LOÏE. 04

Letter to a Young Mother. Imagine Home

(Collective poetry)

26 de September de 2019
Available on:
English

Tonight, the drones of our countries

Will raze to the ground another village.

So, don’t waste your time

With those who don’t ever ask

Who the fuck they are on a Sunday morning

When they go to church.

We are standing. We are never on solid ground. We continue.

All we have to do is a simple act,

For all the knowledge that is in this space

It is what we are

Together.

No one shall be afraid of his or her truth.

I am new to this experience.

Of being inside myself,

surveyed, controlled,

vulnerable.

I know my past, but I can’t see my future.

My past is in my front, the future is in my back,

so, I harbor the tension in my spine and expose it to you, youngmother,

To cover it again, to externalize, contain.

If I dig to the roots, I see that we are all entry points—

Stories that flow into many

And become sore in the ambience of life.

You’re damned if you do

And you’re damned if you don’t see and expect to be seen.

There’s so much we don’t know, but we do as if to play normal.

I am walking on thin ice.

Torn between scaring and relieving trauma,

Be they sane and insane.

I am the organic Opus Dei, mortified, unsanctified,

Carving altars to forgive

who is still cutting women up

And turning them into objects.

I am not speaking out anybody else’s truth,

For I, myself, I am nothing.

But you, youngmother, 

are the crack in the house that opens up

so, water can pass through the crevasses

of ancestral territory.

In collaboration with Tomas Diafas, Fenia Kotsopoulou, Josephine Makris, Ariadne Pediotaki and Maria Zourou. Photographs © daz disley and Psari Visual.

 

We are projecting onto the image we are into.

And yet, I don’t believe in universality,

Because there is always culture,

And when we name it, we can look at it,

And when we’re ready,

We can throw it away.

We choose our labels,

We stitch to them and get rid of them

When we need to.

Bodies need to be unpacked. Homes need to be opened.

It is so difficult to be different.

So, choose your way, youngmother.

Do not care if someone persists

To judge the other by stereotypes,

For the other – the special one –

Could be the hyper-physics—

The bridge

Which un-restrains the evolution.

Don’t lose the ones you love, youngmother,

For the day they fall from your view,

A piece of you will also die,

Even though you’ll find no reason.

Yet who needs reason once you’ve made

Of your existence an act of poetic revolt?

Choose your future, youngmother.

Systems want us to believe

That driving crazy for all the materialistic bullshit,

Trying to succeed even though

the idea of success has been surpassed,

Is for the better.

When does it get real?

Life is a minefield to get through

But we should go beyond the physical action

And the breath we take to honor the issue.

And what do we want to create from here?

They push us to build our lives on rage,

Or on the science of a systematic stain

To control and fuck our minds up

Drag us down to a level

Of social, sexual, inoffensive mediocrity,

And to a state of spiritual slumber.

Systems invent spurious, convoluted logics

For they need to justify their crimes.

They try to change people

Whose behaviour and ideas

Are outside of the main stream

As they see in them the sign of their failure.

They strive to sedate our perception of the reality

And trade our lands for deadly weapons

In the name of an elusive protection

Designed to create new slavery

And a greater division among us people.

What does all that make us become?

Do you know how a bird is crying?

Just as the night, frightened, pale,

It doesn’t know where to escape.

Does the bird belong to the wind?

Or does the wind

Belong to the bird?

If it’s all about capital, misery

Guilt, death and despair,

I yearn for a bit of silence

In defense of myself to not forget romance,

Even though I’m stranded inside my body

All around.

We shut down the borders of our countries

And shout in the face of those running away

— Running for his life —

That he’s a potential terrorist.

So, tell me,

Where can he breathe?

 

In collaboration with Shola Cole, Sara Kostić, Manuel Lopez Garcia, Marco Nektan, Ivana Ranisavljević, Katarina Ranković, Albert Smith, Alex Spyke and Vedran Vucić. Photographs © Mina Sarenac and Maya Ree

 

Don’t speak with him: he’s a refugee.

Send him back home. Don’t you have a house?

It’s gone, my children all dead.

Are you baptized? What is your religion?

What is your nationality? What is your ethnicity?

Persona non grata. Rejected.

Can we talk about pain?

My pain is my guilt.

But my guilt comes from where?

Can we talk about shame?

My shame is what you make me think,

And all those history books written by the winners.

Let’s talk about being knifed at a checkpoint by the police,

While crossing the desert disguised in a truck

Desperately driving for hope.

Let’s talk about being stripped off my clothes

Down to the bare bones and end up raped

In a dump wet alley of a Libyan harbor.

