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Venue: Gropius Bau
Born 2017 in Tilcara, AR
Bartolina Xixa is an Andean drag queen who was born in the province of Jujuy, northern Argentina, on November 28, 2017. She is a persona created by Coya artist and dancer Maximiliano Mamani (born in 1995, also in Jujuy) out of an impulse to question the colonial origins of subaltern identities in the cultures of the South and the associated imposition of the categories of race and gender. Xixa is a tribute to the Bolivian revolutionary leader Bartolina Sisa Vargas (c.1750–82), an Aymara woman who fought alongside her husband Túpac Katari (c. 1750–81) against the colonial occupation of present-day Peru and Bolivia in the eighteenth century and was eventually executed by Spanish troops. Through Xixa, Mamani evokes Indigenous struggle as a foundation for undoing patriarchal and racist paradigms, while also paying homage to the women of his family and the people of the Quebrada de Humahuaca valley in Jujuy. This region has been persistently subjugated by hegemonic power structures that have denied local Indigenous peoples visibility and access to resources through the imposition of white culture and capitalism.
The music video Ramita Seca, La Colonialidad Permanente [Dry Twig, The Permanent Coloniality, 2019] shows Xixa dancing in the middle of a dumping ground in a self-created choreography. The music and lyrics are by folk singer Aldana Bello. Dressed in traditional attire amidst worn-out mattresses, garbage bags, and dust, Xixa uses movements that suggest ancestral remedies to colonial extractivist violence. The work functions as a call for the dissident bodies affected by the predatory systems in place in the former colonies to take a political stance and to combat socioeconomic inequalities and structural violence as a means of healing colonial wounds.
Beatriz Lemos
A Moment of True Decolonization / Episode #6: Sinthujan Varatharajah. Constructing the Tamil Eelam State
The Funambulist / Sinthujan Varatharajah
Podcast
Maternidades subversivas
María Llopis
Monograph
II: La Solidaridad va Más Allá de un Concepto. Entre las Curadoras de la XI Berlin Biennale
Lisette Lagnado, Agustín Pérez Rubio
Conversation
Umbilical Cord Amulet
McCord Museum
Object
Memorial to the Sinti and Roma Victims of National Socialism
Dani Karavan
Memorial
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.
Venue: Gropius Bau
Born 2017 in Tilcara, AR
Bartolina Xixa is an Andean drag queen who was born in the province of Jujuy, northern Argentina, on November 28, 2017. She is a persona created by Coya artist and dancer Maximiliano Mamani (born in 1995, also in Jujuy) out of an impulse to question the colonial origins of subaltern identities in the cultures of the South and the associated imposition of the categories of race and gender. Xixa is a tribute to the Bolivian revolutionary leader Bartolina Sisa Vargas (c.1750–82), an Aymara woman who fought alongside her husband Túpac Katari (c. 1750–81) against the colonial occupation of present-day Peru and Bolivia in the eighteenth century and was eventually executed by Spanish troops. Through Xixa, Mamani evokes Indigenous struggle as a foundation for undoing patriarchal and racist paradigms, while also paying homage to the women of his family and the people of the Quebrada de Humahuaca valley in Jujuy. This region has been persistently subjugated by hegemonic power structures that have denied local Indigenous peoples visibility and access to resources through the imposition of white culture and capitalism.
The music video Ramita Seca, La Colonialidad Permanente [Dry Twig, The Permanent Coloniality, 2019] shows Xixa dancing in the middle of a dumping ground in a self-created choreography. The music and lyrics are by folk singer Aldana Bello. Dressed in traditional attire amidst worn-out mattresses, garbage bags, and dust, Xixa uses movements that suggest ancestral remedies to colonial extractivist violence. The work functions as a call for the dissident bodies affected by the predatory systems in place in the former colonies to take a political stance and to combat socioeconomic inequalities and structural violence as a means of healing colonial wounds.
