Yuki Kihara's Paradise Camp as a potential Fa’afafine museum: Fabulous cohabitation in a shared world

Liang Kai Yu*, Eliza Steinbock*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

This article examines critical ethnographic and archival elements of Paradise Camp, Yuki Kihara's highly celebrated Aotearoa New Zealand national pavilion at the Venice Biennial in 2022. Through its scenography that in Kihara's words is “fa’afabulous,” consisting of archival collages drawn from museum collections and staged photography made after Gauguin's paintings in collaboration with queer Samoan communities, we argue that Kihara's heavily annotated version of a so-called paradise assembled within Paradise Camp offers a ‘potential museum’ that reconnects the missing links between colonial registrations of the past with today's queer Samoan lives. This queer Indigenous reconfiguration of a fabulous paradise, which refuses imperial understandings of Pacific people and geographies, seems central to Paradise Camp's queer ‘camp’ effects, much like an eye roll that dethrones authority. Therefore, we propose that such an artist-fabulated museum lays claims to an Oceanic sovereignty, and broadly fosters a shared world for Fa’afafine and queer Pasifika peoples.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)576-603
Number of pages28
JournalJournal of Material Culture
Volume28
Issue number4
Early online date5 Nov 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2023

Keywords

  • archive
  • Fa’afafine
  • museum studies
  • pacific studies
  • queer and trans studies

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