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Booklet The International Celebration of Blasphemy and The Sacred by Hicham Khalidi - EN

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Written by Hicham Khalidi with CATPC,

Untitled, 2022, Matthieu Kasiama / CATPC, courtesy CATPC and KOW Berlin, photo: Ladislav Zajac
Amanda Sarroff, Renzo Martens

Art
or
Earth? The International
Celebration of Blasphemy and the Sacred
A bird alights in the Dutch Pavilion. He sits before a camera’s double
eye, which oscillates between Lusanga and Venice, while devouring small
white cubes. Titled Mvuyu Libérateur (Mvuyu the Liberator, 2024), the
sculpture depicts, in the words of CATPC member Blaise Mandefu, ‘The
virile bird who cracks open white cubes. This bird is sensitive to the
pain of its fellow creatures, the other animals. When he finds another
bird or animal trapped by hunters, he intervenes to help the animal free
itself.’ Now he has come to free all those held captive by the museum’s
insatiable appetite for profits from plantations. He uses his beak to prise
these cultural institutions wide open. Below him, forests are beginning to
bloom in their stead. Tree roots, animals, fish, rivers and human bodies
encircle these broken cubes. Mvuyu has arrived with a warning: one
should tread more carefully on this sacred earth.
Cercle d’Art des Travailleurs de Plantation Congolaise (Congolese
Plantation Workers Art League, or CATPC) define art as a living force
born of a sacred Earth and art making as a sacred endeavour. They
create objects filled with intention as vessels of cultural memory and
community protection. As CATPC member Ced’art Tamasala explains, ‘If
the sacred Earth gives all things life, art belongs to Earth. In this way, art
practices too become a sacred, life-giving endeavour’.1 The circumstances
under which these practices take place and the intentionality behind
them imbue them with the potential for regeneration.
Since 2014, CATPC have been working steadily to purchase
ancestral lands confiscated in 1911 by the British-Dutch multinational
corporation Unilever and its subsidiaries. Through a collective process of
creating artworks and selling them abroad, the inhabitants of Lusanga
have earned enough money to buy back parcels of the exhausted palm oil
plantations where they and their families once toiled. As of today, 200
hectares of land have been reclaimed and recultivated to provide suste-
nance for the community. They call this undertaking—to regenerate
sacred forests and institute a sustainable economy for them and others to
thrive—the post plantation.
The dream of the post plantation began as a cocreation of
Lusanga’s inhabitants and former Congo director of Greenpeace, René
Ngongo. Together, with the help of Renzo Martens, they have built an
economic framework in which Indigenous communities can choose
to prosper through purchasing and replenishing arable land. CATPC
produces artworks in clay from remaining old-growth forests around
Lusanga. These are cast in cacao and palm fat in Amsterdam, then
exhibited globally and sometimes sold on the international art market.
In the collective’s words, ‘There is no function for cacao and palm fat
that is more sacred than to represent the sacrifices of the past and the
present and to engender the future and bring back the forest’. CATPC
appropriates these raw materials to evidence the art world’s ongoing
complicity in the horrific plantation economy.
The sculptures created for the 60th Venice Biennale function much
like contemporary power objects. They also tell stories. They tell stories
of stories, animated across multiple scenes, much like film stills, in which
forests, rivers, animals, spirits, ancestors, and children intertwine across
allegories and narrations. Some works speak of the West’s devastating
impact on the Global South and give presence to plantation ancestors
who died as enslaved people. Others intimate a brighter future in which
the community decides its own fate guided by its chosen values. In
concert they reflect on the past and foretell what may be to come. In this
sense they are also future-forming.
In Lusanga, each clay sculpture hosts seeds and earth of the
liberated plantation. Those reproduced in cacao, sugar or palm oil in
the Rietveld Pavilion are their enchanted clones. When the sculptures
are exhibited or acquired by collectors and museums abroad, CATPC
hopes that the stories they impart will germinate change as they traverse
the globe. In the words of the collective, ‘Each sculpture will mark the
passage from a painful and dark past to an ecological future, a future in
which the sacred forest will flow through the pavilion’.2

