Clark Art Lecture on Colonialism, Image-Making, and Image-Reading

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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — On Tuesday, April 15, the Clark Art Institute's Research and Academic Program presents a talk by Inês Beleza-Barreiros (Nova University of Lisbon, Portugal / Michael Ann Holly Fellow) on "Thinking Visually: Reparation, Gesture, Reparation." 
 
This free event takes place at 5:30 pm in the Manton Research Center auditorium.
 
According to a press release: 
 
Beleza-Barreiros explores how colonialism inaugurated an epistemological tradition molded by image-making and image reading that remains operational to this day. Images neither illustrate arguments; they are themselves the (colonial) argument. Nor are they documents of colonialism; they are colonialism in action. As art historians dealing with the visual colonial archive, and in the name of "historical truth" and "documental authority," we often end up reifying the past in the present. Through the process of reproduction and circulation, we eternalize colonial epistemicide. How can we use the visual archives of power to elaborate on a critique of domination? How can we examine colonial visuality without eternalizing its spell in the present? How can we reclaim the ontology of critique as reparative? Inspired by the work of Aby Warbug and its projection onto new forms of visual exploration of the archive pursued by artists and filmmakers, Beleza-Barreiros elaborates on a methodological critique, visual archaeology, which provides a way of thinking visually. The image can cease to be a "thing" and instead become the process of its own deconstruction.
 
Beleza Barreiros is an art historian, cultural critic, and curator. Her work focuses on how art and images become knowledge-producing objects. She is particularly invested in the visual culture, public memory, and afterlives of colonialism in the Portuguese-speaking world. Trained in the United States, Portugal, and France, Beleza Barreiros is currently a researcher at ICNOVA, School of Social Sciences and Humanities at Nova University of Lisbon. She has been working on award-winning documentary films that explore the relation between cinema and other arts, such as painting and landscape. Publications include Sob o Olhar de Deuses sem Vergonha: Cultura Visual e Paisagens Contemporâneas (2009). At the Clark, she will work towards the completion of Thinking Visually: The Afterlives of the Plantation. Combining decolonial visual studies and ecocritical art history, this practiced-based project aims to re-historicize the plantation as an aesthetic regime of extraction that endures, and visualize what has resisted this regime, while expanding the analysis of images of the plantation and their role within art history.
 
Free. Accessible seats available; for information, call 413 458 0524. A 5 pm reception in the Manton Research Center reading room precedes the event. For more information, visit clarkart.edu/events. 

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Neal: Dems Need to 'Fracture' Republicans, Challenge Trump Actions in Court

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — U.S. Rep. Richard Neal, D-Springfield, Thursday said Democrats' best strategy to counteract the Trump administration is to "fracture" his support on Capitol Hill and that decisions like the withdrawal of funds to promote resilient infrastructure will be successfully challenged in the courts.
 
Neal was in town to celebrate a $500,000 appropriation he helped secure to help the renovation of the Williamstown Meetinghouse, the Main Street home of First Congregational Church.
 
Later Thursday morning, he headed to a closed door meeting with local business people to talk about the impact of Trump's tariff policy.
 
His visit came 12 days after a rally on the steps of that structure called for action to turn back some of the most aggressive White House actions in the first 90 days of Trump's presidency and 24 hours after news broke that the administration is clawing back $90 million in disaster prevention aid, including $144,000 to support a culvert restoration project in North Adams.
 
On Wednesday, Neal in a news release called the administration's decision not to allocate funds from FEMA's Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities program, "another example of the chaotic decision-making that has been a hallmark of this administration."
 
Thursday morning, he hearkened back to a 1970s dispute between the Nixon administration and Congress that went all the way to the Supreme Court.
 
"The challenge that we're going to have is that I think a lot of these decisions that the Trump administration has made are likely to be overturned in court, but there's going to be a lot of anguish in between," Neal said. "I thought many of these [court] decisions were correctly reached during the Nixon administration, and that's why [the Trump administration] has been using terms like 'pause' rather than impoundment.
 
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