Mercedes Baptiste Halliday

Anthropology | 2024 cohort

mercedes baptiste halliday

Mercedes is an artist, archaeologist-anthropologist, and is currently reading a DPhil in Anthropology at St John’s, University of Oxford. Alongside this, she is the Fugitive Emissions artist-in-residence at the Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge.

Mercedes read a BA in Archaeology and Anthropology at UCL, where she received the Margate Murray Prize for Egyptology. As a recipient of the BFI bursary, she went on to pursue a PGCert in Filmmaking at the National Film and Television School (NFTS), and then read an MPhil in Archaeology at Trinity Hall, University of Cambridge, as a Cambridge Trust Scholar.

She has previously exhibited at the Horniman Museum, UCL East, Studio Voltaire, and London College of Fashion, and has worked with various cultural organisations, such as the Council for British Archaeology, London Museum, Archaeology South-East, and Royal Museum Greenwich in curatorial, learning and engagement capacities.

Mercedes is the founder of Black Archaeo, an organisation that seeks to center the health and wellbeing of Black and Brown people through an engagement with archaeology, heritage, art and ecology. She is also a fencing coach on the Muslim Girls Fence project, run by Maslaha and British Fencing.

 

Project title

Presence, absence and the traces in between: thinking through Asante traditional architecture.

Research Summary

Asante traditional architecture refers to an architectural form prevalent between the 18th and 19th century in the Asante region of present-day Ghana. Characterised by the wattle and daub building technique, organic building materials and courtyard house structure - only ten buildings survive today, on the outskirts of Kumasi. Whilst being inscribed onto UNESCO’s World Heritage List, the buildings presently exist in a range of material states: some as reproductions, others in states of material ruination, or perhaps material absence - existing only as traces in the archive and memory. As such, these buildings inhabit multiple worlds, temporalities, and exist, or perhaps do not exist, between varying and shifting degrees of presence, absence and traces. This research is interested in how various actors, from the Okomfo’s (priests), craftspeople and tourists, to more-than-human actors, such as ancestors, spirits and invasive plants, interact with and conceptualise the constant flux and shiftiness of these buildings, and the things they pull into their orbit.