2021/2022: Tri-continental Quilombo

QUILOMBO
TRI-CONTINENTAL RESEARCH & EXHIBITION PROJECT

Press release ENG / Comunicato stampa ITA

Lago Mio Lugano artist residency
Opening Wednesday, 13 April 2022, 6 pm
Exhibition: 14 April – 31 May 2022

with Carolina Brunelli, Stéphane Kabila, Joseph Kasau, Paulo Nazareth, Maya Quilolo, Wisrah Villefort, and contributions of Denise Bertschi and Orakle Ngoy. Curated by Samuel Leuenberger, Patrick Mudekereza and Benedikt Wyss.

Maya, Joseph and Carolina were our guests at Lago Mio Lugano artist residency in Lugano from August to October.

This is a joint project by SALTS, Waza art center Lubumbashi and Lago Mio Lugano artist residency, in collaboration with Culturescapes 2021 Amazonia. With sincere thanks to kulturelles bl, Pro Helvetia Südafrika, Temperatio, Cantone Ticino, Città di Lugano and La Mobiliare.


 

SALTS (CH), Waza art center Lubumbashi (DR Congo), and Lago Mio Lugano artist residency (CH), in collaboration with Culturescapes 2021 Amazonia, are delighted to announce the exhibition opening of «Quilombo» at City SALTS:

City SALTS, Basel/Birsfelden
Saturday, 30 October 2021, 4–7 pm

QUILOMBO
TRI-CONTINENTAL RESEARCH & EXHIBITION PROJECT
Exhibition: 31 October – 10 December 2021
salts.ch/exhibitions/quilombo

Carolina Brunelli, Joseph Kasau & Stéphane Kabila, Paulo Nazareth, Maya Quilolo, Wisrah Villefort. With a contribution by Denise Bertschi. Opening concert by Orakle Ngoy.

The coalition-based tri-continental research and exhibition project involves the artists Carolina Brunelli (CH/BRA), Joseph Kasau (with Stéphane Kabila, DRC), Paulo Nazareth (BRA), Maya Quilolo (BRA), and Wisrah Villefort (BRA). The exhibition is curated by Samuel Leuenberger, Patrick Mudekereza and Benedikt Wyss. It includes a contribution by Denise Bertschi (CH) and opens with a concert by Orakle Ngoy (DRC). «Quilombo» comprised residencies in Lugano (Lago Mio artist residency) and Basel (Atelier Mondial – International arts exchange program), and a workshop with the Centre for African Studies of the University of Basel. A catalog is planned for Spring 2022 as part of the opening of the exhibition's second itinerary at Lago Mio in Lugano.

ABOUT THE PROJECT

«Quilombo» was developed out of a personal invitation between the Swiss-based institution SALTS and the Congo-based Waza art center, in order to collaborate, exchange, and learn from each other during a full year of co-programming and co-curation. The foundation for an intensive collaboration with the artists within the project «Quilombo» is laid in the partnership with the artist residency Lago Mio Lugano on the Swiss border with Italy.

Once synonymous with escape and resistance, ‹quilombo› today stands for a Brazilian settlement of African descent. Anthropologists and historians meanwhile have arrived at a new understanding of these rural communities, calling for a broader definition: Regardless of their specific history, quilombos share collective identities and notions, linking them to their African roots and making them fight common battles as people in DRC, Switzerland or anywhere else: against capitalism and racism, and for the equitable distribution of resources.

The project «Quilombo» attempts to build on the idea of a «Black Atlantic», coined by British-Guyanese historian and writer Paul Gilroy in 1993 as a «Counterculture of Modernity» in the relations between Africa, the Americas, and Europe. Can we activate aesthetics sensitive to common concerns, taking advantage of the digital age’s challenges, particularly in the unexpected connectivity of our pandemic era? Social injustice has its roots in the history of exploitation of natural resources and human labor and continues to this day. How can this be undermined by an alternative reading of human relations between the three continents, imagining an ecology that empowers humanism and diversity?

ARTISTS

Maya Quilolo (BRA, physical resident in the project «Quilombo») (*1994) was born in a quilombola community in Minas Gerais. Maya graduated in Anthropology and Audiovisual in Belo Horizonte. She acts in the interchange between performance arts, visual arts, and cultural diversity – interested in multidisciplinary investigations that address the potential of the black body. Her Research explores water as an element that connects different people, countries, organisms. For the performance Ìpòrì (2019, Nigeria) she crossed the Atlantic carrying water from South American rivers to the African continent – in order to express the transatlantic relationships. Maya’s work is inspired by shamanistic techniques of the indigenous peoples from the Amazon, relating water as an element in connection with life, fertility, ancestry, the Atlantic crossing, and the diaspora.

