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When
We Came
A one hour, two channel
video work.
Commissioned by the Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art.
Conceived by Paul
Clay 2004
Video Mix: Paul
Clay
Audio Mix: Arrow Chrome
"When We Came" tells the story of Peekskill from the dawn of human
beings.
It begins with the
text of an African creation myth from Ghana. Africa - the origin point
for human kind. A great number of African Americans originally came from
Ghana and most passed through Almina Castle in Cape Coast, a Dutch fort
in the slave trade. Peekskill has been a key center in African American
development and resistance in the New World since before the Revolutionary
War.
The African myth explains
the origin of Water Sun and Moon, and why Water still lives with us on
the earth. Peekskill is about water, about the Hudson River. It formed
from a retreating glacier at the end of the last ice age. It is a New
World that has been continuously being rediscovered for the last 12,500
years. The early Native American Paleo People, the Shield Archaic people,
the Mahicans, the Iroquois, the Wappinger, and the Kitchawak an Algonquian
people, who lived in the town of Peekskill or Sackhoes, as they liked
to call it, before the European peoples ever even arrived.
The story of Peekskill
is about visitors coming up the Hudson from New York. This includes Jan
Peek, for whom the town is named, ("Peek's Creek" in Dutch) who lived
in the settlement of New Amsterdam which was later renamed New York. Jan
came up the Hudson to trade with the Kitchawak at Sackhoes. Other New
Yorkers also traded goods by boat and later by car and train. They brought
ideas too. Young Russian Jewish women fleeing the nightmare of the Triangle
Shirt Waist Factory fire and trying to start a better life free of labor
exploitation. African Americans coming up from the AME Zion Church, and
from Harlem, working towards equality. Soho artists driven out by soaring
real estate prices looking for a place to create and express their art.
They came from other
places besides New York too. The Italians, the Irish, the Chinese as they
built the railroads. The British first to burn the place, and later to
establish families. African Americans fleeing slavery in the South via
the Underground Railroad. Equadorans, Guatemalans, and others from even
further South, looking for a better life.
There is a long and
tumultuous history of arrivals in this place, filled with great strife
and great beauty. We are only the current caretakers and ours is a momentary
passing in the long history of the river valley. The "Muh-he-kun-ne-tuk"
- as the Mahicans would call it when they first came 6000 years ago. "The
place where the waters are never still". In this work we too arrive. The
strangers, the outsiders, the new comers. We try to document, to make
a record, so others who come after can know what we experienced, how we
felt. So they might see what we saw - when we came.
-Paul Clay
2004
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