Beatriz Lemos
Weaving Solidarity
Renata Cervetto and Duygu Örs
Q&A
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
Grupo Experimental de Cine en acción
Gabriel Peluffo
Drawing
Glossary of Common Knowledge
L’Internationale Online
Glossary
Teatro da Vertigem
Monograph
#fight4rojava
Graffiti
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
Venue: Gropius Bau
Born 2017 in Tilcara, AR
Bartolina Xixa is an Andean drag queen who was born in the province of Jujuy, northern Argentina, on November 28, 2017. She is a persona created by Coya artist and dancer Maximiliano Mamani (born in 1995, also in Jujuy) out of an impulse to question the colonial origins of subaltern identities in the cultures of the South and the associated imposition of the categories of race and gender. Xixa is a tribute to the Bolivian revolutionary leader Bartolina Sisa Vargas (c.1750–82), an Aymara woman who fought alongside her husband Túpac Katari (c. 1750–81) against the colonial occupation of present-day Peru and Bolivia in the eighteenth century and was eventually executed by Spanish troops. Through Xixa, Mamani evokes Indigenous struggle as a foundation for undoing patriarchal and racist paradigms, while also paying homage to the women of his family and the people of the Quebrada de Humahuaca valley in Jujuy. This region has been persistently subjugated by hegemonic power structures that have denied local Indigenous peoples visibility and access to resources through the imposition of white culture and capitalism.
The music video Ramita Seca, La Colonialidad Permanente [Dry Twig, The Permanent Coloniality, 2019] shows Xixa dancing in the middle of a dumping ground in a self-created choreography. The music and lyrics are by folk singer Aldana Bello. Dressed in traditional attire amidst worn-out mattresses, garbage bags, and dust, Xixa uses movements that suggest ancestral remedies to colonial extractivist violence. The work functions as a call for the dissident bodies affected by the predatory systems in place in the former colonies to take a political stance and to combat socioeconomic inequalities and structural violence as a means of healing colonial wounds.
Beatriz Lemos
Teatro da Vertigem
Monograph
Being in Crisis together – Einander in Krisen begegnen
Feminist Health Care Research Group (Inga Zimprich/Julia Bonn)
Online workshop
Memorial to the Sinti and Roma Victims of National Socialism
Dani Karavan
Memorial
Hatred Among Us
Lisette Lagnado
Essay
Queer Ancient Ways: A Decolonial Exploration
Zairong Xiang
Monograph
Umbilical Cord Amulet
McCord Museum
Object
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
Venue: Gropius Bau
Born 2017 in Tilcara, AR
Bartolina Xixa is an Andean drag queen who was born in the province of Jujuy, northern Argentina, on November 28, 2017. She is a persona created by Coya artist and dancer Maximiliano Mamani (born in 1995, also in Jujuy) out of an impulse to question the colonial origins of subaltern identities in the cultures of the South and the associated imposition of the categories of race and gender. Xixa is a tribute to the Bolivian revolutionary leader Bartolina Sisa Vargas (c.1750–82), an Aymara woman who fought alongside her husband Túpac Katari (c. 1750–81) against the colonial occupation of present-day Peru and Bolivia in the eighteenth century and was eventually executed by Spanish troops. Through Xixa, Mamani evokes Indigenous struggle as a foundation for undoing patriarchal and racist paradigms, while also paying homage to the women of his family and the people of the Quebrada de Humahuaca valley in Jujuy. This region has been persistently subjugated by hegemonic power structures that have denied local Indigenous peoples visibility and access to resources through the imposition of white culture and capitalism.
The music video Ramita Seca, La Colonialidad Permanente [Dry Twig, The Permanent Coloniality, 2019] shows Xixa dancing in the middle of a dumping ground in a self-created choreography. The music and lyrics are by folk singer Aldana Bello. Dressed in traditional attire amidst worn-out mattresses, garbage bags, and dust, Xixa uses movements that suggest ancestral remedies to colonial extractivist violence. The work functions as a call for the dissident bodies affected by the predatory systems in place in the former colonies to take a political stance and to combat socioeconomic inequalities and structural violence as a means of healing colonial wounds.
Beatriz Lemos
Teatro da Vertigem
Monograph
Freiheit für Chile!
Anonymous
Photo album
Grupo Experimental de Cine en acción
Gabriel Peluffo
Drawing
Glossary of Common Knowledge
L’Internationale Online
Glossary
Expresiones de la locura: el arte de los enfermos mentales
Hans Prinzhorn
Monograph
Umbilical Cord Amulet
McCord Museum
Object
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.