This exhibition will challenge your misconceptions of the Calais 'Jungle'
- Text by Taylor McGraa
- Photography by Headline image by Paul Evans
As a humanitarian crisis wages, the Calais ‘jungle’ has come to symbolise the fiery debate that’s been sweeping through Europe. The camp itself is a vast expanse filled with thousands of people, all desperate enough to make often perilous journeys to try and make Europe their home. To some, Calais represents a failure in foreign policy, governments neglecting their responsibilities and an excuse to stir up fear and prejudice. To others, it’s just a place – for now – to call home.
Call me by my Name: Stories from Calais and Beyond is an exhibition seeking to break down the boundaries between these ranging perceptions. Using one space to show work created by campers within Calais, the volunteers who enter it, and other established artists, it brings all of its artists to the same level, and humanises them.
Running for a total of twenty days, the exhibition displays a range of art as diverse and unique as the individuals who made them. The series aims to pull our attention away from self-indulgent debates, and draw it back to those people struggling to survive within the camps themselves. Rather than limiting our perspective to one produced through the gaze of European reporters, this exhibition delves much deeper.
Too often, when we talk about the crisis facing migrants, refugees, humans, we forget about their humanity. We forget that they are real people, with real families, hopes and fears – each one with a unique experiences and outlook. In putting works produced by those inside of and outside the camp side by side, the exhibition allows our preconceptions to dissolve into the background.
One particularly powerful component of the exhibition is ‘Welcome to our Jungle’ – the product of a photography project run by volunteers. Here, those living in the camp were given cameras and photographic training, providing them with the resources to document the world around them. Many of the images were captured by children, giving the final images a sense of pure, unadulterated humanity.
Nick Ellwood, a reportage illustrator, is another artist who features in the exhibition. After spending time working and drawing within the Calais camp. His sketches not only capture the portraits of those who he met, but hand-scrawlings of their names and stories too.
The exhibition also displays the work of ALPHA, a Mauritanian artist who was for a time living inside the camp, before being granted asylum in France. With many of his paintings produced using bright, bold colours and with images of hope, our presuppositions of migrants as figures of despair are diminished. Instead, we are left in awe of the simple beauty created in his work.
With a sculptural installation designed specifically for the series itself, alongside a variety of other photographs and paintings from all corners of Calais, Call me by My Name offers the spectator a radically honest view of life in the camp. “Visitors will journey physically and emotionally through the space”, says Sue McAlpine, curator of the exhibition, “they will see refugees and migrants emerging from a nameless bunch of individuals, neither victims nor angels but each with their own story to tell”.
This exhibition forces us to reconsider how we react to, and talk about the complexities of the refugee crisis. It wants us to reflect on what has – or has not – been done about the crisis so far, and allows us to hone in on contemporary migration issues, placing an unapologetic and raw representation of Calais before our very eyes, challenging us to question what will happen next.
Call me by my Name: stories from Calais and Beyond exhibition from the Migration Museum Project is open at the Londonewcastle Project Space from 2 – 22 June, 2016.
Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.
Latest on Huck
The party starters fighting to revive Stonehenge’s Solstice Free Festival
Free the Stones! delves into the vibrant community that reignites Stonehenge’s Solstice Free Festival, a celebration suppressed for nearly four decades.
Written by: Laura Witucka
Hypnotic Scenes of 90s London Nightlife
Legendary photographer Eddie Otchere looks back at this epic chapter of the capital’s story in new photobook ‘Metalheadz, Blue Note London 1994–1996’
Written by: Miss Rosen
The White Pube: “Artists are skint, knackered and sharing the same 20 quid”
We caught up with the two art rebels to chat about their journey, playing the game that they hate, and why anarchism might be the solution to all of art’s (and the wider world’s) problems.
Written by: Isaac Muk
The Chinese youth movement ditching big cities for the coast
In ’Fissure of a Sweetdream’ photographer Jialin Yan documents the growing number of Chinese young people turning their backs on careerist grind in favour of a slower pace of life on Hainan Island.
Written by: Isaac Muk
The LGBT Travellers fundraising for survival
This Christmas, Traveller Pride are raising money to continue supporting LGBT Travellers (used inclusively) across the country through the festive season and on into next year, here’s how you can support them.
Written by: Percy Henderson
The fight to save Bristol’s radical heart
As the city’s Turbo Island comes under threat activists and community members are rallying round to try and stop the tide of gentrification.
Written by: Ruby Conway