White Cube

  • Renzo Martens
  • Netherlands, Belgium, Democratic Republic of the Congo
  • 2020
  • 79 min
  • World Premiere
  • IDFA Competition for Dutch Documentary, IDFA Competition for Feature-Length Documentary

Visitors to the temples of modern art in global cities will be familiar with the white cube gallery space. But when one arises in the middle of a Congolese palm oil plantation, the effect is deeply disorienting. Furthermore, it draws attention to the often overlooked ties between colonialism and the art world, for example, through the multinationals that now proudly sponsor these Western museums.

This Congolese arts center is part of artist Renzo Martens’s unorthodox plan to jump-start the local economy. Former workers at the plantation make sculptures that are reproduced in chocolate, and then exhibited in New York. The plantation workers, most of whom earn a dollar or less a day, use the profits from this successful exhibition to buy back the land confiscated from them by Unilever.

This documentary sees Martens continue on from Enjoy Poverty (2008), in which he encouraged impoverished African people to use photography to exploit their own suffering. On that occasion however, the film established that the local population earned nothing from their efforts. This new film documents an attempt to reverse the flow of wealth and use the privileges associated with the art world to bring about real change.

Credits

  • 79 min
  • color
  • DCP
  • Spoken languages: Lingala, French, English
  • Subtitles in: English
Director
Renzo Martens
Production
Pieter van Huystee for Pieter van Huystee Film
Co-production
Inti Films
Cinematography
Renzo Martens, Dareck Tuba, Hans Bouma, Maarten Kramer, Daan Wallis, Remco Bikkers, Louise van Assche, Eric Vander Borght, Jean Counet, Deschamps Matala, Lisa Perez, Boaz van der Spek
Editing
Boaz van der Spek, Eric Vander Borght, Jos de Putter, Jan de Coster

IDFA history

2020
World Premiere
IDFA Competition for Dutch Documentary
IDFA Competition for Feature-Length Documentary
2018
Rough Cut Project

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IDFA history

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