Representation, Victimization or Identification. Negotiating Power and Powerlessness in Art on Migration
Abstract
A commonplace idea, and worry, in much political art is the emphasis on not to victimize
the object/subject in artistic strategies, and to portray people as subjects with agency. And
the way to do this is to allow for identification. This article asks if this strong idea might be
shaped by an ameliorating guilt for victims, which in turn is partially informed by an
inability to free the gaze from a hegemonic view of people as agents. Instead the article
looks at some contemporary artists who surface an opposite recognition, the radical lack of
power for large groups within the global migration system, without attempts at temporary
symbolic solutions. It will be argued that ththe recognition of powerlessness is and has
always been a ground for political as well as artistic representation, mobilisation and
solidarity.