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exp. 1
exp. 2
exp. 3
Documentation
exp. 3: Affect Archives. Sinthujan Varatharajah – Osías Yanov
For exp. 3, researcher, essayist, and political geographer Sinthujan Varatharajah looks critically into the aftermath of the 1983 anti-Tamil pogroms and riots in Sri Lanka—and the wars and genocide that followed. These led hundreds of thousands of Tamils into exile. For those who emigrated to Europe, divided Berlin was their personal entry point. At the time, the Berlin Wall played a little-known role as a permeable gateway, a transit point used as a loophole of survival for many then “Third World” refugees. A special agreement between East and West Germany enabled refugees to enter through East Germany to settle in the West. In the 1980s, the political cracks in the walls of partitioned Germany became a lifeline of survival for the Tamil. This specific history of the Wall is the point of departure for Varatharajah’s investigations into physical and cultural borders and the memories of displacement of this community. Gathered in the exhibition space at the architectural complex at ExRotaprint are different traces of these transit routes, such as oral histories, newspaper clippings, photographs, maps, and other collected materials. Together they form a living archive reflecting on issues of encampment, statelessness, and spatial power, bringing forth a displaced people and their untold stories.
Wall texts (English, German, Tamil)
All audio material consists of excerpts from interviews with Eelam Tamils living in Germany, commented on and realized by Sinthujan Varatharajah:
Audio: Schönefeld Airport (German and Tamil)
Audio: Friedrichstraße (German and Tamil)
Audio: Zoologischer Garten (German and Tamil)
Audio: Life in camps for Eelam-Tamil refugees (German and Tamil)
Talk by Sinthujan Varatharajah with Duygu Örs, 28.2.2020:
Video: how to move an arche
For more information on the work of Sinthujan Varatharajah see @varathas
Photos: Mathias Völzke
Thanks to:
Umut Aydın, Till Gathmann, Jeyasangar Gopalapillai, Jakob Jakobsen, Ponniah Karunaharmoorthy, Ranjini Karunaharmoorthy, Sinduja Krishnakumaran, Abinaya Kumarakuranathan, Elif Küçük, Nadarajah Mathivathanasekaram, Prashanthy Mathivathanasekaram, Ram Paramanathan, Bruntha Puvaneswaran, Krishanthy Puvaneswaran, Selvaratnam Puvaneswaran, Yanantha Puvaneswaran, Tanasgol Sabbagh, Dama Sathianathan, Rathy Sriskandarajah, Yogarajah Sriskandarajah, Ralph Tharayil, Maharaj Varatharajah, Senthuran Varatharajah, Shanthynee Varatharajah, Sinnadurai Varatharajah & Garunya Wieczorek
Hatred Among Us
Lisette Lagnado
Essay
Weaving Solidarity
Renata Cervetto and Duygu Örs
Q&A
Expresiones de la locura: el arte de los enfermos mentales
Hans Prinzhorn
Monograph
Touching Feeling. Affect, Pedagogy, Performativity
Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick
Monograph
„Klaus Eckschen: Hörspiel“
Die Remise
Hörspiel
Queer Ancient Ways: A Decolonial Exploration
Zairong Xiang
Monograph
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
Documentation
exp. 3: Affect Archives. Sinthujan Varatharajah – Osías Yanov
For exp. 3, researcher, essayist, and political geographer Sinthujan Varatharajah looks critically into the aftermath of the 1983 anti-Tamil pogroms and riots in Sri Lanka—and the wars and genocide that followed. These led hundreds of thousands of Tamils into exile. For those who emigrated to Europe, divided Berlin was their personal entry point. At the time, the Berlin Wall played a little-known role as a permeable gateway, a transit point used as a loophole of survival for many then “Third World” refugees. A special agreement between East and West Germany enabled refugees to enter through East Germany to settle in the West. In the 1980s, the political cracks in the walls of partitioned Germany became a lifeline of survival for the Tamil. This specific history of the Wall is the point of departure for Varatharajah’s investigations into physical and cultural borders and the memories of displacement of this community. Gathered in the exhibition space at the architectural complex at ExRotaprint are different traces of these transit routes, such as oral histories, newspaper clippings, photographs, maps, and other collected materials. Together they form a living archive reflecting on issues of encampment, statelessness, and spatial power, bringing forth a displaced people and their untold stories.
