vieh – -Translation – Keybot Dictionary

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"In China zum Beispiel gibt es kaum Frauenbiografien aus dieser Zeit. Ich sagte, das kann doch nicht wahr sein, habt ihr wirklich gründlich genug gesucht? Und es stellte sich heraus, dass es aus dieser Zeit tatsächlich keine Biografien gibt, außer von einigen Konkubinen und Kaiserinnen. Das war's. Noch vor einem guten Jahrhundert hatten Frauen dort keinen Namen, keinen Status und wurden komplett marginalisiert - wie Vieh."
The project Woman to Go, which ter Hejine began in 2005 and continues to work on in various forms, is dedicated to forgotten biographies such as these. The idea behind the installations, of which the most recent version is presented in Deutsche Bank's new Amsterdam offices, seems at first rather simple: hundreds of postcards stacked in wall racks are offered for the taking, free of charge. On the front of the cards are photographs of unknown women taken between 1839 and 1920. On the backs are biographies from this era, which obviously, however, are unconnected to the photographs. A basic idea in the work is that the effect exerted by the portraits and biographies is heightened by this very discrepancy. Frequently, these biographies chart the adventurous lives of unusual women all over the world-artists, tea traders, pirates, writers, researchers, partisans, suffragettes. All of them were pioneers whose achievements were overlooked by the "official" version of history. On her journeys around the globe, for years ter Heijne pored through used book stores and flea markets, researched with students in archives, searched the Internet. "In China, for example, there are hardly any women's biographies from this time at all. I said to them, but that can't be, did you really look hard enough? And it turned out that there really weren't any biographies from this time, except for a small number of concubines and empresses. That's where it ends. Up until only around a century ago, women there had no name, no status, and were completely marginalized-as if they were livestock."
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"Das Volk der Herero muss das Land verlassen. Wenn das Volk dies nicht tut, dann werde ich es mit dem groot Rohr dazu zwingen. Innerhalb der deutschen Grenze wird jeder Herero, mit oder ohne Gewehr, mit oder ohne Vieh erschossen. Ich nehme keine Weiber oder Kinder mehr auf, treibe sie zu ihrem Volke zurück oder lasse auf sie schießen."
"But the Herero people must leave this land. If they refuse, I will force them with the Groot Rohr [canon]. Any Herero found within the German borders armed or unarmed, with or without cattle, will be shot. I will accept no more women or children, but will send them back to their people or have them shot." These are the words General Lieutenant Lothar von Trotha, acting under the orders of Emperor Wilhelm II, used in 1904 to initiate the genocide on the Herero tribe; Markus Woeller cites them at the beginning of his critical exhibition review in the taz. One hundred years after the Herero uprising, which was brutally suppressed, German Foreign Aid Advisor Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul might have asked for forgiveness, but black Africa’s past does not play much of a role in the German collective memory, as Woeller contends. The fact that Kentridge’s installation will not do much to change this is due, in his opinion, to an overload of quotes and techniques in Kentridge’s miniature theater, the Black Box: "Unfortunately, Kentridge does not […] succeed at turning the darkroom into a place of illumination. In Black Box/Chambre Noire, form and content collide in a clumsy way. In what starts out as an investigation into the Herero massacre, theatrical performance and decontextualized opera arias are blown up into an-all-too respectable desire to make art. A mechanical sculpture ballet and fragments of documentary material, nostalgic colonial decor and computer-generated projection technique reduce the images endlessly." In using drawing to imitate original documents, pages of historical books, old-style handwriting, and Dadaist collages, Kentridge creates a "complacent retro style." In his opinion, "the project Black Box/Chambre Noire gets too tied up in aesthetic frills. Yet it was supposed to recover the black box of human catastrophe and evaluate it."