Visual Culture in an Age of Global Conflict (National Museum of Bardo, Tunis, 28-29 March 2015)

Visual Culture in an Age of Global Conflict (National Museum of Bardo, Tunis, 28-29 March 2015)

Visual Culture in an Age of Global Conflict (National Museum of Bardo, Tunis, 28-29 March 2015)

By : Jadaliyya Reports

Visual Culture in an Age of Global Conflict

The Kamel Lazaar Foundation is pleased to announce that it will stage a two-day conference at the National Museum of Bardo from 28–29 May, 2015. This will be the third iteration of the JAOU initiative to be held there and the first international conference at the Museum since the terrorist attacks on Wednesday, 18 March 2015.

Organized in advance of those attacks, the conference has since taken on an additional pertinence in relation to any investigation into the role that culture performs in the personal, social, public, and political discourses that are unfolding across the region. The indiscriminate attacks have further highlighted the susceptibility of culture in an age of global terror, as have the recent destruction of artifacts in Iraq, Syria and elsewhere. The questions that remain demand exploration and considered responses if we are to not only condemn these attacks but also ensure that culture and civil society will prevail in the face of extremism, violence and indiscriminate killing.

JAOU 2015 will bring together local and international artists, curators, academics, and cultural practitioners to address these concerns and will include, alongside other events, a condition report on visual culture in the Maghreb, an extended series of round table discussions on, respectively, collaborative geographies in an age of global conflict, the future of art institutions in the Middle East, the role of artistic practices in building international relations and local institutions, the use of archives in contemporary art practices, and the historical genealogies that inform performance art in the Middle East.

Confirmed speakers and performers for the event include Sultan Al Qassemi, Lina Attalah, Mohamed Aziza, Saleh Barakat, Syhème Belkhoja, Moncef Ben Moussa, Antonia Carver, Svetlana Costa, Anthony Downey, Aadel Essaadani, Hela Fattoumi, Wassim Ghozlani, Nadia Kaabi Linke, Hiwa K., Tania El Khoury, Amal Khalaf, Lina Lazaar, Kamel Lazaar, Sofiane Ouissi, Mourad Sakli, and Slavs and Tatars.

The conference will also include an accelerated session, hosted by Thinkers and Doers, to enable four short-listed cultural entrepreneurs to present projects that promote Arab culture and, in turn, evaluate value its economical, social, educational and environmental footprint.

Alongside the symposium, JOAU will showcase entirely unique, container-based, mobile art exhibition, which will be situated in the heart of Carthage. Curated by Lina Lazaar, this inaugural exhibition will explore the interplay between sacred space, religious ritual, cultural convention, and everyday life. Artists involved in this include Adel Abidin, Rashed Al Shashai, Zoulikha Bouabdellah, Mounir Fatmi, and Moataz Nasr.

Further events include a series of organized tours of galleries and museums in Tunis, a film premiere, workshops, and books launches, including volume 02 in the Foundation`s Visual Culture in the Middle East Series: Dissonant Archives: Contemporary Visual Culture and Contested Narratives in the Middle East. The Foundation will also launch a series of new initiatives to support the infrastructural development of cultural institutions across the Maghreb and Middle East.

The attack on the National Museum of Bardo was designed to undermine the nascent democratic model of Tunisia, the country`s economy, the voice of its people, and the vibrant culture of the region by targeting innocent people in a museum renowned for its outstanding mosaic collections and exceptional works of art.

This attack will not succeed in achieving those goals.

Fari Bradley and Chris Weaver will conduct interviews with a selection of panelists over the conference for broadcast on arts-music radio station Resonance104.4FM. Daily podcasts will be available to download from the show`s webpage.

Full details of the conference, including panels, round-tables, exhibitions, performances, film premieres, book launches, and other surrounding events, can be found on the Kamel Lazaar Foundation website.

Listen to an interview with JAOU Founder Lina Lazaar here, in which she discusses with Fari Bradley the current North African art scene and the origins behind JAOU.

