The Graveyards of Community Gathering: Archiving Lesbian and Feminist Life in London

Grant, Catherine. 2019. The Graveyards of Community Gathering: Archiving Lesbian and Feminist Life in London. In: Allyson Mitchell and Cait McKinney, eds. Killjoy's Kastle. Canada: University of British Columbia Press and The Art Gallery of York University Press. ISBN 9780774861571 [Book Section]

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Abstract or Description

On a quiet afternoon in 2014 I visited the BFI in London and saw Killjoy’s Kastle. To be precise, I saw documentation of Killjoy’s Kastle as it had been figured in Toronto: a fabulous, immersive environment populated by queerly creepy characters that I recognised from my dreams, my nightmares and sometimes my reality. As I sat, fascinated by the film footage and photographs, I was surrounded by gravestones, carved with the names of lesbian and feminist organisations that had been taken away from this life too soon. I recognised some of them: the women’s bookshop where I had browsed for hours, the bars I had haunted as a younger person, the community space that had fallen prey to cuts in recent months. I sat in this creepy, campy graveyard, admiring the crotcheted cobwebs and writing about the undead vibrations of these communities that now existed in memory alone. This article attends to the potential of Killjoy’s Kastle as a space of learning and community gathering; picturing queer feminist pasts that often don’t make the history books. The experience of ‘afterness’ that the gravestones activated will be considered in relation to queer temporalities, and the remnants and revenants that were ready to be revived by the act of making and viewing this installation. Drawing on conversations with Nazmia Jamal, programmer of Killjoy’s Kastle at the BFI and head of the London gravestone creators, this article will see how the artwork can be imagined as a script or a stage ready to be taken up in the future to create feminist communities around its celebratory wakes. The focus will be on London-based feminist archives and institutions including the Lambeth Women’s Project and the Feminist Library.

Item Type:

Book Section

Additional Information:

This will be a peer-reviewed book chapter, 5000 words long.

Keywords:

feminism, feminist art history, re-enactment, queer art history, queer time, black feminism, feminist organisations

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

Art
Visual Cultures

Dates:

DateEvent
July 2018Accepted
15 September 2019Published

Item ID:

21003

Date Deposited:

27 Sep 2017 11:27

Last Modified:

25 Sep 2019 09:45

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/21003

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