Fabiola Jean-Louis: History Rewritten and Remembered
A rustle of fabric, a pop of color and the unflinching gaze of dark eyes. With these, fine art photographer Fabiola Jean-Louis weaves a narrative that blends past and future, fact and fantasy, afro-futurism and Black girl magic. In the process, blending photography and sculpture, she warps time and space, giving us a glimpse of what might have been while casting light on a history that many have forgotten or ignored.
“Re-Writing History” is a captivating commentary on some of society’s uglier realities through the mechanism of revisionist history and the medium of beautiful art. Yet it’s intervention is not placing Black people in Victorian England - we were already there. Perhaps the most celebrated and heartbreaking story of the “Black Victorians” belongs to Sarah Forbes Bonetta. Orphaned during her capture at six, she was later “rescued” by British naval captain, Frederick E Forbes. Forbes appended both his name and that of his ship, “Bonetta,” to the girl before presenting her as a gift to Queen Victoria at the age of eight. Though elegant images of her and other Black people of this era exist from both the United States and the United Kingdom, the lives of the people depicted were often anything but. Re-Writing History points out this glaring disparity, challenging us to identify the narratives, symbols and tropes used to carry out and justify these tragedies while shining a light on their continued presence today.