2022
Digital inkjet print on polyester yoryu, embroidered with gold leaf thread
Overall: 50 × 54 in. (127 × 137.2 cm.)
August 2023 - June 2024
Eltonhead Manor Room, Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore, US
BMA 2022.198
Colonial Desires is part of a reinstallation of the Eltonhead Manor period room at Baltimore Museum of Art in order to enrich contemporary understanding of trade histories in the Chesapeake Bay. It serves as a new sail for public history storytelling.
The scarf at right by Beatrice Glow, an American contemporary artist of Taiwanese descent, hangs like a ship’s sail. Glow’s images narrate how trade, enslavement, and exploitation are intertwined in Maryland’s tobacco industry. Using historic sources, Glow mapped the tobacco trade from plantations in the United States to Chinese ports. Colonial Desires is based on the events of merchant and enslaver Captain John O’Donnell’s (1749-1805) return to Baltimore from China in 1785. When O’Donnell arrived in Baltimore harbor, he abruptly sold his ship and used the money to purchase a plantation that he named Canton, now the location of Baltimore’s Canton neighborhood. In doing so, he stranded a crew of Chinese and South Asian sailors in the colonies against their will. Through a smoky montage of this history, Glow’s scarf signals the exploitative effect of Chesapeake trade on a global scale.