Wall texts (English, German, Tamil)
All audio material consists of excerpts from interviews with Eelam Tamils living in Germany, commented on and realized by Sinthujan Varatharajah:
Audio: Schönefeld Airport (German and Tamil)
Audio: Friedrichstraße (German and Tamil)
Audio: Zoologischer Garten (German and Tamil)
Audio: Life in camps for Eelam-Tamil refugees (German and Tamil)
Talk by Sinthujan Varatharajah with Duygu Örs, 28.2.2020:
Video: how to move an arche
For more information on the work of Sinthujan Varatharajah see @varathas
Photos: Mathias Völzke
Thanks to:
Umut Aydın, Till Gathmann, Jeyasangar Gopalapillai, Jakob Jakobsen, Ponniah Karunaharmoorthy, Ranjini Karunaharmoorthy, Sinduja Krishnakumaran, Abinaya Kumarakuranathan, Elif Küçük, Nadarajah Mathivathanasekaram, Prashanthy Mathivathanasekaram, Ram Paramanathan, Bruntha Puvaneswaran, Krishanthy Puvaneswaran, Selvaratnam Puvaneswaran, Yanantha Puvaneswaran, Tanasgol Sabbagh, Dama Sathianathan, Rathy Sriskandarajah, Yogarajah Sriskandarajah, Ralph Tharayil, Maharaj Varatharajah, Senthuran Varatharajah, Shanthynee Varatharajah, Sinnadurai Varatharajah & Garunya Wieczorek
Umbilical Cord Amulet
McCord Museum
Object
IV: How Fear Can Dismantle a Body. Vis-a-Vis with two of four curators of the 11th Berlin Biennale
María Berríos, Lisette Lagnado
Conversation
Maternidades subversivas
María Llopis
Monograph
Being in Crisis together – Einander in Krisen begegnen
Feminist Health Care Research Group (Inga Zimprich/Julia Bonn)
Online workshop
Glossary of Common Knowledge
L’Internationale Online
Glossary
Weaving Solidarity
Renata Cervetto and Duygu Örs
Q&A
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
Documentation
exp. 3: Affect Archives. Sinthujan Varatharajah – Osías Yanov
For exp. 3, researcher, essayist, and political geographer Sinthujan Varatharajah looks critically into the aftermath of the 1983 anti-Tamil pogroms and riots in Sri Lanka—and the wars and genocide that followed. These led hundreds of thousands of Tamils into exile. For those who emigrated to Europe, divided Berlin was their personal entry point. At the time, the Berlin Wall played a little-known role as a permeable gateway, a transit point used as a loophole of survival for many then “Third World” refugees. A special agreement between East and West Germany enabled refugees to enter through East Germany to settle in the West. In the 1980s, the political cracks in the walls of partitioned Germany became a lifeline of survival for the Tamil. This specific history of the Wall is the point of departure for Varatharajah’s investigations into physical and cultural borders and the memories of displacement of this community. Gathered in the exhibition space at the architectural complex at ExRotaprint are different traces of these transit routes, such as oral histories, newspaper clippings, photographs, maps, and other collected materials. Together they form a living archive reflecting on issues of encampment, statelessness, and spatial power, bringing forth a displaced people and their untold stories.
