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Tourmaline, Salacia 2019. Tate. © Tourmaline. Courtesy of the artist and Chapter NY, New York.

Tourmaline

12 rooms in Artist and Society

  • Betye Saar and Firelei Baez
  • A view from São Paulo: Abstraction and Society
  • Civil War
  • Nation Building Between Heaven And Earth
  • Wael Shawky
  • Naufus Ramírez-Figueroa
  • Joseph Beuys and Vlassis Caniaris
  • Tourmaline
  • Deana Lawson
  • Farah Al Qasimi
  • Witnesses
  • Joseph Koudelka

Salacia uses split-screen montages of archival footage and 16mm film to imagine a dream of freedom for 19th-century trans sex worker Mary Jones

Tourmaline brings the lives of transgender figures from history into focus across her artistic and activist practice. Salacia, her 6-minute film, centres on the story of Mary Jones, a Black trans woman and sex worker who lived in New York City in the 19th century. Jones was imprisoned in 1836 for stealing a man’s wallet, and was subsequently subject to intensive public and tabloid scrutiny and abuse. Tourmaline encountered her story in the New York municipal archives through court transcripts and press lithographs.

Tourmaline expanded on the archives’ narrative by adding imaginary scenes. She envisions a version of Jones’s life in Seneca Village. This was a small community in New York, where free Black and Irish people could own land. It was destroyed in 1857 to build Central Park. The film then moves to 20th-century archive footage of queer and trans rights activist Sylvia Rivera. It then returns to Jones, as if Rivera was speaking backwards in time to her.

Describing this combination of fact and fiction, Tourmaline said: ‘I’m always folding time in on itself because that’s how I experience it.’ Subverting the often racist and transphobic version of Mary Jones’s story and connecting her with other trans people of colour across time, Tourmaline positions Jones as a transhistorical figure. Like the main character in her film, who proclaims it in confidence, she affirms that ‘we can be anything we want to be.’

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Tate Modern
Natalie Bell Building Level 2 West
Room 9

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Tourmaline, Salacia  2019

Salacia 2019 is a digital colour video with sound, lasting just over six minutes, that can be projected or shown on a monitor. It takes the form of montage and split-screen movement of images between period drama, footage of activist history and scenes of contemporary New York, and tells the story of Mary Jones (born in 1803), a Black trans woman who lived in the nineteenth century. She was an outlaw and sex-worker living in the free Black community Seneca Village (formerly located between 82nd and 89th street) in the 1830s who was imprisoned for stealing a man’s wallet. The film takes the form of a folk tale or fable to address racism and transphobia.

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artworks in Tourmaline

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T15683: Salacia
Tourmaline Salacia 2019
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