Let’s talk about restrictions.

Let’s talk about not being able to move

Chained in a South-African prison because I’m black.

Or let’s talk about queer, about being a daughter, a son.

Yes dad, you say that I have been a bad daughter.

Well, I say that I will be even a worse son.

Yet we continue to philosophize about freedom,

Humming against our fears.

Yes, let’s talk about fear.

Fear of feeling the fear

Of being truly free,

As my freedom ends where your freedom begins.

Let’s talk about having fear of the unknown,

Of leaving and losing,

Of touching and being touched,

Of looking into your eyes,

Of my heart when it’s too tender,

Of time ticking.

Let’s say that modernity’s great promise – the freedom from fear –

Now lies in ruins.

I mean, fear as a medium, not as message.

Fear to take a chance,

Fear as collateral effect, force behind progress

Scoring the aces,

That plays and wins, caressing, embarrassing.

Fear manages. Fear rocks.

Give it a face, a symbol, a trajectory, a luminous trail.

Signs, lines, symbols,

Voices glued on a wall

Along lines, etched,

Undefined by boundaries, real and imaginary.

Let’s identify the cavities,

The ravines, the corners

Where fear is sleeping,

Resting and preparing to wake up.

A coiled snake lurking for the next prey,

A spore near opening.

An independent entity capable of self-reproduction, diffusion,

Crossing thresholds, filtering secret places,

Metamorphic, crystallized into the cracks of a sidewalk,

Residual, mutable,

An anomalous gap between the rails,

A fractal unexplored, not encoded, hard to label.

So where did the ‘I-am-here’ kind of map go missing?

It was never there when I grew up.

And now, look what we’ve got:

Matchboxes for trees and open drains—

Bethlehem, Gaza, Aleppo, Lhasa…

So many places, guarded against.

Every day we die, youngmother,

To be reborn as pulverized stones in a vacuum

Where words are only shells for feelings,

Where we should learn to not leave each other alone,

Otherwise when everything around us is changing

We won’t ever change.

The cycle of trust goes beyond laughter and tears.

In this transitional space of encounters

and other encounters that will be no more,

There will always be someone who’ll say—

You can’t. Play it safe, don’t mix this with that.

But you will.

Point to one end, which is always present.

Footfalls echo in response to what they have traced,

Where there we had been though we cannot say where.

The end and the beginning are always there,

Even if they are not

what we have dreamed of or exactly expected.

You know this already,

It’s all complexity,

Sometimes consistency.

And what we call the beginning

Is often the end— that which from where

We restart again.

I am who I am,

Carrying some things with me

Without possessing them.

I am in a body that is my body,

A body that is by nature radical

As any other-ed body is.

Would you stand with me and hold my hand?

 

With: Thomas Amisare, Ivan Bevilacqua, Gianni Calcinai, Cristiana di Rubba, Martina Ermini, Cecilia Ferretti, Filippo Ferretti, Simona Gonnelli, MD Hadaythullah, Ibrahim Karamoko, Mahamadou Konare, Boubacare Konate, Gianna Mancini, Matteo Meucci, Lucio Miglionico, Lorenza Minisci, Marina Morandi, Maria Novedrati, Silvia Pecorini, Francesca Piani, Farida Poggesi, Ilde Serinelli, Diarrasouba Soiilho, Martina Taras, Giovanni Tenucci, Veronica Vannucci, Simon Yeboah. Light: Stefano Baldini. Photograph © Maria Grazia Lenzini

 

Imagine… Imagine a people, a people of hope,

A people of vision, who yearn for knowledge,

People who believe in themselves

As well as believe in everyone else,

All accepting aspects of one another,

Progressive, open spirits questing evidence and compassion.

Now, imagine death.

Can you see it?

It’s like staring at the sun.

You can only see it at eyes closed.

Now, imagine life.

What does it look like?

Would you stand with me and hold my hand?

 

 

 

 “Letter to a Young Mother. Imagine Home” is a cut-up text based on spoken words that emerged during the co-creation production processes of “HOME”, the current cycle of collective performance operas by VestAndPage. The text encompasses the contribution of over 70 international artists and non-artists, with a variety of life stories and cultural backgrounds. A selection from the multitude of words that arouse during discussions around the topic of ‘home’, have been collected, written down and finally arranged by VestAndPage into a one-voice-poetry. In this resulting collective poem authorship is deluded, as the single voice eventually complements the other, to give shape to a text in which all –apparently disconnected– parts fall together into a whole.