From Plantations to Museum Coffers


Museums, from Tate Modern in London to the Stedelijk Museum in
Amsterdam, the Van Abbe Museum in Eindhoven, and Museum Ludwig
in Cologne, were founded, at least in part, on plantation profits. In one
example, among many, recent research traces the wealth behind the
Stedelijk’s construction in 1895 to colonial imports, including cacao,
coffee, and tobacco, grown almost exclusively on plantations.3 Plantation
ownership was also packaged into financial products and sold as shares.4
To this day, a speculative market endures on the promise of
extraction and the perpetuity of the plantation economy. It is no
coincidence that the Port of Amsterdam, the world’s largest import
hub for cacao beans and the biggest repository of plantation labour,
lies only 15km away from the Stedelijk Museum. Although Unilever
presumably sold its remaining Congolese holdings in 2009, many of its
former workers now toil for companies furnishing the raw materials still
used in its products. As recently as 2019, these companies—financed in
part by Belgian, British, German, and Dutch development banks—paid
day labourers as little as US$1.20 per day for full-time work under life-
threatening conditions.5
Wealth from plantation extraction continues to flow to museums
under the guise of corporate sponsorship, sometimes in the name of
care or social justice. Yet if those still working on plantations today find
themselves the subjects of critical discourse or trendy exhibitions, they
are rarely, if ever, given the opportunity to be the authors or direct
beneficiaries of it. As expressed by scholar, curator and documentary
filmmaker Ariella Aïsha Azoulay, ‘It is impossible to decolonize the
museum without decolonizing the world’.6

The White Cube: A Reckoning


White cube galleries, and their intentionally atemporal, ahistorical
modernist architectures, are steeped in ideologies of dominance.
Early on in his collaboration with CATPC, Martens hoped to forge a
forceful critique of the art world’s complicity in Congo’s devastating
plantation economy. He strove to incite what he called a ‘reverse
gentrification programme’, grounded in the idea that not only well-
positioned artists and the cultural institutions they exhibit in or the
audiences they cater to should benefit from critical discourse about
inequality but also the disenfranchised plantation communities they
profit from financially and intellectually.
In 2017, Lusanga laid the cornerstone of its own ‘white cube’.
Conceived as a joint initiative with Martens and designed by Dutch
architecture firm OMA with input from Arsene Ijambo, general secretary
of the Association of the Architects of the Congo (SAC), Lusanga’s White
Cube was intended to ‘repatriate’ some of the social, economic, and
cultural capital indebted to the community and others like it. Though
it was a striking achievement, the collaboration also raised concerns. As
art historian and critic Claire Bishop wrote in 2017 regarding Martens’s
entanglement with CATPC, ‘Can ethically troubling overidentification with
neocolonial corporate capitalism productively operate in tandem with
ethically reassuring social engagement, or do these two contradictory
impulses neutralize each other?’7
When the Mondriaan Fund invited Martens to represent the
Netherlands in the 60th Venice Biennale, he and CATPC chose to rethink
their partnership. After long deliberation he, together with the collective
and Dutch Pavilion Curator Hicham Khalidi, made the decision to
define his role more explicitly as one in service to CATPC and its aims.
On February 7, 2023 CATPC performed Mosi, a sacred ritual to formally
redefine their relationship. Martens, as part of the artistic team, and
Khalidi, as curator, see themselves foremost as mediators and translators
of CATPC’s evolving vision. For the first time in the history of the Venice
Biennale, a community who lives and works on a former plantation
speaks for itself from the international stage of the Dutch Pavilion.
In 2023, CATPC placed their Lusanga White Cube on trial before
the entire community. It was pronounced guilty and sentenced to return
stolen lands and art. All energy would henceforth be concerted towards
the post-plantation. For CATPC, the Lusanga White Cube represents
all white cubes throughout the world. They hope that the path towards
reconciliation initiated at home will ripple across the globe, beginning in
the Rietveld Pavilion. The jumelage, or twinning, of the Lusanga White
Cube with the Rietveld Pavilion forges a channel for this transmission.
Via a livestream between the two spaces, audiences in Lusanga are
able to connect with the Dutch Pavilion, and visitors to Venice become
Lusanga’s invited guests. The livestream plays an especially significant
role for the wider plantation community, who lack the time and resources
to travel to Venice. It offers a reciprocal gaze where once a blind eye was
turned.

