Aline Motta’s work was recently featured in MASP’s exhibition
Histórias Afro-Atlânticas, arguably the most important curatorial project held at a major museum to map the work of Black visual artists in Brazil. She is an artist that has been constantly shifting between photography, film, and video installations.
Filha Natural (Natural Daughter, 2019), her latest work, is a culmination of Motta’s years of researching her own family, through which she expresses a different perspective on the racial constitutions of our own families.
When working with film, Motta employs a variety of devices, notably plotting non-idealized connections between Black Brazilians and our ancestors from Africa. Motta’s works share common features, and both familiarity and strangeness are two key concepts to be found throughout them all.
Firstly, she uses narration as a tool to create discomfort rather than using it as a guiding path. Secondly, Motta positions photographs in sites where they initially seem alien, but we later learn her reasons for such arrangement. Lastly, sound and music not only create a sonic atmosphere, but also cause the lives of our ancestors to materialize in our current space-time.
Filha Natural turns the fragmentation imposed on us by slavery into a powerful aesthetic tool. “Francisca, a daughter. Whose daughter?”, asks Motta, the narrator. As she tries to fill in the multiple gaps in telling her/our story, we realize that fragmentation for Black people can only be combated with speculation and imagination. In
Filha Natural, Motta is in search for an historical character, Francisca, in places where her presence has been removed. Since the effects of slavery impedes Black people from fully covering the gaps in our collective history, Motta investigates ways through which she can give Francisca some level of existence. Whether or not the character we see is actually Francisca, as we watch the film we feel as if some level of justice is given to her memory – and to the memory of many others.
How to watch:
Filha Natural is not available on the Internet, but you can read about Motta’s process in making the film
here.