‘One Month after Being Known in that Island’ is the inaugural exhibition of the Basel H. Geiger Cultural Foundation’s new permanent space. Commissioned by the Caribbean Art Initiative and curated by Yina Jiménez Suriel and Pablo Guardiola, the show brings together paintings, drawings, films, audio works and installations by 11 artists hailing from Aruba, Colombia, Curaçao, the Dominican Republic, Guadeloupe, Haiti, Puerto Rico, Trinidad and Venezuela. (The Anglophone Caribbean is largely absent.)
It might seem incongruous to stage an exhibition on the Caribbean in the city of Basel, but the curators took inspiration from the 1795 Peace of Basel, which saw representatives from various European powers congregate in the neutral Swiss city to redistribute colonial Caribbean territories. Spain ceded its Haitian territory to France as part of this treaty, four years after the onset of the Haitian revolution, resulting in the entire island of Hispaniola becoming a single French colony – one that ultimately gained independence in 1804.
In common with many group exhibitions about the Caribbean, this show
borrows its theoretical concept from Édouard Glissant’s Poetics of Relation (1997) and his proposal that the Caribbean Sea is the ultimate binding agent for its inhabitants. A connection created by the creolisation of the nations catalysed by forced migration, trade and colonisation. In her 2014 essay ‘What Is a Caribbean Writer’, Guadeloupean writer Maryse Condé quips: ‘So, here is the Caribbean with no fixed abode. It is not necessarily regrettable, may we say again. Strangled by their cramped, overpopulated islands, the peoples of the Caribbean are suddenly offered the vast world and its wide expanses open to the heart. As a result, their egos swell and they are elated.’ The rising prominence of Caribbean artists in Western art spaces can put them at risk of an inflated sense of self and eagerness to shed the constraints of the global south. However, if the artists manage to keep their elasticity, remembrance and Caribbeanness intact their unique positionality between diasporas can serve as endless inspiration.
‘One Month after Being Known in that Island’ run at Kulturstiftung Basel H. Geiger, Switzerland,