Sign up to the Kamel Lazaar Foundation newsletter to receive more information on the conference and other surrounding events of JAOU Tunis 2015.

\"\"
[Photo by Hydar Dewachi, 2011. Via Ibraaz.]

Thursday 28 May

10:00–10:15

Opening Remarks

– Kamel Lazaar, Chairman, Kamel Lazaar Foundation

– Moncef Ben Moussa, Director, National Museum of Bardo

 10:15–11:45

Roundtable I

Culture in an Age of Global Conflict

Chair: Ghazi Gherairi, Jurist and Academic, Tunisia

– Alexandre Kazerouni, Research Fellow, Sciences-Po, Paris

– Sultan Al Qassemi, President, Barjeel Art Foundation, Sharjah

– Mohamed Aziza, Chancellor of the World Poetry Academy of Verona (Italy)

Respondents: Anthony Downey, Editor-in-Chief, Ibraaz, and Lina Lazaar, founder of JAOU

 11:45

Break

 12:00

Keynote I

– Aadel Essaadani, Culture Speciailst and Founder of Abbatoirs de Casablanca

General States of Culture in Morocco

Responses and questions

12:30

Lunch

13:45

Roundtable II

Maghreb Condition Report I: The Choreographed Body in Tunisian Culture

Chair: Hela Fattoumi, Director of the National Choreographic Centre of Caen, Basse-Normandie

– Oumaima Manaï, dancer and choreographer, Tunis

– Wael Maghni, dancer, Tunis

– Marwen Errouine, choreographer, Tunis

Respondent: Syhème Belkhodja, Founder of Ness el Fenn and Kalimat, Tunis

15:00

Lecture-Performance I

– Hiwa K., artist, Berlin

Starting from the Middle

Responses and questions

15:30

Break

15:45

Roundtable III
Performing Archives/Archiving Performance: Contemporary Art Practices across the Middle East

Chair: Anthony Downey, Editor-in-Chief, Ibraaz

– Nadia Kaabi-Linke, artist, Berlin

– Tania El Khoury, artist, Beirut

– Héla Ammar, artist

– Slavs and Tatars, artists, Berlin

Respondent: Amal Khalaf, Commissioning Editor, Ibraaz, and Hiwa K., artist, Berlin.

17:00

End

Friday 29 May

10:00–11:00

Thinkers and Doers: Accelerated Session

Moderator: Amandine LePoutre, Founder, Thinkers and Doers

Five minute presentations by:

– Lilia Ben-Gacem, Blue Fish

– Anne Hélèn Decaux and Valérie Konde, Pavilion33

Amine Chouaieb, Chifco

– Alizée Doumerc and Camille Caubriere, GUESTVIEWS

– Bobby Demri, GOV

Respondent: Mourad Sakli, Musicologist and Former Tunisian Minister of Culture, Tunisia

11:00–11:45

Keynote II

– Lecture-Performance by Slavs and Tatars

Al Isnad or Chains We Can Believe In

Responses and questions

11:45

Break

12:00–13:00

Roundtable IV

Maghreb Condition Report II: Visual Culture in the Maghreb

Chair: Svetlana Costa, Curator and Artistic Director, Arts Cabinet, London

– Anabelle Boissier, Research Associate, LAMES, Paris

– Mourad Sakli, Musicologist and Former Minister of Culture, Tunisia

– Wassim Ghozlani, Co-Founder, Maison De L`Image

– Moncef Dhouib, filmmaker, Tunis

– Hind Meddeb, Filmmaker, Journalist, Director, Tunisia Clash

– Rita Alaoui, Founder and Artist, The Ultra Laboratory, Morocco

Respondents: Evangeline Kim, art consultant, and Riccarda Mandrini, journalist, Italy

