sëke (it's black)
Fort Jay at Governors Island
June 3 - 30, 2011
Opening Reception: Saturday, June 11, 3 - 5 PM
 

Hector Canonge SEKE Fort Jay at Governors Island

 

sëke (it’s black)
Hector Canonge and Reeta Saeed
In the native language of the Lenape people, the original inhabitants of many of the islands that today make up NYC, sëke means “it’s black.” This site-specific installation in two of the largest ammunition cell rooms inside the Magazine Court of Fort Jay at Governors Island, references the conquest, colonization, and revolution of new territories in the Western Hemisphere. sëke also treats the military history of the fort, the implications of gunpowder as technology for domination, and the legacy of people’s presence in a particular place at a particular time.

Hector Canonge SEKE at Fort Jay Governors Island


Description:
sëke
is a multimedia, site specific installation at two of Fort Jay’s powder or ammunition cell rooms located in the Magazine Court of the historical Fort Jay. The project references the military history of the fort, the implications of gunpowder as technology for domination, and the legacy of people’s presence in a particular place at a particular time. The two contrasting environments complement one another as they invite people to immerse themselves in experiencing the sudden darkness and lightness, life and death, excess and shortage.

Artists' Statement:
When we were first introduced to Fort Jay at Governors Island, we were not aware of the military history of the site.  Though the island is an idyllic place to live, there are many parts in the fort that are quite dark as they guard a history and stories that many people don’t know or hear about.  The fact that inside the fort people used to leave comfortably and yet have the soldiers’ quarters above the ammunition rooms of the Magazine is quite discomforting.




Seke is made possible by Lower Manhattan Cultural Council’s Swing Space program with permission from the National Park Service, Governors Island National Monument.

LMCC Swing Space Program