Naima Morelli

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Tag "multimedia artist"

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There is a mesmerizing Patti Smith’s song I used to listen to when I was in my teens. It’s called “Land” and tells – in a very surreal way – the story of this guy called Johnny. Since the chord progression wasn’t too complicatedly, I quickly learned to play it on the guitar. There was a particular line that made me pretty excited when I sang it. It was “I hold the key to the sea of possibilities”.

When I was seventeen I had a number of small abilities, but very little how-to knowledge.
My guitar practice alone branched off into my folk Neapolitan repertoire, my intimate Carla Bruni-like songs and my love for punk rock. These three aesthetics were not conflicting to me. That was confirmed by reading on a magazine that Norah Jones also had a punk band. I thought, if she does it, why I shouldn’t? (Well, if you have ever heard me singing and playing, the answer is pretty straightforward).

Way before I would learn the position for a E chord, I was making been comic books. Since I was born, I have never stopped drawing and creating stories. As often happens, I started making comic books since I was in high school and my school mates were my first readers. Never in my life I considered to stop that. Then of course, there was the writing. I was that annoying kid asked by the teacher to stand up and read her essay out loud. I didn’t really like to do that, mostly because my pulp Tarantino-confronts-Romero-on-the-theme-of-abortion like essays were meant to be read with a little verve. Which I completely lacked of . Anyways, at eighteen I started writing for an art magazine and a number of rock and general publications. Around the same time, I started covering every blank spot I could find in the city with graffiti. Man, that was real fun!

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Bindi Cole is one of the first artists I interviewed in Melbourne.
I come to know about her work during the presentation talk of “Melbourne Now” exhibition at the NGV.
Her work span through different mediums, from photography to installation, and the themes are often related to her personal history and aboriginal issues.
She constantly challenges stereotypes, revealing overlooked complexities behind communities and identities. In the series “Not Really Aboriginal” she photographed her family and herself with black painting on their face. The title refers to the accusation that some people addressed to her, that of not being “really” Aboriginal, because of her anglosaxon aspect and her light skin.
One of her most challenging work is “Sistagirls”, a photographic series about the transgender community of the Tiwi Islands.
Recently Bindi Cole decided to reflect on her personal history, mainly through video and installations. Even if she went through tough times, her vision underlies a constant optimism and reveals the beauty of the human experience.
I find her recent installation with emu feathers “I Forgive You) (currently exhibited at Queensland Art Gallery) just moving.

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Ecco cosa vedete, nascosti dietro al vetro a specchio.
In una stanza metafisica, bianca come uno spazio espositivo, io e l’artista Valentina De’ Mathà ci sediamo ad un tavolo candido, sul quale è adagiato un niveo foglio.
Io scrivo una domanda, e in silenzio passo il foglio a Valentina. Lei scrive la risposta, piega la parte superiore della carta in modo che non sia leggibile e mi ripassa il foglio.
Alla ventesima domanda Valentina si alza ed esce. Anche io faccio lo stesso, ma prima apro il foglio e ve lo attacco, dal verso leggibile, al vetro specchio.

C’è scritto questo:

Cosa c’è sotto?

Il caso che non esiste.

Perché vivi in Svizzera?

All’inizio perché ho improvvisamente sentito la necessità di staccarmi dall’Italia e soprattutto da Roma, verso la quale avevo un attaccamento morboso. Quindi, al culmine di questa morbosità, ho deciso di tagliare il cordone ombelicale e fuggire via senza guardarmi indietro, ma soprattutto perché mi sono resa conto, con estrema lucidità e amarezza, che l’ Italia non sarebbe stata in grado di darmi le opportunità professionali, il sostegno e i confronti di cui avevo bisogno, e che avrei trovato solo viaggiando.

Non era mio obiettivo trasferirmi in Svizzera, anzi, ma dieci giorni prima di partire verso Berlino ho conosciuto Roger Weiss, fotografo svizzero, colui che poi è diventato mio marito.

Ho visto artisti che sulla carta d’identità hanno scritto “artigiano”, tu invece?

Ho solo il passaporto.

L’hai mai persa la carta d’identità?

Mai.

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