Tessel Janse, PHD Candidate in Cultural Studies at Goldsmiths, University of London and art critic, member of AICA Netherlands, wrote the text below, based on the webinar 'Extraction: colonisation and the decolonisation of identities', organised by the Forum Committee of AICA International, which took place online 2 october 2025. (see the website of AICA International for the full recording and previous sessions)
Though European colonialism officially ended due to the decolonisation movements of the twentieth century, its underlying structures continue to linger. Peruvian sociologist Aníbal Quijano wrote that in addition to the erasure of Indigenous peoples and the extraction of resources, under colonialism European culture and its values became a universal model for progress and modernity. He named this repression of other knowledges ‘coloniality’, a world order that remains firmly in place today. ‘Decoloniality’, then, is theorised by Latin American thinkers such as Walter Mignolo and María Lugones as the creation of a world where multiple knowledges can coexist and where repression through categories of race, gender, coloniser and colonised is abolished. The discussion of (de)coloniality is one geographically specific tradition of thought amongst many that call for the need to decolonise ongoing colonial power dynamics existing in discrimination, the flow of capital to former imperial centres, and in cultural and political institutions both in the ‘West’ and Global South.
For its fifth iteration of the ‘Ruptured Histories’ webinar series, AICA looked towards the role of art in critically examining enduring colonial extraction and erasure of identities, and for continuing the work of decolonisation. Chaired by International board member Robert-Jan Muller, AICA invited curator Christian Kravagna to introduce and respond to the session, and artists Paula Albuquerque and Sandra Gamarra Heshiki to share their work. They reflected on strategies for reinventing postcolonial identities, refusing the imperial gaze and rethinking the silences in museums and archives. Taken together, their contributions showed that there are as many understandings of decolonisation as there are histories of resistance against colonialism. Read more










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