Addressing Race and Erasure in Queer Experimental Film Collections
Curatorial Essay by Mahlet Cuff
"Sometimes naming a thing, giving it a name or discovering its name helps one to begin to understand it."
- Octavia Butler, Parable of the Sower
"The history of colonization, imperialism is a demand for reparation for transformation. In resistance, the exploited, the oppressed, work to expose the false reality - to reclaim and recover ourselves."
- bell hooks, Talking Back: Thinking Feminist, Thinking Black
As someone who is located in the Canadian prairies, I have experienced firsthand the difficulties of finding documentation of LGBTQ2+ racialized people there; as a film curator, adding the layer of experimental film creates another challenge. Therefore, when browsing the CFMDC collection of LGBTQ2+ Canadian films from the 1970s to the 2000s that was activated and digitized in partnership with Archive/Counter-Archive, I expected to see more works by Black and racialized artists because of Toronto’s status as a hub for Black and racialized queer artists. This was not the case, however, and it became clear to me that these kinds of narratives are only now being included in the archive.
The archive is simultaneously a place that can hold truths as well as a space of erasure. On the one hand, gatekeeping practices have historically prevented a variety of stories from being preserved and told— specifically stories by people of colour, LGBTQ2+ people, and women. On the other hand, the way the material is often labelled (or not labelled) and classified in the archive also contributes to this ongoing erasure. In the case of film collections, naming plays into the ways that a film is found, viewed, and shared. Oftentimes, these labels, especially as they relate to identity, are inaccurate or outdated—therefore hindering their presence in the archive. A key tool in accessing audiovisual material about marginalized folks, then, is thinking outside of the box. In addition, the question of how such films become accessible to the public must be at the forefront of conversations when confronting absences in film collections and archives. They must not be swept under the rug but activated, digitized, and screened.
This program of short films by racialized queer artists from the CFMDC Case Study, therefore, foregrounds the concepts of naming, truth(s), and embodiment in relation to absence in that collection. These films, indeed, tell us much about what it means to tell and to recover the truth (or truths), about the importance of naming in the face of erasure, and about being in one’s body when this body is marked as “Other.” Although these reflections take the viewers beyond the archive, the ideas developed in these films apply to the archive, too. Through this collection of experimental and documentary film and video, truth, naming, and embodiment take the form of protest, intimate conversations, interviews, POV, and poetry.
... the question of how such films become accessible to the public must be at the forefront of conversations when confronting absences in film collections and archives.