Masha, Agraw, Tiwiza, Agadir, Assays

Masha, Agraw, Tiwiza, Agadir, Assays
22 November 2024, 6:00 PM–9:00 PM
RoundtableWorkshopLecture-performanceScreening

Please join us for a workshop and an evening devoted to cosmologies of the commons in West Asia and North Africa, and their present resurgence. 

Thursday, 21 November 2024, the workshop takes place at Atelier Kanal, Square Sainctelette 12, 1000 Brussels. Tea will be served from 16:30 and the workshop starts at 17:00. The workshops are free and in English. The workshop by Tizintizwa Collective is targeted at people of North-African and West Asian cultures or origin who are interested in archive policies. The workshop by Marwa Arsanios is intended for organisers working in the field of culture. 

Friday, 22 November 2024, the evening is hosted at K1, Avenue du Port 1, 1000 Brussels. Drinks will be served from 17:30, with the screening starting at 18:00 and the roundtable at 19:00. The event is free and in English. 

This workshop and the event are co-produced by de Appel en Kanal-Centre Pompidou.

Biographies

  • Philippe Pirotte

    Philippe Pirotte, co-artistic director of the Busan Biennale 2024, is a professor of Art History and former rector at the Städelschule in Frankfurt am Main in Germany. He is also an adjunct senior curator at the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive at the University of California, Berkeley. In 1999, Pirotte co-founded the contemporary art center Objectif Exhibitions in Antwerp. From 2005 to 2011 he was director of Kunsthalle Bern in Switzerland and from 2004-2013 a senior advisor at the Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten in Amsterdam. Recently, he curated a survey exhibition of performance artist Melati Suryodarmo at the Bonnefanten Museum Maastricht (2022) and the group show Arus Balik: From below the wind to above the wind and back again at the Center for Contemporary Art in Singapore (2019). Pirotte was a member of the curatorial team for the 2017 Jakarta Biennale and served as artistic director of La Biennale de Montréal in Canada in 2016. In addition to curating, he has also edited several books and authored numerous essays and contributions to catalogues on modern and contemporary art. Most recently, he edited an anthology of writings by the artist Hassan Khan. 
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  • Marwa Arsanios

    Marwa Arsanios addresses structural questions using different devices, forms and strategies. From investigating the conflict-driven transformation of architecture to exploring artist-run spaces and temporary conventions between feminist communes and cooperatives, her practice aims to make space within − and without − existing art structures to experiment with different kinds of politics. She frequently uses the medium (and space) of film to connect struggles as if they were images. In recent years, Arsanios has adopted a new materialist perspective on these issues, focusing on feminist movements and historic land struggles. In this approach, she explores questions of property, law, economy and ecology while looking at specific plots of lands and the people who work on them. Her multidisciplinary research and collaborative methods have been deployed in numerous projects.  
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  • Tizintizwa

    Tizintizwa ("mountain pass of the bees") is a polydisciplinary art and research collective that provides pretexts for collective creation and cross-pollination. Their practice is based on working together and with others, finding consonance in difference and championing heterogeneity in nature and culture. Their work often involves collaborating with agricultural communities, documenting oral literature and ancestral traditions, observing ecological transformations, facilitating cross-regional dialogue and highlighting the importance of transgenerational transmission and the relationship between land and people. In 2019, Tizintizwa initiated AWAL, a collaborative oral heritage archive project which includes a rural residency and a public programme dedicated to documenting, unpacking and curating "oraliture" in Morocco and beyond. 
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A workshop about archiving and organising, inspired by the commons in West Asia and North Africa

21 November 2024, 5:00 PM–8:00 PM
Atelier KANAL, Brussels
Workshop
Please join us for a workshop on archiving and organising, inspired by the commons in West Asia and North Africa. After a brief introduction, participants divide into two groups, focusing on different practices. Soumeya Ait Ahmed and Nadir Bouhmouch will run a workshop on adopting the ancestral concepts of the Agadir (a collective granary) and Agraw (a consensus-based village assembly) into contemporary archiving practices, using their AWAL research on oral archives as a case study. In parallel, Marwa Arsanios will guide a reflection on how the Mashaa (a communal system of land tenure that transcends ownership and still exists in West Asia) can be applied to art organisations of different scales. We will conclude with a group session where participants can share their insights and ideas.