Corps de l’article
Statement
In research, I examine the cross-border relationship between the Black communities of Windsor, Ontario and Detroit, Michigan during the International Miss Sepia Contests held from the 1930s to the 1950s as part of the Emancipation Parade and Freedom Celebrations of Windsor.
I’ve understood the term sepia in its objective capacities; themed photo booths at amusement parks—using costumes and sepia tones to transport middle-class families into quaint western saloons. I never liked them.
Or my childhood understanding of a ghost, something fleeting, brown, and murky.
(Similar to the experience of marginalized bodies, which only ever exist in our collective periphery vision).
Sepia had never existed in my body in this way. As a Woman of Colour and as Women of Colour, where do we find autonomy in the language of our difference?
The series Unnatural, This Step is a collection of manipulated Polaroid photography, found objects, and natural material: an abstracted documentation of trophies and crowns, the racialized borderlands between Canada and the United States as they remain, a nod to my internal trepidation in owning (and understanding) my sepia body.
Remember: a pageant created for and by sepia bodies (Black Excellence) is an exceptionally well-dressed protest; a copper-hued wave to the judges, the crowd…a poltergeist salute to our continued search for freedom.
Parties annexes
Biographical note
Talysha Bujold-Abu holds a Master’s of Fine Arts (MFA) from the University of Windsor (2018) and is recipient of the Outstanding Graduate Student Research Award—Excellence in Scholarship, Research, and Creative Activity (2018). Bujold-Abu is an illustrator, researcher, arts educator, and the current Gallery Manager & Membership Coordinator with the Arts Council Windsor & Region, a non-profit organization that programs and supports all disciplines of the creative arts in partnership with local artists and art organizations. Bujold-Abu has spoken and exhibited at the Intersections | Cross Sections Conference in Toronto in 2018 and has participated in the Structures of Anticipation Research Symposium and Exhibition in Windsor in 2019. Exhibitions include: “Art Is a Living Thing” in Masterton, New Zealand; “The Truth Has Legs” in Leamington, Ontario; and “The Body Electric. Diversity in Residency Education: Training in a World of Differences” at the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons, Fall 2019, in Ottawa, Ontario.