Thesis Defence – Diana Marcela Torres Molano

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Candidate: Diana Marcela Torres Molano

Rank applied : Ph.D.
Program: Art history
Option: Thesis
Department/Faculty/School: Department of Art History

Title: Mujeres Colombianas y Arte Denunciante: Collective Resistance, Community Safeguarding and Memory-Making (2010-2024)

Date: Friday, November 29, 2024
Time: 9 a.m. – 12 p.m.
Location: Engineering, Computer Science and Visual Arts Integrated Complex, 1515 St. Catherine W., Room 6.421

Abstract

How has community-based art led by women creators contributed to confronting violence and promoting peace in Colombia, a country recovering from a civil war? (1948-2016). This dissertation highlights the often-overlooked role of women in peacebuilding at a local level through their artistic endeavours. It focuses on the period from 2010 to 2024 when art practices adopted a communal approach, primarily driven by women from rural and peripheral communities. The thesis highlights how their creative work has become crucial in reconciliation outside official frameworks, allowing them to denounce and challenge violence and engage with their communities through art.

The study establishes the concept of “arte denunciante” (art that denounces), encompassing art forms that confront violence, historical oppression, and systemic injustices in multiple contexts. Through the lenses of race and gender, it addresses how women’s practices of “arte denunciate” have evolved from traditional approaches in museums and galleries to more inclusive, community-driven processes of social change. Thus, the research frames community-based “arte denunciante” as “invented spaces” and “sites of re-existence,” showcasing their role in providing platforms for historically excluded voices and fostering communal reconciliation. By focusing on the creative strategies of Colombian women and their impact on local peace-building, the research underscores the broader relevance of “arte denunciante” as an approach applicable to global contexts experiencing conflict and violence.

The methodology of this reserach, which incorporated a “SentirPensar” (feeling-thinking) approach, was based on genuine connections with artists, active listening, site visits, and critical analyses of case studies. As such, the research was developed through oral history interviews with eight artists creating “arte denunciate” and site visits conducted in four peripheral regions in Colombia, including two urban centers and two rural towns.