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Saturday, September 21, 2024

Valuing refugee and migrant voices


group of girls holding embroidered orange fabric
Embroidery is a key exercise for younger ladies affected by gender-based violence because it encourages friendship and assist between them, in addition to studying a brand new talent collectively. Items are sometimes made collectively to boost this nurturing and secure surroundings – Dzaleka Refugee Camp, Malawi. Photograph by Helen Storey.

As we strategy Refugee Week with hopes to galvanise motion, CSF researchers Francesco Mazzarella, Helen Storey and Lucy Orta discover the connecting threads between their work. In dialog, they mirror on shared values, themes and studying experiences, highlighting hope and alternatives amidst current challenges.

“The worth of this work we do is greater than the sum of our components. It reveals how we are able to work on particular person components of a bigger complete, in several methods, with totally different companions, and in several contexts.”

How would you summarise your long-term initiatives with refugees?


Helen: I’m working with those that have been long-term displaced in Dzaleka camp (Malawi) and Maratane camp (Mozambique), whereas staying in contact with the Zaatari Motion work that is now develop into self-sustaining with our Syrian colleagues in Jordan.


In Africa, we will likely be exploring new fashions to reverse refugee dependency on NGOs by means of making, including abilities and supporting the refugees to develop into the contracted suppliers to important UNHCR procurements. Are we slowly turning into social engineers too? I am methods wherein redesigning programs is as essential because the bodily work that you just co-create.


Francesco: By Decolonising Trend and Textiles, we’re participating in a reciprocal technique of textile and vogue making. We’re shifting narratives round refugees, mapping methods to construct resilience inside the area people, framing collective visions for the long run, and co-creating culturally vital vogue and textile merchandise and artworks.

Lucy: I have been working over the past 30 years to carry consideration to points surrounding migration and displacement – particularly how material and sew as a language are intimately related to our private identities, recollections, and feelings. By follow, I search methods to render susceptible communities seen and to query social acceptance. To problem the space between artists and society and advocate for a extra related, engaged and socially accountable strategy to creating artwork. Traces: Tales of Migration goals to disclose the tales related to migrant historical past within the UK.

group of people looking at portrait art work in an exhibition
Traces: Tales of Migration, Portrait Gallery on the Nunnery Gallery. Lucy Orta, 2023. Photograph by Lori Demata.

What are you studying from this collaborative approach of working?

Francesco: Our refugee collaborators are reminding us to not be pushed by our issues, however to be led by our goals. We’re together with the analysis group within the making actions to create a way of equality throughout the undertaking. Contemplating that refugees are amongst probably the most interviewed and monitored populations, we need to shift energy imbalances – difficult our privilege and prejudice and sustaining reciprocity and responsiveness to numerous methods of figuring out.


Lucy: I see the method of working with totally different teams of migrants as a metaphor. Processes are highly effective containers of that means. They’re concerning the relationship between an artist’s voice and that of the group, expressed within the outcomes. Traces: Tales of Migration is a metaphorical course of of individuals reflecting and shaping our understanding of the world round us.

“The dialogical construction of our group actions empowered members by selling empathy, understanding and connection. They helped construct a way of shared identification, and guided distinct particular person outcomes.”

Helen: The circumstances for equality are virtually unimaginable between your self and those that you are interacting with, besides within the act of creating. Equality which holds hope appears to exist within the unplanned and within the surprises of {our relationships}.

Virtually each refugee I work with reveals me one thing concerning the life abilities that we’ll have to take care of the precarity of all our lives going ahead. What I feel is essential fairly often is not, in that situation, and I have to be cautious to not be extractive. One of many necessities as a practitioner, artist or designer working in these types of areas is your means to be susceptible and your willingness to be undone.

a damaged building with the words "the living hope" visible
The “Dwelling Hope” nursery college in Dzaleka Refugee Camp, Malawi. Photograph by Helen Storey.

What challenges are you going through?


Helen: Local weather change itself is a large problem. The houses of the individuals who I work with are washed away every year, they usually have repeatedly rebuilt the infrastructure of their lives. When and the way we work together with them in that course of could be very pertinent.

One other problem is making an attempt to do that work based mostly within the UK, while our personal authorities has a migration coverage that’s so inhumane. They show cowardice and an avoidance of our all futures.


Francesco: We have to transfer in the direction of a framework of ethics of care. Participating susceptible folks in co-creation processes highlights the trajectory of trauma. As an example, now we have witnessed that asylum seekers usually expertise extra trauma than refugees who’re extra settled, and subsequently can’t be as artistic.

We have to have efficient safeguarding measures and assist programs in place. We additionally have to collaborate with professionals from different sectors who’re trauma-informed and may take care of the darkish aspect of designing for social good.

Lucy: For me, the primary problem is the longevity of our initiatives and methods to maintain the momentum and relationships. We’re constructing empathy, we’re constructing group. What occurs to these communities as soon as our analysis initiatives and funding ends?

All of us have to be adequately geared up to know trauma, to learn the indicators of the impact of our work on others, and to have the ability to present or point out the place assist will be accessed.

two people hugging and smiling
Two members from the Decolonising Trend and Textiles undertaking, carrying conventional garments and exhibiting the connection constructed by means of the undertaking. Photograph by JC Candanedo.

What are your hopes for the long run?

Helen: I hope I proceed to study the deeper stuff within the complexity of long-term displacement, and to have the ability to elevate the impression of what we are able to do in response to it. I need to contribute to humane coverage making for migration of all types.

Francesco: I hope we are able to higher tackle the wants and aspirations of refugee communities, honouring their numerous cultures and invaluable craft heritage abilities.

I additionally hope we are able to transfer past the present follow wherein designers are ‘parachuted’ into marginalized communities to unravel different folks’s issues. Let’s shed a lightweight on what we are able to study from refugees.

“Hopefully we are able to decolonize design follow and form another vogue system that’s grounded in equality, variety, inclusion and sustainability of cultures.”

Lucy: I hope we are able to problem the damaging narrative round migration, utilizing our practices as catalysts for that change – to fight the pernicious unfold of xenophobia and advocate for a extra related, engaged, sociable, and socially accountable strategy to arts and design.

Be part of us for a collection of actions all through Refugee Week and past…

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