An Archaeology of Disability: A Dialogic Essay

David Gissen, Pia Hargrove, Brooke Holmes, Jennifer Stager, Christopher Tester, Pasquale Toscano, Mantha Zarmakoupi

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

An Archaeology of Disability is a research station designed for the Venice Biennale, Architettura 2021 by David Gissen, Jennifer Stager, and Mantha Zarmakoupi and exhibited later at La Gipsoteca di Arte Antica of Pisa in 2022, at the Canellopoulos Museum of Athens in 2023, and at the Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki in 2024. The research station works with languages and forms used by contemporary disabled people to reproduce elements - a ramp, a seat, an art gallery - from the ancient Acropolis in Athens that vanished long ago and that have little or no extant material forms. Among the many people who contributed to the research station are two performers, Christopher Tester and Pia Hargrove, who performed, respectively, the ekphrastic film and audio description Semata (Signs) (2021). The following dialogic essay draws on conversations with the curators and performers led by Brooke Holmes and Pasquale Toscano. This dialogic form surfaces some of the collaborative aspects of the research station to highlight the ways in which such collaboration brings different lenses to antiquity.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)317-363
Number of pages47
JournalClassical Antiquity
Volume43
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 1 2024

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Classics

Keywords

  • access
  • accommodation
  • American Sign Language
  • classicism
  • community
  • cripistemology
  • Deaf
  • democracy
  • disability
  • disability aesthetics
  • disability justice
  • Greek Sign Language
  • impairment
  • materiality
  • monument

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