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The Instagram Project: Provocative Jokes Deconstructed

Yuxin Jiang
The Instagram Project:
Provocative Jokes Deconstructed

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The Instagram Project: Quirky

Yuxin Jiang
The Instagram Project:
Quirky Science Questions

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Notes on The Instagram Project

Yuxin Jiang
Notes on The Instagram Project

It was almost Christmas time in 2019. I was at the Charing Cross Library. A book caught my eyes with its contents.

I. Face
II. Economy
III. Industry
IV. Politeness
V. The Disregard of Time
VI. The Disregard of Accuracy

……

The book is called Chinese Characteristics, written by an American missionary in the late 19th century. I have never thought the Chinese, a complex population living on a vast land could be so neatly summarised into twenty some characteristics. Somewhat intrigued to see what the author has to say in his succinct and definite profiling, I borrowed the book, and walked into the chilly dark streets of London. Prior to discovering of this book, I have been fascinated by the photos and video clips about the Chinese on Instagram. So much so that I decided to make work about them, which is what has become The Instagram Project.
The subject depicted feels absurd and at places uncivilised throughout Chinese Characteristics. The same in much of the content on Instagram. It became apparent to me that the legitimacy of these textual and visual discourses came from a white perspective centred world view.

Here is an example.

The same inappropriate behaviour seems hasn’t changed for more than 100 years. But why is this behaviour deemed inappropriate in the first place?

What constitutes a good sleeping environment and sleeping manners is a matter of belief shaped by societal and personal circumstances instead of a matter of universal fact. In the case of the Chinese sleeping described, the behaviour is shaped by many thinkings different from the West including a very different understanding of what’s good for the body, the idea of efficiency in relation to a specific kind of working condition, a different take on the idea of the public and the private, and so on.

Coming back to The Instagram Project, it is a series of experiments about how do we make sense of what we see.
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Negar Yaghmaian

Negar Yaghmaian
The Smell of Earth and Tree

Maritime trade stretched across the Strait of Hormuz, which connects the Persian Gulf to the Arabian Sea. Trade was not only an economic activity but a complex web of cultural and social exchanges that strongly affected lifestyles in the region. The Smell of Earth and Tree is taken from the diary of an old sailor who recounts stories of his voyages. Like him, others remember their journeys from Iran to the West Indian Coast when tailwinds drove their dhows and stars guided them.

While seamen talk openly about these often-perilous expeditions, fellow travelers, and free ports and bazaars, they do not talk much about their private lives and family histories. The travels and long layovers in harbors led to marriages between diverse nationalities, in this case, between Indian and Iranian individuals looking to establish homes. However, with maritime trade fading away, many families were broken or separated.

To keep these experiences alive, Yaghmaian explores small towns in the Persian Gulf, seeking to maintain a connection with the past. She gathers photographs, maps, and other treasured possessions to reimagine these stories, many of which remain untold. Through the meditative practice of listening, the artist picks pieces of the sailor’s recollections and carves out contemporary renditions of their familial, cherished truths.

The Smell of Earth and Tree, 2020, 60 pages, 17x 22.5cm with soft cover

Biography

Negar Yaghmaian is a photographer living and working in Iran. She graduated with a BA in photography from Tehran Art University and completed a course in Documentary and Photojournalism at IED, Madrid. Yaghmaian is interested in personal stories and their interconnections to wider social issues. Through a contemporary lens, her photography gives access to memories embedded in the past. She was artist-in-residence at CACP Villa Perochon in France and her works have been exhibited and published both at home and internationally, including Voices Off Festival, Arte Creative Program, and Le Monde.
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George Selley

George Selley
Human Exploitation

In 1996, the US Department of Defense released declassified excerpts of The Human Resource Exploitation Training Manual. This was the standard textbook for students at the US Army School of the Americas (SOA): an American military training academy set up in Panama in 1946, which trained Latin American soldiers. More than 60,000 soldiers have been trained at the establishment, and eleven dictators have attended its courses—among them, some of the region’s most notorious human rights abusers, such as death-squad leader Roberto D’Aubuisson, Leopoldo Galtieri, Efraín Ríos Montt as well as strongman Manuel Noriega, Domingo Monterrosa, Colonel Julio Alpirez, and General Luis Alonso Discua, who commanded an army death squad known as Battalion 3-16. Despite this shocking list of human rights abusing alumni, US army officials identify these men as “a few bad apples.”