Facing the Belgian Pavilion, Confronting History


It is no coincidence that those watching the livestream from Lusanga
within the Rietveld Pavilion also face the Belgian pavilion. It is CATPC’s
long-held desire to speak to those in power in Belgium about the
atrocities committed in Congo. Following King Leopold II’s private
annexation of what he named the Congo Free State, large swathes of
land he misleadingly designated terres vacantes were given in concession
to private enterprise to exploit. When the Belgian Parliament took control
of this vast territory in 1908, it granted the Lever Brothers (under the
name Huileries du Congo Belge) free reign. Companies like Unilever
stripped the land of its biodiversity. They scraped the ground too of
its inhabitants. As it became increasingly difficult to recruit labourers
to work under the plantation’s gruelling and often deadly conditions,
men and women were coercively pulled from different villages, severing
families and ancestral lineages. The plantation became a blank slate,
evacuated of history and humanity, and Lusanga was one of many places
to bear this catastrophe. Most of CATPCs members are the children of
these displaced peoples. Cleaved from their cultures and communities,
today they search for remnants of their past.
Balot Returns
A fragment of this history has finally been recovered, albeit temporarily.
For the duration of the Venice Biennale, the Lusanga White Cube has
been converted into a shrine for a single Kwilu Pende power figure
known abroad as Chief’s or Diviner’s Figure representing the Belgian Colonial
Officer, Maximilien Balot (Balot, for short). Maximilien Balot (1890–
1931) was a colonial agent dispatched to forcefully recruit labourers for
the Lever Brothers’ plantations. In 1931, fed up with the abuse and in
revenge for an assault on Kafutshi and other women by territorial agents,
Balot was decapitated and dismembered. The Belgian force’s murderous
retaliation fuelled what became a powerful Pende uprising. Balot, made
that year, was carved in an act of resistance to harness the agent’s
malevolent spirit in service of the Pende people. It remained hidden until
1972, when it was purchased by an American scholar who later sold it to
the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (VMFA) in Richmond, where it resides
today.8 For the first time in half a century, the sculpture returns home.9

Luyalu, or the Force


For CATPC, to exhibit in the Rietveld Pavilion presents a double bind.
This ambivalence is expressed in the exhibition’s title, The International
Celebration of Blasphemy and the Sacred. Not only must they contend with
their ambivalence towards participating in an elitist art world event to
which they have little access and for an audience with whom they have a
conflicted relationship, they feel they must hold themselves accountable
for the privileges this opportunity affords, while others within their
community are struggling to survive, let alone make their own work
visible. In Tamasala’s words, ‘We are not sure that good intentions will
have the desired result or that good intentions will really lead to sacred
forests….in reality, we are at the very beginning. And, even if it works,
it is a small step on the path towards those forests [in the four corners
of Congo] being regenerated’. Instead, CATPC is guided by an ethos of
luyalu.

Luyalu is the vital force in our lives, in nature and our relationship
with Earth, which we express through art. This force is interwoven
with the reality of our lives in the ruins of the plantation in
Lusanga. Its strength animates life and enables us to find our own
strength thanks to many years of practice and generations upon
generations of experience in spirituality, art, and the connection
with Earth passed onto us by our ancestors.
This is the “Muzindu” (depth) that has enabled our group to con-
nect with our allies, our ancestors, and draw inspiration from them
to create the “kikungika ya mbasi” (the composition of the future),
based on the inspiration revealed by the unsuspected depths buried
in each of us, brought together to share life.

