January 22, 2010

Russian skaters should rethink routine

Russian ice dancers should rethink their routine

By Bev MantonFrom an Aboriginal perspective, this performance is offensive. It was clearly not meant to mock Aboriginal culture, but that does not make it acceptable to Aboriginal people. There are a number of problems with the performance, not least of all the fact both skaters are wearing brown body suits to make their skin appear darker. That alone puts them on a very slippery slope.

Australians know only too well the offence that can be caused by white people trying to depict themselves as black people during performance pieces. Last year's domestic and international furore over the blackface skit on Hey, Hey it's Saturday's Red Faces is a recent case in point.

That said, I don't think it's the most offensive part of the performance. That honour belongs to some of the claims by Domnina and Shabalin that have accompanied it.

They are not, as they state, wearing "authentic Aboriginal paint markings." They are wearing white body paint in designs they dreamed up after reading about Aboriginal Australians on the Internet. The designs are no more "authentic" or "Aboriginal" than the shiploads of cheap, "Aboriginal" tourist trinkets that pour into our country from overseas.

This is not a particularly difficult concept. For art to be Australian, it must be painted by an Australian, and for art to be Australian Aboriginal, it must be painted by an Australian Aboriginal. Russian art is not painted by Italians, and I doubt Russians would be impressed if someone tried to pass it off otherwise.
Comment:  For more on the subject, see Russian Skaters Do "Aboriginal Dance."

Below:  "Russian ice dancers Oksana Domnina and Maxim Shabalin perform the routine that has angered indigenous Australians." (Photo: AFP)

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