 

CONTRIBUTORS

Thomas Amisare (GH), Ivan Bevilacqua (IT), Gianni Calcinai (IT), Cristiana di Rubba (IT), Martina Ermini (IT), Cecilia Ferretti (IT), Filippo Ferretti (IT), Simona Gonnelli (IT), MD Hadaythullah (BD), Ibrahim Karamoko (CI), Mahamadou Konare (CI), Boubacare Konate (CI), Gianna Mancini  (IT), Matteo Meucci (IT), Lucio Miglionico (IT), Lorenza Minisci (IT), Marina Morandi (IT), Maria Novedrati (IT), Silvia Pecorini (IT), Francesca Piani (IT), Farida Poggesi (IT), Ilde Serinelli (IT), Diarrasouba Soiilho (CI), Martina Taras (IT), Giovanni Tenucci (IT), Veronica Vannucci (IT), Simon Yeboah (GH)

 

  • I Left My Story Home (HOME I), Florence, Italy, 2017

Tomas Diafas (GR), Fenia Kotsopoulou (GR), Josephine Makris (GR), Ariadne Pediotaki (GR), Maria Zourou (GR)

 

  • Aegis VI (HOME II), Thessaloniki, Greece, 2017

Shola Cole (US/UK), Sara Kostić (RS), Manuel Lopez Garcia (ES), Marco Nektan (RS), Ivana Ranisavljević (RS), Katarina Ranković (RS), Albert Smith (SA/UK), Alex Spyke (RS), Vedran Vucić (RS)

 

  • After the Fear (HOME III), Belgrade, Serbia, 2017

Sylvie Barbier (TW/FR), Stefan Biere (DE), Madeleine Virginia Brown (UK), James Thomas Bullimore (UK), Bruno Camargo (BR/IT), Don Chow (CA), Leman Sevda Darıcıoğlu (TR), Erin Devine (US), Samira Engel (DE), Julha Franz (BR), Marisa Garreffa (AU/IT), Ria Jade Hartley (UK), Paola Kodra (AL), Marie Künne (DE), Gerhard Liska (AT), Nancy Gewolb Mayanz (CL), Ashley-Louise McNaughton (UK), Yuan Mor’O Ocampo (PH), Daniela Francesca Lillo Olivares (CL), Eva Pyrnokoki (GR), Daiane Rafaela (BR), Enok Ripley (CA), Jewel A Rob (BD), Sara Simeoni (IT), Marcel Sparmann (DE), Alex Spyke (RS), Alex Talamo (AU)

 

  • Come Home (HOME IV), Venice, Italy, 2017

Stanislaw Baldyga (PL), Dominika Borkowska (PL), Maria Nova (PL), Joanna Pietrowicz (PL)

 

  • Mother (HOME V), Sopot, Poland, 2018

Further contribution: Sarai Editorial Collective and Raqs Editorial Collective (Monica Narula, Shuddhabrata Sengupta and Jeebesh Bagchi), Ambarien Alqadar, Cybermohalla Ensamble, Claudia Roselli.

Edited quotes from: Albert Camus, Selma Meerbaum-Eisinger, Voodoo Warriors of Love (John Crossley, Lenroy Guiste and Patcee Francis), and Irvine Welsh.

 

Collection, arrangement and editing by VestAndPage (Verena Stenke & Andrea Pagnes), 2017-2018

Proofread by Marisa Garreffa

 

About:

Francesca Carol Rolla

Francesca Carol Rolla (Venice, 1986) is a performance art curator, writer, and PhD candidate in Visual Arts at the Doctoral School of Humanities of the University of Strasbourg (FR) with the thesis “Letters to a Radical Performance Curator”. Aligning the curatorial practice with a performative mode of research, and with the aims to set foundations for radical interaction and new terms of exchange, she explores new contemporary approaches to artistic creation and reflection, there where the meaning and value for a responsible and independent co-authorship involves both artists and curators in co-creative processes. She has trained, worked and collaborated with artists such as Bill Viola, Alejandro Jodorowski, Marilyn Arsem, Preach R Sun, VestAndPage, Marcel•lí Antúnez Roca, Antonio Manuel, Guillermo Gomez-Peña and ORLAN, among others.
Since 2014, she is an associate curator of the Venice International Performance Art Week, and coordinator of its Educational Learning Program realized in collaboration with Live Arts Cultures and other international partner organizations. Since 2017, she is an honorary member of La Pocha Nostra.
Since 2019, Francesca Carol Rolla is on the board of LOÏE. Magazine as Director of the “Performance Archive” section, with a strong interest of exploring the journey between curating research and performance writing.
| www.collectivesignatures.com |

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