You may have never gone there, and may never wish to go, but if you've watched
any local TV or read any newspapers in the past decade you've definitely heard
or read about the Image Factory. It's Belize's contemporary art space, home
to countless cutting edge art adventures. But considering the sheer volume of
work that the Factory has put out in the past ten years, that style of art has
hardly caught on.
Still the Factory crew presses on tonight as they present a 10 year retrospective
where they say goodbye to the past. We found out about their disposable decade.
Jules Vasquez Reporting, [jules.vasques@gmail.com]
They started out 10 years ago in June of 1995, this is the preparations for
the first show in June of 1995 - a teenaged Gilvano Swasey and Factory co-founder
Anthony O'Ferrell preparing canvasses and frames for the young realists exhibit.
Yasser Musa, Image Factory Director
"When we started with the young realists we didn't know what we were
doing, obviously, and we didn't know where we were going in many ways. All we
knew was that we had this space and we had these ideas that somehow art was
important to society; somehow art had its place in the community. And so after
every exhibit we started to develop different ideas and started to collaborate
with different artists and then we started to branch out regionally, and we
then started to go out internationally and exhibit as well. So over ten years
I could say that we have accomplished a lot in terms of putting forward a lot
of products."
And those products are visible in this collage on invitations the Factory has
sent out for the close to 100 shows it has been involved with in the past decade.
It's a staggering body of work and hanging on the walls today are a collection
of 60 pieces form the Factory all stars, the best of the best artists who've
had exhibits.
Also sharing the space with the Image Factory artists is another ambitious
art project that turns ten this year. Stonetree Records, the ocuntry's flagship
record label, is looking back at its decade. Director Ivan Duran said Stonetrees
emphasis on product has changed the soundscape of Belize.
Ivan Duran, Stonetree Records Director
"With Keimoun and Brother David's Raw, which were the first two locally
produced CDs, I think that changed the whole musical landscape in Belize. All
of a sudden more CDs started to get produced and released. Looking back I think
we've come a long way in the last ten years."
And even with all this outstanding work like Andy Palacio's Keimoun and Aurelio
Martinez's Garifuna Soul, the internationalization of the Belizean sound has
not happened quite the way everyone thought it would. Duran says building this
product is not an overnight phenomenon, it's a process.
Ivan Duran,
"We have to find our own sound, we can't just wait to be discovered
just like that. We have to work really hard in developing our sound, we have
to work very hard in developing our artists, we have to work very hard in increasing
the producing of local material. This will take more than just the first ten
years, this will take decades and decades. We will get there, maybe fifty years
down the line, but if we continue in this path we are clearly going there."
And while Duran is looking to build on the Stonetree sound, in the other room
Factory Director Yasser Musa is looking to throw it all away.
Yasser Musa,
"Now we have the challenge to look back at ourselves and try to erase
that history, because if we do not erase that history, what will be the problem
is that we will start parroting ourselves and start looking back and regurgitating
some of the old ideas. I think in art, where we've always wanted to look ahead
and innovate, one of the biggest challenges for all of us here at the Factory
is to try and respect what we've done but put that in a box and just hide that
away and then try to challenge ourselves into other areas, the same way we had
done ten years ago."
10 years ago - they painted birds and jaguars, today it was pictures of nude
women and abstract pieces - and tomorrow at the Factory - we don't know quite
what it's going to be - and that seems to be just fine by them.
The retrospective show opens tonight and will feature an open air performance
by Paul Nabor.