In direct response to this, Selley has created a series of collages, using images of two early to mid-twentieth- century American geographers—Isaiah Bowman and Eugene Vernon Harris—housed at the University of Milwaukee Photography Archive. These photographs were used to chart, map, and document Latin America on behalf of the American Geographical Society and the US Foreign Service. In Human Exploitation, Selley edits these images and places them within extracts of the manual. In this way, the artist creates nuances that record the implementation of power and, by altering their surfaces and deconstructing the linear narrative history, he imbues them with new meaning. This creates a feeling of suspicion and mystery where people are removed from the pictures, and attention is drawn to banal objects that become menacing. When these collages are sequenced, they generate a dark, poem- like narrative that reminds us that things aren’t always as they seem, while attempting to convey both the reality and threat of the militarization of the young soldiers.
The sound piece contained within this folder is an amalgamation of songs known to be currently or historically used by the US Military for interrogation purposes. The Human Exploitation manual talks extensively about the effects of solitary confinement on prisoners and interrogatees. The manual advocates the use of sensory control – whether a deprivation of the senses, or an overload of unwanted sensory stimulus. This can include blocking out all natural light, constant changing of clocks, drastic variation in the times that meals are served, or the constant playing of extremely loud music. The idea behind such techniques is to prevent any form of routine developing in the prisoner, with the aim of ultimately inducing “psychological regression”: a loss of autonomy, a reversion to an earlier behavioural level.

The US military has been known to use many songs in this way – from aggressive heavy metal bands such as Metallica to children’s popular TV show theme tunes such as Sesame Street and Barney the Dinosaur. I have taken a selection of these songs, corrupted the files in an editing software – a process which to some extent is out of my control and is relatively random – after which I have channelled them through an analogue synthesiser and re-composed the sound into its current form. The idea of twisting, corrupting and re-composing these files can be associated with a damaged and twisted memory that we need to re-assemble, working with what remains. The sound becomes swamped, the violence hidden within the status of the songs selected, each corrupted sound wave merges and competes with the other – a sinister representation of the sound of state violence and torture.

Biography

George Selley is a London-based photographer, filmmaker, and researcher. He is a recent graduate of an MA in Photojournalism & Documentary Photography at the London College of Communication. Selley currently teaches photography at Fine Arts College in Camden and his work has been published in Dazed, PHMuseum, Wallpaper, Huck, The British Journal of Photography, Artpress, and Fisheye Magazine, among other notable publications. In 2017, Selley was one of the first photographers to receive the Paris Photo Carte Blanche Student Award. His work has been exhibited globally in places like Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Poland, Ukraine, Portugal, Israel, Hungary, the Netherlands, the US, and the UK. In 2015, his documentary Study Drugs was selected and screened at the American Public Health Association Film Festival in Chicago. The artist is co-founder of the Carte Blanche Collective.
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Yuxin Jiang

Yuxin Jiang
The Instagram Project

The Instagram Project is a constellation of works looking at Instagram images that knowingly or unknowingly participate in the construction and consumption of the Chinese as a spectacle of “the other.” This is a gaze that is often mistaken as the societal reality. Through an analytical and satirical approach and methodology, Jiang takes the images and the words accompanying them out of Instagram and she dissects, alters, and repurposes them to create new meanings within a new dispensation. Quirky Science Questions and Provocative Jokes Deconstructed are two works from a broader project that undoes the underlying ethnocentric value judgments that fuel the popularity of these images on social media.

