HOMO SARGASSUM

Opening Symposium

September 26 & 27, 2024. 

at the FSU Museum of Fine Arts
Hosted and supported by the Winthrop King Institute
Presented by the TOUT-MONDE Art FOUNDATION

 

Program:

SYMPOSIUM I: “Understanding the HOMO SARGASSUM”

Thursday, September 26, 2024, 2:30pm 

Zoom Link

Welcome words

  • Martin Munro, Director of WKI, FSU (3min)
  • Vanessa Selk, TMAF Executive & Artistic Director (3min)
  • Louisa Marajo, Artist, HS Initiator & Lead Artist (3min) 

Keynote speaker:

  • Tatiana Flores, TMAF Board President (7-10 minutes)

3:00pm - 5:00pm: Panel 1: What is Sargassum? A French Antillean perspective on an invading oceanic creature.
Location: Room 249, Fine Arts Building, Adjacent to MoFA

Description: From a natural habitat for marine life to a toxic threat and an artistic muse, the Sargassum seaweed is a multifaceted experience, depending on each living community. The ecological, social and political impacts of the proliferation of the Sargassum seaweed since 2011 had particular repercussions in the French Antilles, where reactions were voiced from multiple fields, echoing the rhizomatic connection between all worlds, as following Edouard Glissant’s methodology of thought. This panel will study the cases related to Guadeloupe and Martinique to understand the very nature of the Sargassum seaweed (Dr. Sarra Gaspard), its public health, sociological and anthropological implications (Dr. Florence Menez) as well as its artistic interpretation and potential philosophical meaning (Louisa Marajo and Nicolas Derné).

Moderated by Martin Munro, Director of the Winthrop-King-Institute for Contemporary French and Francophone Studies

With:

  • Scientist: Dr. Sarra Gaspard, Professor, Department of Chemistry, Université des Antilles
  • Researcher: Dr. Florence Menez, Anthropologist, Department of Human Science, Université des Antilles
  • Artists: Louisa Marajo, Multimedia Artist, Homo Sargassum Initiator, and Nicolas Derné, Video Artist and Photographer

5:00pm - 5:30pm: break/ refreshments
Location: Fine Arts Building Lobby and Courtyards

5:30 - 6:15pm: HOMO SARGASSUM Film Screening
Location: TBA

  • Short Film 8’, 2020
  • followed by 15min Q&A with Vanessa Selk & Louisa Marajo, moderated by Nyasha Laing, writer and film critic
  • 15min questions with public

6.30-8pm: Opening reception with Medhi Michalon, sensory artist and mixologist, offering a Sargassum-based non-alcoholic cocktail.
Location: Refreshments in FAB lobby, MoFA galleries open


Friday, September 27, 2024
Location: William Johnston Building, Room G40

9:30am - 11:00am: Panel 2: The Transatlantic journey of the Sargassum: echoing Caribbean History and Migrations

Zoom Link

Description: Present in the Sargasso Sea as well as in the territorial waters of West Africa, the Sargassum started migrating in masses towards the Americas, carried by transatlantic currents. The traceable oceanic movements of the Sargassum do not only revive the memories of the Middle Passage and of a cultural homeland of the Caribbean, but also echo the more contemporary migrations from and within the Caribbean. Starting with a scientific analysis of the transatlantic journey of the sargassum through a dedicated tool called “Drifters” (Nicolas Wienders), this discussion will further share a historic perspective on the arrival of the Sargassum in the Americas and its creative interpretation from an immigrant artist’s point of view (Billy Gerard Frank), and examine the cultural heritage of the African diaspora in contemporary artistic practices in Puerto Rico, notably (Marina Reyes Franco).

Moderated by Dr. Mora J. Beauchamp-Byrd, Associate Professor of Art History and Director of Museum and Cultural Heritage Studies at Florida State University.

  • Scientist: Dr. Luna Hiron Ph.D. in Physical Oceanography, Center for Oceanic and Atmospheric Prediction Studies, Florida State University OR Dr. Philippe Miron (TBC), Senior Scientific and AI Engineer, Adjunct Faculty, Physical Oceanography, Florida State University (COAPS) + Video recording (TBC) by Dr. Nicolas Wienders, Researcher, Center for Oceanic and Atmospheric Prediction Studies, Florida State University
  • Artist: Billy Gerard Frank, Multimedia Artist
  • Curator: Marina Reyes Franco, Curator, Museum of Contemporary Art of Puerto Rico

11:30am - 1.00pm: Exhibition tour with curators Vanessa Selk & Michael Carrasco
Location: MoFA Galleries

1:00pm - 2:30pm: Lunch break
Location: Fine Arts Building Lobby and Courtyards

3:00pm - 4:15pm: Panel 3: The Ecocide of the Sargassum algae: who is killing who? 
Location: Room 249, Fine Arts Building, Adjacent to MoFA

Zoom Link

Description: The Sargassum quickly gained its reputation from asphyxiating marine life and releasing toxic gasses impacting humans. However, the proliferation of the Sargassum is a direct consequence of human pollution and neo-colonial agricultural practices impacting notably Caribbean communities and African diaspora. Through a lens of ecocriticism, this panel will analyze the ideas of colonial and decolonial ecology by Malcolm Ferdinand through conceptual and methodic maps (Moses Maerz), before examining the political and poetical representations of a colonized nature and landscape through the work of three Caribbean artists (Chris Cyrille), and addressing the impacts of Black communities and bodies by anti-environmental practices (Morel Doucet).

Moderated by PhD candidate: Libby Fowler Beagle, Florida State University

  • Researcher: Dr. Moses Maerz, writer, editor and researcher on, art, literature and philosophy
  • Art critic: Chris Cyrille, writer and exhibition storyteller
  • Artist: Morel Doucet, Artist and Ceramist

4:30pm-5:00pm: Poetic Performance by Louisa Marajo, read in English by Carine Schermann. 
Location: Museum Gallery

Zoom Link

5:00pm - 7:00pm CLOSING RECEPTION
Location: Refreshments in FAB lobby, MoFA galleries open

Closing Remarks By Dr. Martin Munro, Director Of The WKI, FSU