{"id":2305,"date":"2013-03-01T22:58:16","date_gmt":"2013-03-01T22:58:16","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/archee.uqam.ca\/?p=2305"},"modified":"2022-12-08T22:58:26","modified_gmt":"2022-12-08T22:58:26","slug":"mars-2013-erick-meyenberg-race-discourse-in-present-continuous","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/archee.uqam.ca\/mars-2013-erick-meyenberg-race-discourse-in-present-continuous\/","title":{"rendered":"Mars 2013 – Erick Meyenberg: Race Discourse in Present Continuous"},"content":{"rendered":"\n

Temporally, an immense amount of time separates a chart detailing categories of castes and mixtures of races produced in the 19th century, and the 2011 immersive installation\u00a0Return to the Present<\/em>\u00a0by Mexican artist Erick Meyenberg. Yet, both chart and installation are intertwined to a history of racial discourse dating back to Colonial times that still prevails in contemporary societies. Meyenberg’s aim to address this issue has Germany as its locus, and Mexico as its historical context. From 2005 to 2010, Meyenberg studied in Germany at the Berlin University of the Arts (Universit\u00e4t der K\u00fcnste), where he was classified in that category that Homi K. Bhabha has described as \u201calmost the same but not quite.\u201d1<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0Although in Mexico he had passed for white, in Germany, other factors attached to nationhood differentiated him from them. Interestingly, for Meyenberg, this experience revealed that despite the many obvious existing differences between Germany and Mexico, both countries were bound to a common history of race construction that has continuously repeated itself, suspended in a present continuous, despite its outdated basis. Meyenberg’s installations provide critical insights in the ways in which the past connects to the present. Specifically, his experiences in Germany and Mexico made him reflect on the context of the latter country, where despite the fact that racial mixing has been the rule more than the exception, racism continues to prevail2<\/sup><\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

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\u00c9tude taxonomique et comparative entre les castes de la Nouvelle Espagne et celles du Mexique contemporain, Erick Meyenberg<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

In the past years, Meyenberg’s research has focussed on racial mixtures. A central element of his work is the gradual transformation of color in real time using LEDs (Light Emmitting Diodes) in a literal yet poetic way to explore questions of racial discourse formation and stratification. LEDs’ logic lies in the mixture of red, green and blue (RGB); together, these colors have the capacity to produce a vast array of tones and colors, while the effect of lighting the three of them at the same time, space, and intensity produces white light. Meyenberg uses this technical feature to evoke narratives of racial superiority in relation to whiteness3<\/sup><\/a>. In what follows, I discuss the installations\u00a0Return to the Present<\/em>\u00a0and\u00a0\u00c9tude taxonomique et comparative entre les castes de la Nouvelle Espagne et celles du Mexique contemporain<\/em>. Both works put forth historical connections where gallery visitors are provoked to position themselves, and those around them, within past and present histories of race construction and racism.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

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