2nd Place Winner Image of Research 2020
This image displays an in-progress state of my visual study: a
textile/fabric iteration of a historically based dataset. This 2016
dataset is a simplified and incomplete copy of an 18th-century
handwritten manuscript entitled, Book of Negroes. The registry documents
the biographical material of 3,000 Black Americans (historically
labeled the Black Loyalists) who emigrated from New York (America) to
Nova Scotia (Canada) at the end of the American Revolution. This process
image is part of a larger study that uses art and design to explore
questions on how incomplete historical material can matter in relation
to human interaction and experience. 1,000+ names of the Black Loyalists
are re-presented as traveling across the fabric. While working closely
with these names (optically and tangibly), I noticed how I viewed them
as surrogates for the actual migrants who traveled across land and
water. This resulted in me working less mechanically and more
intuitively, prioritizing name placement based on possible familial
connections over that of abstract rules for structure and arrangement.
The latest intervention with embroidery retraces my decisions for
arrangement. While working, thoughts of repeated joining and disjoining
of relationships and mis/re-identification of individuals emerged,
complicating perceived experiences of the Black Loyalists.