We are “Mosi” (one, in Kikongo), and together we form the


“Luyalu ya Mosi” (the strength of the whole as one, in Kikongo).
That is Luyalu: our collective methods of thinking, acting, working
and sharing everything, from art to the land, in connection with
our ancestors.’

CATPC is a practice born of our shared Earth. It is an active, ethical


framework to rethink our responsibility to one other. For every baby
born in Lusanga, a tree is planted in his or her name so that they may
grow together. In the words of curator Ruba Katrib, ‘The artistic project
of CATPC…understands humanity in a different way. It is agency and
voice at the same time’.10 These lives, as they unfold before us, enunciate
and enact new possibilities for justice and healing across the colonial
difference.
Notes

1 Since November 2022, Hicham Khalidi without decolonizing the world’, www.
has been conducting recorded interviews guernicamag.com, 12 March 2020, https://
with CATPC members, Renzo Martens, www.guernicamag.com/miscellaneous-
and other collaborators and allies (see files-ariella-aisha-azoulay/
publication). At times, Ced’art Tamasala, 7 Claire Bishop, ‘Cercle d’Art des
on behalf of CATPC, would respond in Travailleurs de Plantation Congolaise:
written letters. This quote is an extract SculptureCenter’, Artforum 55, no. 9 (May
from a letter dated 3 February 2023. 2017), https://www.artforum.com/events/
2 Idem. cercle-dart-des-travailleurs-de-plantation-
3 See Laura van Hasselt, ‘Geld, geloof en congolaise-2-230139/.
goede vrienden: Piet van Eeghen en de 8 For more on the power figure Balot
metamorfose van Amsterdam, 1816–1889’, read: Herbert F. Weiss, Richard B.
PhD diss. (University of Amsterdam, Woodward, and Z.S. Strother with a
2022). contribution from Christophe Gudijiga
4 See Renzo Martens, ‘Erken dat and Sindani Kiangu, ‘Art with Fight in It.
uitgebuite plantagearbeiders co-auteurs Discovering that a Statue of a Colonial
van het Stedelijk Museum zijn’, www. Officer Is a Power Object from the 1931
nrc.nl, 7 June 2023, https://www.nrc.nl/ Pende Revolt’, African Arts, Spring 2016
nieuws/2023/06/07/erken-dat-uitgebuite- Volume 49:1.
plantagearbeiders-co-auteurs-van-het- 9 In March 2024 a ceremony was held
stedelijk-museum-zijn-a4166578. in Lusanga with notables of the region,
5 Human Rights Watch (2019), ‘A Dirty local chiefs, present and former plantation
Investment: European Development workers, and the community of Lusanga.
Banks’ Link to Abuses in the Democratic In this ceremony, Balot was restored to its
Republic of Congo’s Palm Oil Industry,’ rightful place. This triumphant moment
https://www.hrw.org/report/2019/11/25/ will ripple through the exhibition in
dirty-investment/european-development- Venice.
banks-link-abuses-democratic-republic, 10 From the recorded interview by
Retrieved 28 January 2023. Hicham Khalidi with Ruba Katrib, Renzo
6 Sabrina Ali, ‘Ariella Aïsha Azoulay: ‘It is Martens, Amanda Sarroff, October 8,
not possible to decolonize the museum 2023.

colophon

This publication is issued on the occasion Text: Hicham Khalidi with CATPC,
of the exhibition The International Amanda Sarroff, Renzo Martens
Celebration of Blasphemy and the Sacred, Graphic design: Ton van de Ven
held conjointly in the Dutch pavilion at the Print: Veenman
60th International Venice Biennale and the
White Cube, Lusanga, DRC. With thanks to: Ariella Aïsha Azoulay,
Ruba Katrib, Dr. Ndubuisi C. Ezeluomba
20 April – 24 November 2024

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