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ºÚÁÏÉç Film

Maxime Jean-Baptiste It Would be Alright if He Changed My Name

10 May 2025 at 16.00–18.00
A man moving in a dynamic motion, pressing his arms outwards, with his eyes closed. He is lit by a soft glowing blue light. He is wearing black clothes and has a microphone attached round his head.

Maxime Jean-Baptiste, To Yield 2023. Courtesy the artist and Alchemy Film and Moving Image Festival.

Catch Maxime Jean Baptiste’s new lecture performance exploring the legacies of slavery today

As part of ºÚÁÏÉç’s anniversary weekend, and in collaboration with Open City Film Festival, Maxime Jean-Baptiste presents a lecture-performance exploring how slavery affects Black lives today. The work is inspired by his role as an extra in a TV adaptation of Les Misérables by Victor Hugo, a novel set in France between 1815 and the 1832 June Rebellion.

In the mini-series, Jean-Baptiste played a slave on a replica slave ship. The harsh conditions on set triggered his asthma, forcing him to quit. He was paid in cash and left the job. By bringing this experience to the stage, Jean-Baptiste questions the structures of cinema and the impact of recreating violent histories on Black bodies.

The title, It Would be Alright if He Changed My Name, comes from a 1962 song by Nina Simone about racial injustice. It also refers to Simone’s decision to change her name to keep her music career hidden from her family.

Through this performance, Jean-Baptiste sheds light on racial profiling and the struggles of extras, who are often ignored. He challenges how marginalized people are treated in performance spaces and questions the way their labour is used in art.

This event is organized in collaboration with Open City Documentary Festival and Alchemy Film and Moving Image Festival, Scotland.

With support from the General Representation of Wallonia-Brussels.

  • Introductions
  • Maxime Jean-Baptiste, It Would be Alright if He Changed My Name 2025, 50 min
  • Conversation with the artist and Yasmina Price, followed by a Q&A

Maxime Jean-Baptiste

Maxime Jean-Baptiste is a filmmaker based in Brussels and Paris. Born and raised in the context of the Guyano-Antillese diaspora in France, of a French mother and Guyanese father, he is interested in the complexity of Western colonial history by detecting and portraying the survival of past traumas in the present. In doing so, he delves into archives and types of reenactments that imagine living and embodied memories. His film Listen to the Beat of Our Images (2021) was selected for ISFF Clermont-Ferrand, Sundance Film Festival and IDFA, among others. His first feature film, Kouté vwa (2024) is presented in London as part of the OpenCity Film Festival.

Yasmina Price

Yasmina Price is a New York–based writer and film programmer completing a PhD at Yale University. She focuses on anticolonial cinema from the Global South and the work of visual artists across the African continent and diaspora, with a particular interest in the experimental work of women filmmakers.

This event will be BSL interpreted.

You can enter via the Cinema entrance, left of the Turbine Hall main entrance, and into the Natalie Bell Building on Holland Street, or into the Blavatnik Building on Sumner street. The Starr Cinema is on Level 1 of the Natalie Bell Building.

There are lifts to every floor of the Blavatnik and Natalie Bell buildings. Alternatively you can take the stairs.

  • Fully accessible toilets are located on every floor on the concourses.
  • A quiet room is available to use in the Natalie Bell Building on Level 4.
  • Ear defenders can be borrowed from the Ticket desks.

To help plan your visit to ºÚÁÏÉç, have a look at our visual story. It includes photographs and information about what you can expect from a visit to the gallery.

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Starr Cinema

Bankside
London SE1 9TG
ºÚÁÏÉç

Date & Time

10 May 2025 at 16.00–18.00

Advance tickets are now fully booked, extra space may be available on the day

Pricing

£0 / £0 for Members

Part of the ºÚÁÏÉç Birthday Weekender

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