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Thursday, 29.10.2020
6–8 pm
RSVP required
Glaskiste c/o ExRotaprint
Gottschedstraße 4, 13357 Berlin
In English
Free admission, limited capacity
Share: Facebook
The 11th Berlin Biennale’s final gathering aims to move away from Western philosophy and cultural theory’s understandings of death and mourning. It emphasizes themes of death, mourning, and life after death from a queer perspective, using a critique of norms, questioning ontologies, epistemologies, and ethics, as well as bio and necropolitical agendas, based on the works of the artists presented in the 11th Berlin Biennale exhibition.
Taking into consideration that for Indigenous peoples death has been life’s silent companion since the start of the colonial conquest, these artistic interventions attempt to critique discourses on death and mourning associated with heteronormative models of familial bonds, chronological lifestyles, norms for intergenerational relationships, and “adequate” responses to biopolitical regimes of health and life. They delve into the cultural ties that Indigenous peoples have maintained in their understanding of mourning as a form of both cultural expression and struggle, and, in this sense, broaden the spectrum of the sexo-dissident struggle, understood as bodies that are battlegrounds and decolonial resistance beyond their mortality.
The event will be recorded on video and made available on our website afterwards.
Please note that due to the current situation, admission to the event is limited and will only be possible with a facemask. Due to the limited capacity, the event is already fully booked.
THE MOBILIZATION
Nicolás Cuello
Text
Museo de la Solidaridad Salvador Allende (MSSA) in Berlin
A conversation between María Berríos and Melanie Roumiguière
Conversation
New Look
Flávio de Carvalho
Performance
Grupo Experimental de Cine en acción
Gabriel Peluffo
Drawing
Invitation to the Species: Cecilia Vicuña
Tamaas / Cecilia Vicuña
Podcast
El primer nueva corónica y buen gobierno
Felipe Guamán Poma de Ayala
Chronicle
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
Thursday, 29.10.2020
6–8 pm
RSVP required
Glaskiste c/o ExRotaprint
Gottschedstraße 4, 13357 Berlin
In English
Free admission, limited capacity
Share: Facebook
The 11th Berlin Biennale’s final gathering aims to move away from Western philosophy and cultural theory’s understandings of death and mourning. It emphasizes themes of death, mourning, and life after death from a queer perspective, using a critique of norms, questioning ontologies, epistemologies, and ethics, as well as bio and necropolitical agendas, based on the works of the artists presented in the 11th Berlin Biennale exhibition.
Taking into consideration that for Indigenous peoples death has been life’s silent companion since the start of the colonial conquest, these artistic interventions attempt to critique discourses on death and mourning associated with heteronormative models of familial bonds, chronological lifestyles, norms for intergenerational relationships, and “adequate” responses to biopolitical regimes of health and life. They delve into the cultural ties that Indigenous peoples have maintained in their understanding of mourning as a form of both cultural expression and struggle, and, in this sense, broaden the spectrum of the sexo-dissident struggle, understood as bodies that are battlegrounds and decolonial resistance beyond their mortality.
The event will be recorded on video and made available on our website afterwards.
Please note that due to the current situation, admission to the event is limited and will only be possible with a facemask. Due to the limited capacity, the event is already fully booked.
„Klaus Eckschen: Hörspiel“
Die Remise
Hörspiel
Queer Ancient Ways: A Decolonial Exploration
Zairong Xiang
Monograph
Género y colonialidad en busca de claves de lectura y de un vocabulario estratégico descolonial
Rita Segato
Essay
Grupo Experimental de Cine en acción
Gabriel Peluffo
Drawing
Feminist Health Care Research Group
Web archive
Glossary of Common Knowledge
L’Internationale Online
Glossary
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
Thursday, 29.10.2020
6–8 pm
RSVP required
Glaskiste c/o ExRotaprint
Gottschedstraße 4, 13357 Berlin
In English
Free admission, limited capacity
Share: Facebook
The 11th Berlin Biennale’s final gathering aims to move away from Western philosophy and cultural theory’s understandings of death and mourning. It emphasizes themes of death, mourning, and life after death from a queer perspective, using a critique of norms, questioning ontologies, epistemologies, and ethics, as well as bio and necropolitical agendas, based on the works of the artists presented in the 11th Berlin Biennale exhibition.
Taking into consideration that for Indigenous peoples death has been life’s silent companion since the start of the colonial conquest, these artistic interventions attempt to critique discourses on death and mourning associated with heteronormative models of familial bonds, chronological lifestyles, norms for intergenerational relationships, and “adequate” responses to biopolitical regimes of health and life. They delve into the cultural ties that Indigenous peoples have maintained in their understanding of mourning as a form of both cultural expression and struggle, and, in this sense, broaden the spectrum of the sexo-dissident struggle, understood as bodies that are battlegrounds and decolonial resistance beyond their mortality.
The event will be recorded on video and made available on our website afterwards.
Please note that due to the current situation, admission to the event is limited and will only be possible with a facemask. Due to the limited capacity, the event is already fully booked.
I: Junto a las curadoras de la XI Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art
Renata Cervetto, Lisette Lagnado
Conversation
Touching Feeling. Affect, Pedagogy, Performativity
Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick
Monograph
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
Solidarity and Storytelling. Rumors against Enclosure
María Berríos
Essay
A World Without Bones
Agustín Pérez Rubio
Memorial to the Sinti and Roma Victims of National Socialism
Dani Karavan
Memorial
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
Thursday, 29.10.2020
6–8 pm
RSVP required
Glaskiste c/o ExRotaprint
Gottschedstraße 4, 13357 Berlin
In English
Free admission, limited capacity
Share: Facebook
The 11th Berlin Biennale’s final gathering aims to move away from Western philosophy and cultural theory’s understandings of death and mourning. It emphasizes themes of death, mourning, and life after death from a queer perspective, using a critique of norms, questioning ontologies, epistemologies, and ethics, as well as bio and necropolitical agendas, based on the works of the artists presented in the 11th Berlin Biennale exhibition.
Taking into consideration that for Indigenous peoples death has been life’s silent companion since the start of the colonial conquest, these artistic interventions attempt to critique discourses on death and mourning associated with heteronormative models of familial bonds, chronological lifestyles, norms for intergenerational relationships, and “adequate” responses to biopolitical regimes of health and life. They delve into the cultural ties that Indigenous peoples have maintained in their understanding of mourning as a form of both cultural expression and struggle, and, in this sense, broaden the spectrum of the sexo-dissident struggle, understood as bodies that are battlegrounds and decolonial resistance beyond their mortality.
The event will be recorded on video and made available on our website afterwards.
Please note that due to the current situation, admission to the event is limited and will only be possible with a facemask. Due to the limited capacity, the event is already fully booked.
A World Without Bones
Agustín Pérez Rubio
Género y colonialidad en busca de claves de lectura y de un vocabulario estratégico descolonial
Rita Segato
Essay
El primer nueva corónica y buen gobierno
Felipe Guamán Poma de Ayala
Chronicle
Grupo Experimental de Cine en acción
Gabriel Peluffo
Drawing
Solidarity and Storytelling. Rumors against Enclosure
María Berríos
Essay
Museo de la Solidaridad Salvador Allende (MSSA) in Berlin
A conversation between María Berríos and Melanie Roumiguière
Conversation
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.