After graduating in Information and Communication Sciences from the University of Lubumbashi, specializing in performing arts (audiovisual, cinema, and theater), Joseph Kasau (born 1995, DR Congo, resident in the project «Quilombo» in Lugano and Basel, September/October 2021) completed residencies in various cultural centers in the country and abroad. Kasau collaborates with Stéphane Kabila (born 1993, DR Congo, researcher and curator, studying in the MA Curatorial study program at the Faculty of Fine Art, Music and Design at the University of Bergen (KMD) in Norway).

Carolina Brunelli (CH/BRA, born 1988, resident in the project «Quilombo in Lugano and Basel, August–October 2021) is a Swiss artist born and raised in Rio de Janeiro, Brasil, with a Brasilian mother and a Swiss father. Carolina has developed an awareness about the importance of the untold stories of oppression and resistance of indigenous and black communities in Brasil. Her Bachelor’s graduation work (since 2020 MFA at the HGK in Basel) was a homage to all black women who lost their children.

Paulo Nazareth (BRA, non-physical resident in the project «Quilombo) was born in the city of Borun Nak [Vale do Rio Doce] Minas Gerais and is living as a global nomad. Paulo Nazareth’s work is often the result of precise and simple gestures, which bring about broader ramifications, raising awareness to press issues of immigration, racialization, globalization colonialism, and its effects in the production and consumption of art in his native Brazil and the Global South. While his work may manifest in video, photography, and found objects, his strongest medium may be cultivating relationships with people he encounters on the road — particularly those who must remain invisible due to their legal status or those who are repressed by governmental authorities. In certain aspects, Nazareth deliberately embodies the romantic ideal of the wandering artist in search of himself and universal truths, to unveil stereotyped assumptions about national identity, cultural history, and human value.

Wisrah Villefort (BRA, born in 1989, non-physical resident in the project «Quilombo) is a mixed-race individual with African, Indigenous Brazilian, and European roots. The tri-continental foundation of the «Quilombo» program was central to his most recent work while he – as a queer, POC artist living in the Global South – often feels left out of the conversation. Wisrah is researching the effects of anthrophony, the sound produced by humans, on the ecologies it constitutes. With the proposed activation of aesthetics sensitive to common concerns, Wisrah echoes the thinking of critic and curator Cedriq Fauq on the updated conceptualism conceived by BIPOC artists that engage with strategies to refuse representational performances of blackness designed by the West.

Denise Bertschi (CH, born in 1983, Aarau) is an artist-researcher and lives and works in Switzerland. She is currently a doctoral candidate at EPFL Lausanne in collaboration with HEAD–Genève, where she works at the intersection of artistic research and Swiss colonial history. She completed her MA in Visual Arts at HEAD-Genève and her BA at ZHdK Zurich. Various project contributions from Pro Helvetia and the Aargauer Kuratorium funded her artistic research. Currently, she is in an artist residency at LA BECQUE end of 2021. In 2017–2018, Denise Bertschi spent several months in Johannesburg on a Pro Helvetia residency grant and four months on a commissioned research trip to Bahia, Brazil. 

Orakle Ngoy (DR Congo) is one of the rare female voices of Congolese hip hop. In her texts, she highlights the realities of life in the Democratic Republic of Congo and retells them from the special perspective of women. She raps about sexism and gender discrimination and appeals to respect for African women in general and Congolese women in particular.

«Quilombo» is presented in collaboration with the multidisciplinary biennial festival Culturescapes that, in 2021, is focused on Amazonia. The project is kindly supported by kulturelles.bl, Pro Helvetia Südafrika, Temperatio, Cantone Ticino, Città di Lugano and La Mobiliare.

Image © Lago Mio 2020

 

www.salts.ch | www.centredartwaza.ch | www.lagomioresidency.ch | www.culturescapes.ch


13. February 2023

Lago Mio artist residency is taking a break in 2023. Until further notice, we do not offer residences. …mehr

12. August 2022

On Thursday, August 18, starting at 7 pm, we want to celebrate with you! Together with the resident artists Mohamed Harb, Mia Sanchez and Gaia Del Santo, and our partners Pro Helvetia – Swiss Arts Council and Sonnenstube Offspace we in …mehr

20. April 2022

Lago Mio summer residency Residency: 18 June – 17 August 2022 Application deadline: May 8 Selection date: May 15 The Lago Mio Lugano artist residency invites all Fine Arts students from Swiss art schools to apply for a two-month summer …mehr

Archiv


City SALTS
Hauptstrasse 12
Birsfelden, Switzerland

Centre d'Art WAZA
Avenue Adoula
Lubumbashi, DR Congo

Lago Mio artist residency
Via Cattedrale 15
6900 Lugano, Switzerland

www.salts.ch
www.centredartwaza.ch
www.lagomioresidency.ch
www.culturescapes.ch

Image credits:
© graphic design Mirco Joao-Pedro incl. ORI (2017), Maya Quilolo, images the artists