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‘Maria was actually due to give birth on that boat,” says Aisha Mirza with a half sigh, half laugh. “We were all excited, but she ended up starting labour early and having the baby in the hospital. Then she brought the baby to the boat and I got to photograph their first few days together. That was really special.”
Mirza, an artist and writer, is speaking via Zoom, sitting outside on a bench on a sunny autumn day talking me through some of the photographs in their new exhibition and smiling. WWWADING, is a five-year culmination of photography and oral history collected along the canals of London with a focus on boaters of colour. Inspired by the idea of what they call “a marginalised people choosing a marginalised way of life”, the photographs are an ode to a community of queer or disabled boaters in their natural habitat, who don’t typically have a lens on their existence.
Mirza is half Pakistani and Egyptian (and a boater) and talks about how water is part of their current and ancestral historical past. “One of the things that unites a lot of black and brown people is that we have movement in our lineages. Whether that’s violent displacement, migration, economic movement, we’ve all sailed on seas to get here and end up on this strange land. So it felt obvious that communities of colour occupying these spaces would be explored.”
Mirza began asking boaters uncommon questions. How has water proven up within the historical past of your loved ones? How do boats inform how you reside now? “One person I was interviewing was like: ‘Well, the British build canals. That’s what they do.’” The thought of colonial capitalism carved into the earth by way of watery networks provides the work a vital edge. “It’s considered an incredible feat of engineering despite facilitating colonialism and control through commerce and capitalism. Large areas of marshland were destroyed to build these and land never recovers.”
The title WWWADING elicits concepts of watery battle and the net, which places us in a contemporary world, regardless of our want to flee it at occasions. Mirza describes desirous to be as near off-grid dwelling as you’ll be able to in a metropolis. “When I first moved on to a boat, I was saying I was off grid as a joke until I realised that people living on boats in London are for the most part not tapped into any of the main grid systems. For constant cruisers, like me, who move my boat every two weeks, we’re managing our own water, we’re creating our own electricity, using solar power and gas from bottles. It’s quite hardcore.”
The footage communicate to how individuals are utilizing home-making as an act of resistance in opposition to the excessive prices of London dwelling. From the inclusion of mobility scooters on boats to indicators declaring “THE TRUTH IS IN THE SOIL” (“I heard there’s one that says Compost The Rich, but I couldn’t find it”) or show items of Indian and Pakistani flags kissing.
One {photograph} captures a boater on a towpath doing somebody’s hair in a young present of communion; one other is of a boater, Esme, consuming a Pot Noodle. “She makes ceramics using clay foraged from the towpath,” says Mirza. “She has this tiny boat and she has an enormous dog on it. It’s as big as her.” There’s humour within the photographs too. “There’s two swans who’ve swum up to my front door – and you can see an Amazon box.”
One {photograph} captures an individual in a “Boaters Fightback” T-shirt, referencing a rising motion to withstand the federal government’s assist of privatisation of land across the waterways. “The canals used to be a place of working-class labour, but now they’re a place of waterfront views and million-pound flats,” sighs Mirza. “Residents overlooking the beautiful waterways of London don’t necessarily want to see poor people living in boats.”
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Mirza’s images seize the neighbourliness of boaters. We discuss an image they took of their ex-wife in a shower regardless of a shower being virtually unattainable to put in. “The hardest thing for me about living on a boat is not having a bath. I’m a water baby, but I live on a boat on water as polluted as the London waters are so I can’t swim!”
We talk about this battle that governs a lot of our lives: selecting to dwell in a metropolis that isn’t at all times nice for our well being, and perhaps being a continuing cruiser makes that simpler to handle. We’re silent for a second pondering of how all of us navigate political, social, cultural air pollution – and all of a sudden Mirza smiles and we talk about the tub image and the way individuals create glimmers of solar for themselves. “She just looks so beautiful with her gaze and being really present,” they are saying fortunately. “For a moment, you forget the capitalist real estate treadmill – and you’re given these moments. That’s what I’m living for.”
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