Maryam Jafri

Independence Day 1934-1975

January 25 - February 24, 2024

Opening Thursday, January 25, 6-8pm

Installation View Maryam Jafri, Independence Day 1934-1975, (2009-2019) black & white archival inkjet prints

Maryam Jafri’s Independence Day 1934-1975 (2009-2019) features 57 archival photographs culled from more than 30 archives of the first Independence Day ceremonies of various Asian, Middle Eastern, and African nations including Jordan, Kuwait, Indonesia, India, Tunisia, Ghana, Senegal, Syria, Malaysia, Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique, Vietnam (South), DR Congo, Burkina Faso and Algeria. The photos are sourced primarily from public archives in their respective countries.

The first Independence Day, leading up to and including the formal ceremony, unfolds as a series of codified rituals and speech acts enacted across public and elite spaces, within the 24-hour twilight period during which a territory transitions into an independent nation-sate. Resistance and counter-resistance protest movements, legal proceedings within capital buildings, VIP functions, parades, stadium salutes, and first addresses to the new nation, amongst other episodes and events, are all supervised by the departing colonial powers. 

The photographic material is strikingly similar despite disparate geographical and temporal origins as it reveals a political model, the concept of the modern nation-state itself, exported from Europe and in the process of being formally reproduced throughout the world. Who comprises any nation between the necessary condition of finding the “us” while often followed by “them”? What could have historically unfolded here? “Ethnic nationalism,” “civic/liberal nationalism,” or world communism, are modern concepts that originated in Germany, United States/France, and the Soviet Union, respectively. We may encounter yet another fundamental typology, post-colonial or anti-colonial nationalism, by which these various countries came to identify or imagine themselves.  

An identification guide to each photograph’s date and country of origin is available as a handout at the center of the installation. 

During the course of the exhibition the gallery will host a film screening of “The Battle of Algiers” (1966), directed by Gillo Pontecorvo, and a comparative reading seminar on “The Ethnic Origins of Nations” (1986) by Anthony Smith, “The Nation and Its Fragments” (1993) by Partha Chatterjee, “The Origins of Totalitarianism” (1951) by Hannah Arendt, and “Neither Settler Nor Native” (2020) by Mahmood Mamdani (dates TBA).

Maryam Jafri’s multimedia practice integrates video, sculpture, photography, and performance. Recent solo presentations include No Lithium, No Work at Kunsthal Aarhus, DK (2023), Nontstop You at Kai Matsumiya, New York, NY (2022), A Broad and Narrow Point, Blaffer Museum of Art, Houston, TX (2021), I Drank the Kool-Aid but I didn’t Inhale, ICA Los Angeles, CA (2019), and The Road to Serfdom, Repaved, Taxis Palais Kunsthalle Tyrol, AT (2019). Recent biennials and notable group exhibitions include to see oneself at a distance, MASS MoCA, North Adams, MA (2023), Blocks, Museum of Contemporary Art, Palermo, IT (2021), Front International Triennial, Cleveland, OH (2018), Athens Biennial, GR (2018), São Paolo Bienniale, BR (2016), and the Belgian Pavilion, Venice Biennale, IT (2015).

Download Press Release

Download Identification Guide

AT THE PARLIAMENT:

39. Granting Independence, 4 February 1948 Sri Lanka

40. Granting Independence, 6 March 1957 Ghana

41. Granting Independence, September 30 1966 Botswana

AT THE STADIUM:

25. VIP Women, 7 August 1960 Ivory Coast

26. VIP Men, 1 August 1960 Benin

PARADES:

30. Bourguiba’s Return From Exile, 1 June 1955 Tunisia

31. King Baudouin I and President Kasavubu, 29 June 1960 DR Congo

32. President Senghor, 4 April 1960 Senegal

33. President Nyerere Waving, 9 December 1961 Tanzania

34. President Ngo Dinh Diem, 1955/1956 (Date Contested), South Vietnam

35. President Kenyatta and Prince Phillip Waving, 12. December 1963 Kenya

30. Bourguiba’s Return From Exile, 1 June 1955 Tunisia

37. Celebrating, 5 July 1962 Algeria

39. Granting Independence, 4 February 1948 Sri Lanka

CELEBRATIONS:

45. VIP Party, 17 April 1946 Syria

46. VIP Party, 15 August 1947 India

47. Reception (After Round Table Conference) Brussels, 21 February 1960 DR Congo

NEGOTIATIONS:

10. About To Sign Independence Agreement, 1956 Morocco

11. About To Sign Independence Agreement, 1946 Jordan

12. Signing Independence Agreement, 1960 Madagascar

13. Signing Independence Agreement (Never Honored), 1936 Syria

14. Signing Independence Agreement, 1956 Tunisia

15. Signing Independence Agreement, 1961 Kuwait

10. About To Sign Independence Agreement, 1956 Morocco

29. Girls Marching, 5 August 1960 Burkina Faso

AT THE STADIUM:

27. Girls Marching, 1 July 1962 Burundi

28. Girls Marching, 17 April 1946 Syria

29. Girls Marching, 5 August 1960 Burkina Faso

42. Fireworks Over New Delhi, 15 August 1947 India

43. VIP Party, 4 July 1946 Philippines

44. Thirty-One Gun Salute, 9 December 1961 Tanzania

ADDRESS TO THE NATION:

51. Sukarno, 17 August 1945 Indonesia

52. Shukri al-Quwatli, 17 April 1946 Syria

53. Sheikh Al Sabah, 19 June 1961 Kuwait

54. Samora Machel, 25 June 1975 Mozambique

55. Justin Tomêtin Ahomadégbé, 1 August 1960 Benin

56. Manuel Roxas, 4 July 1946 Philippines

57. Julius Nyerere, 9 December 1961 Tanzania

Installation View Maryam Jafri, Independence Day 1934-1975, (2009-2019) black & white archival inkjet prints


Maryam Jafri / Independence Days (Publication)

Edited by Maryam Jafri, Nina Tabassomi. Text by Ariella Aïsha Azoulay, Paul O’Neill, Nina Tabassomi. Published by Walther König Books, Köln.

In her artist book ‘Independence Days’, Maryam Jafri presents an expanded version of her photo installation, ‘Independence Day 1934–1975’ juxtaposing and arranging 234 photographs sourced over 10 years of research in 40 archives across Asia, Africa, and the Middle East, including many from rare and at-risk collections.

This is an investigation of the role played by photography in mid-twentieth century decolonization processes.

Published after the exhibition, ‘Maryam Jafri: Roads to Serfdom, Repaved’ at Taxispalais Kunsthalle Tirol, Innsbruck (9 February 9 – 12 May 2019).

English and German text. $45.

Available to purchase at Printed Matter, Inc. and Center for Art, Research, and Alliances (CARA)

Available online at artbook.com