Quirky Science Questions is a set of unexpected science problems created from images and video clips from Instagram. The reading of the pictures shifts as they are given a new function, liberating them from the original narrow-minded context. The questions are produced in collaboration with Theodora Ntoka, an education researcher. On the other hand, Provocative Jokes Deconstructed focuses on nine of the numerous Instagram “jokes” that are made at the expense of the objectification of real people. The photographs are deconstructed and further broken down into three parts: people, words, and captions. The flicking through jokes, readily to be laughed at, are turned into separate entities demanding viewer attention and thinking. They are called upon to make up their own minds about what is at stake within this world of secret pleasures.

Biography

Yuxin Jiang lives and works in London and Shanghai and holds an MA in Photographic Studies from the University of Westminster. She is an artist striving to challenge the thinking around intersectional identity issues by analyzing cultural forms, such as language, image culture, and her own experience of becoming a global citizen. Her artistic practice has recently begun to shift towards one that is collaborative and functional, with an increased interest in situating her work beyond the artistic context. Recent projects include Part of Syllabus (2019/2020), a UK-wide artist development program, Chinese edition translator of Photography: The Key Concepts; exhibition- based work Five Events, and Some Observations on Identity, which also won the Lianzhou Foto Festival Jury Prize of 2018 and was a finalist for the Jimei x Arles Discovery Award of 2017.
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Georgs Avetisjans

Georgs Avetisjans
Motherland. Far Beyond the Polar Circle

Motherland. Far Beyond the Polar Circle is a visual and investigative journey taken by Georgs Avetisjans during the winter of 2019–2020. Using a Soviet-made medium-format camera, the Salut, the artist narrates the story of Igarka, where many deported Latvians once lived. The city is located 163 kilometers north of the Arctic Circle in Siberia and was built upon the bones of Soviet prisoners. The artist’s grandmother was deported to Siberia on June 14, 1941 and she has never said a word about it since. During the next deportations between 1948 and 1951, thousands more civilians were forcefully moved and millions of lives were affected by Stalin’s Gulag labor system. Considered enemies of the USSR, many were taken to camps and left to die from cold, starvation, and poverty.

In this body of work, Avetisjans oscillates between the past and the present and his documentary-style photography is dominated by this sharp dual vision that exposes secrets guarded in the past. He shows how today the community of Igarka has its own hopes and dreams for the future: the revival of railway and agriculture, to become the oil capital of Siberia, and the expansion of its airport. Yet these contemporary images stand in contrast to governmental records and archival material. By tracing the painful account of his own family, Avetisjans shares snapshots of the seemingly infinite landscapes of Northern Siberia and its inhabitants. While now often romanticized, this vast expanse holds many recollections that the artist excavates and, in so doing, he brings these narratives to the surface.

“Oh, Varenka, Varenka” / From the series Motherland. Far Beyond the Polar Circle, 2020, Digital smartphone colour moving image

Biography

Georgs Avetisjans is a Latvian-Armenian artist. He holds an MA in Photography from the University of Brighton and has exhibited in China, Hungary, and Italy, amongst others. Most recently he was awarded the Riga Photography Biennial Award, the Magnum Photos Graduate Photographers Award, and the Different Worlds prize at Photon – Centre for Contemporary Photography in Ljubljana. He was a finalist of the Poznań Photo Diploma Award 2019. His photobook Homeland. The Longest Village in the Country was published during the Les Rencontres d’Arles and was launched with a solo show at the Latvian Museum of Photography in 2018. This publication was selected as one of the best books for that year by the British Journal of Photography and Calvert Journal. He has lectured at TJN, ISSP, Rīga Stradiņš University, and the Royal Academy of Art in The Hague and has taken part in residencies like Docking Station in Amsterdam.
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Transcriptions and Transmissions: A Conversation

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Fondazione Modena Arti Visive

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Parallel – European Photo-based Platform