Wall texts (English, German, Tamil)
All audio material consists of excerpts from interviews with Eelam Tamils living in Germany, commented on and realized by Sinthujan Varatharajah:
Audio: Schönefeld Airport (German and Tamil)
Audio: Friedrichstraße (German and Tamil)
Audio: Zoologischer Garten (German and Tamil)
Audio: Life in camps for Eelam-Tamil refugees (German and Tamil)
Talk by Sinthujan Varatharajah with Duygu Örs, 28.2.2020:
Video: how to move an arche
For more information on the work of Sinthujan Varatharajah see @varathas
Photos: Mathias Völzke
Thanks to:
Umut Aydın, Till Gathmann, Jeyasangar Gopalapillai, Jakob Jakobsen, Ponniah Karunaharmoorthy, Ranjini Karunaharmoorthy, Sinduja Krishnakumaran, Abinaya Kumarakuranathan, Elif Küçük, Nadarajah Mathivathanasekaram, Prashanthy Mathivathanasekaram, Ram Paramanathan, Bruntha Puvaneswaran, Krishanthy Puvaneswaran, Selvaratnam Puvaneswaran, Yanantha Puvaneswaran, Tanasgol Sabbagh, Dama Sathianathan, Rathy Sriskandarajah, Yogarajah Sriskandarajah, Ralph Tharayil, Maharaj Varatharajah, Senthuran Varatharajah, Shanthynee Varatharajah, Sinnadurai Varatharajah & Garunya Wieczorek
Teatro da Vertigem
Monograph
Género y colonialidad en busca de claves de lectura y de un vocabulario estratégico descolonial
Rita Segato
Essay
BLM KOREA ARTS
#BlackLivesMatter #BLMKoreaArts
Young-jun Tak
Statement
Expresiones de la locura: el arte de los enfermos mentales
Hans Prinzhorn
Monograph
New Look
Flávio de Carvalho
Performance
Fragments of the Artist’s Diary, Berlin 11.2019–1.2020
Virginia de Medeiros
Diary
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
Documentation
exp. 3: Affect Archives. Sinthujan Varatharajah – Osías Yanov
For exp. 3, researcher, essayist, and political geographer Sinthujan Varatharajah looks critically into the aftermath of the 1983 anti-Tamil pogroms and riots in Sri Lanka—and the wars and genocide that followed. These led hundreds of thousands of Tamils into exile. For those who emigrated to Europe, divided Berlin was their personal entry point. At the time, the Berlin Wall played a little-known role as a permeable gateway, a transit point used as a loophole of survival for many then “Third World” refugees. A special agreement between East and West Germany enabled refugees to enter through East Germany to settle in the West. In the 1980s, the political cracks in the walls of partitioned Germany became a lifeline of survival for the Tamil. This specific history of the Wall is the point of departure for Varatharajah’s investigations into physical and cultural borders and the memories of displacement of this community. Gathered in the exhibition space at the architectural complex at ExRotaprint are different traces of these transit routes, such as oral histories, newspaper clippings, photographs, maps, and other collected materials. Together they form a living archive reflecting on issues of encampment, statelessness, and spatial power, bringing forth a displaced people and their untold stories.
Wall texts (English, German, Tamil)
All audio material consists of excerpts from interviews with Eelam Tamils living in Germany, commented on and realized by Sinthujan Varatharajah:
Audio: Schönefeld Airport (German and Tamil)
Audio: Friedrichstraße (German and Tamil)
Audio: Zoologischer Garten (German and Tamil)
Audio: Life in camps for Eelam-Tamil refugees (German and Tamil)
Talk by Sinthujan Varatharajah with Duygu Örs, 28.2.2020:
Video: how to move an arche
For more information on the work of Sinthujan Varatharajah see @varathas
Photos: Mathias Völzke
Thanks to:
Umut Aydın, Till Gathmann, Jeyasangar Gopalapillai, Jakob Jakobsen, Ponniah Karunaharmoorthy, Ranjini Karunaharmoorthy, Sinduja Krishnakumaran, Abinaya Kumarakuranathan, Elif Küçük, Nadarajah Mathivathanasekaram, Prashanthy Mathivathanasekaram, Ram Paramanathan, Bruntha Puvaneswaran, Krishanthy Puvaneswaran, Selvaratnam Puvaneswaran, Yanantha Puvaneswaran, Tanasgol Sabbagh, Dama Sathianathan, Rathy Sriskandarajah, Yogarajah Sriskandarajah, Ralph Tharayil, Maharaj Varatharajah, Senthuran Varatharajah, Shanthynee Varatharajah, Sinnadurai Varatharajah & Garunya Wieczorek
Glossary of Common Knowledge
L’Internationale Online
Glossary
Weaving Solidarity
Renata Cervetto and Duygu Örs
Q&A
Struggle as Culture: The Museum of Solidarity, 1971–73
María Berríos
Essay
Queer Ancient Ways: A Decolonial Exploration
Zairong Xiang
Monograph
Hatred Among Us
Lisette Lagnado
Essay
Expresiones de la locura: el arte de los enfermos mentales
Hans Prinzhorn
Monograph
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.