graduate work in African History at Howard University and Historical Documentary Filmmaking at George Washington University. Jeanna’s work has been shown at the Arts Guild of Sonoma; The Art Cave in Santa Cruz; The Barrett Art Center; Eyelevel Centre; Jennifer Perlmutter Gallery; Delaplaine Arts Center; Smith Gallery of Yale Divinity School; 516 Arts; and the Henry Sheldon Museum of Fermont History. Her work has been featured in Create Magazine, Albuquerque Journal, Kolaj Magazine, and Hyperallergic. In addition to several private collections, Jeanna’s work is also a part of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art’s permanent collection. INSTAGRAM

The Worlds We’ll Make by Ric Kasini Kadour
16″x12″; found image collage with acrylic paint on paper on wood panel; 2022. Courtesy of the artist.

Ric Kasini Kadour, a 2021 Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts Curatorial Fellow, is a writer, artist, publisher, and cultural worker. Working with the Vermont Arts Council, Kadour curated four exhibits: “Connection: The Art of Coming Together” (2017) and Vermont Artists to Watch 2018, 2019 and 2020. In 2017, he curated “The Art of Winter” at S.P.A.C.E. Gallery in Burlington, Vermont. In 2018, Kadour curated “Revolutionary Paths: Critical Issues in Collage” at Antenna Gallery in New Orleans, which bought together collage artists whose work represents the potential for deeper inquiry and further curatorial exploration of the medium; followed in 2019 by “Cultural Deconstructions: Critical Issues in Collage” at LeMieux Galleries in New Orleans, which furthered the conversation; and “Amuse Bouche”, also at LeMieux Galleries in 2023. Since 2018, he has produced Kolaj Fest New Orleans, a multi-day festival & symposium about contemporary collage and its role in art, culture, and society. As Curator of Contemporary Art at Rokeby Museum in Ferrisburgh, Vermont in 2019 and 2020, he curated three exhibitions, “Rokeby Through the Lens” (May 19-June 16, 2019), “Structures” (August 24-October 27, 2019), and “Mending Fences: New Works by Carol MacDonald” (July 12-October 25, 2020). He also curated “Contemporary American Regionalism: Vermont Perspectives” (August 17-October 20, 2019); “Where the Sun Casts No Shadow: Postcards from the Creative Crossroads of Quito, Ecuador” (November 1-30, 2019); and “Many Americas” (August 20-November 27, 2022) in the Wilson Museum & Galleries at the Southern Vermont Arts Center. “The Money $how”, co-curated with Frank Juarez, was presented at the AIR Space Gallery at Saint Kate-The Arts Hotel in Milwaukee, Wisconsin (April 10-September 12, 2021). For Birr Vintage Week & Arts Festival in Birr, County Offaly, Ireland (August 13-20, 2021), he curated “Empty Columns Are a Place to Dream”, which traveled to the Knoxville Museum of Art in January-February 2022. At 516 ARTS in Albuquerque, New Mexico, Kadour co-curated with Alicia Inez Guzmàn two exhibitions: “Many Worlds Are Born” (February 19-May 14, 2022) and “Technologies of the Spirit” (June 11-September 3, 2022). In 2023 at the Knoxville Museum of Art, Kadour curated “Where the Sun Casts No Shadow: Postcards from the Creative Crossroads of Quito, Ecuador” (January 9-February 16, 2023) and “Mythical Landscape: Secrets of the Vale” (March 17-May 28, 2023). In September 2023, he curated “Word of Mouth: Folklore, Community and Collage” at A’ the Airts in Sanquhar, Scotland. His first short film, The Covenant of Schwitters’ Army, debuted at Collage on Screen during Kolaj Fest New Orleans 2023. His second, Joy Is Paper, debuted at Collage on Screen during Kolaj Fest New Orleans 2024. Kadour is the editor and publisher of Kolaj Magazine. He has written for a number of galleries and his writing has appeared in Hyperallergic, OEI, Vermont Magazine, Seven Days, Seattle Weekly, Art New England (where he was the former Vermont editor) and many others. Kadour maintains an active art practice and his photography, collage, and sculpture have been exhibited in and are part of private collections in Australia, Europe and North America. In January-February 2020, he was artist-in-residence at MERZ Gallery in Sanquhar, Scotland. He holds a BA in Comparative Religion from the University of Vermont. Kadour splits his time between Montreal and New Orleans. www.rickasinikadour.com