Accelerate: Access & Inclusion at The Tang Teaching Museum No.1

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Carrie Mae Weems When and Where I Enter the British Museum, 2006

Amber N. Wiley Assistant Professor of American Studies As an academic, as a woman who studies art history and architectural history, as a scholar, as a black woman: those worlds collided when I saw Carrie Mae Weems’s When and Where I Enter the British Museum. It derailed me, and I had to take a moment to reflect on why this image spoke to me so strongly. I visited the British Museum four years ago. It’s a treasure trove of history. I saw Assyrian lions that guarded the gates of ancient cities that no longer exist. I saw busts of pharaohs, Roman replicas of Greek originals. I saw the Elgin Marbles. I sat in front of the Rosetta Stone for a very long time thinking about how we decoded hieroglyphics. And while I was looking at this history of the world and feeling so blessed and happy that I had the opportunity to do so, I started to feel this slight contradiction. Why were the Elgin Marbles in London? It started to feel like the British Museum was more of a monument to British imperialism. I was feeling this weight on me like I should not be enjoying all of these things. All of these things should not be here. Why are they here? Why aren’t they in their home countries? What was the situation when the British Museum acquired these pieces? Were they “stolen”? Were they acquired during a time when the British were ruling over a particular territory? If we’re thinking about

ourselves living in a postcolonial moment, I’m wondering, what does that mean? Should we be doing repatriation of these works back to the places where they came from? Should the Rosetta Stone be here? Should it be repatriated back to where it was found? Or does the Egyptian government not have the resources? And does the British Crown owe anything to these countries? When I saw When and Where I Enter the British Museum and then I thought about the title, it brought so many of those memories back, and it made me question what my position was within this institution, and what that meant as a woman, as a black woman, as an American. Because the title is saying, “When and Where I,” not “When and Where You,” or not “When and Where We Enter the British Museum,” it is instantly personal. Yet still it’s accessible for someone like me. I can connect to that. I felt like she hit the nail on the head when thinking about your own position, or my own position, within this larger institution. The poetics of the image in a formal way are really important—how she situates herself in the frame, how she directs our eyes. We see Carrie Mae Weems as the silhouette against all the other action in the image. We have this deep portion of the pavement that leads us, that gives us this sense of

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