13:00–14:00

Lunch

14:00–15:30

Roundtable V: Future Imperfect: Art Institutions in the Arab World

Chair: Sultan Al Qassemi, President, Barjeel Art Foundation, Sharjah

– Saleh Barakat, Director, Agial Gallery, Beirut

– George Arbid, Architect and Founder of Arab Centre for Architecture, Beirut

– Sofiane Ouissi, Co-Founder, Dream City, Tunis

– Lina Attallah, Editor, Mada Masr, Cairo

– Antonia Carver, Fair Director, Art Dubai

Respondent: Chair: Svetlana Costa, Curator and Artistic Director, Arts Cabinet, London

15:30–16:15

KLF: Condition Report and Perspectives

– Local initiatives supported by KLF, Elsa Despiney

– Launch of Ibraaz Platform 009, and Dissonant Archives: Contemporary Visual Culture and Contested Narratives in the Middle East by Anthony Downey

– Launch of the Maghreb Directory, and launch of Kamel Lazaar Foundation website Version 2.0, Nour Sacranie and Hydar Dewachi

– Development of the Museum of Contemporary Art of Tunis, Soumaya Gharsallah-Hizem

16:30

Closing Remarks

Lina Lazaar, Founder, JAOU

  • ALSO BY THIS AUTHOR

    • Long Form Podcast Episode 8: Resigning the State Department Over Gaza With Hala Rharrit

      Long Form Podcast Episode 8: Resigning the State Department Over Gaza With Hala Rharrit

      In this episode of Long Form, Hala Rharrit discusses the factors that led her to resign from the US State Department, the mechanisms by which institutional corruption and ideological commitments of officials and representatives ensure US support for Israel, and how US decision-makers consistently violate international law and US laws/legislation. Rharrit also addresses the Trump administration’s claim that South Africa is perpetrating genocide against the country’s Afrikaaner population, and how this intersects with the US-Israeli campaign of retribution against South Africa for hauling Israel before the ICJ on charges of genocide.

    • Emergency Teach-In — Israel’s Profound Existential Crisis: No Morals or Laws Left to Violate!

      Emergency Teach-In — Israel’s Profound Existential Crisis: No Morals or Laws Left to Violate!

      The entire globe stands behind Israel as it faces its most intractable existential crisis since it started its slow-motion Genocide in 1948. People of conscience the world over are in tears as Israel has completely run out of morals and laws to violate during its current faster-paced Genocide in Gaza. Israelis, state and society, feel helpless, like sitting ducks, as they search and scramble for an inkling of hope that they might find one more human value to desecrate, but, alas, their efforts remain futile. They have covered their grounds impeccably and now have to face the music. This is an emergency call for immediate global solidarity with Israel’s quest far a lot more annihilation. Please lend a helping limb.

    • Long Form Podcast Episode 7: Think Tanks and Manufactuing Consent with Mandy Turner (4 June)

      Long Form Podcast Episode 7: Think Tanks and Manufactuing Consent with Mandy Turner (4 June)

      In this episode, Mandy Turner discusses the vital role think tanks play in the policy process, and in manufacturing consent for government policy. Turner recently published a landmark study of leading Western think tanks and their positions on Israel and Palestine, tracing pronounced pro-Israel bias, where the the key role is primarily the work of senior staff within these institutions, the so-called “gatekeepers.”

Inaugural Issue of Journal on Postcolonial Directions in Education

Postcolonial Directions in Education is a peer-reviewed open access journal produced twice a year. It is a scholarly journal intended to foster further understanding, advancement and reshaping of the field of postcolonial education. We welcome articles that contriute to advancing the field. As indicated in the editorial for the inaugural issue, the purview of this journal is broad enough to encompass a variety of disciplinary approaches, including but not confined to the following: sociological, anthropological, historical and social psychological approaches. The areas embraced include anti-racist education, decolonizing education, critical multiculturalism, critical racism theory, direct colonial experiences in education and their legacies for present day educational structures and practice, educational experiences reflecting the culture and "imagination" of empire, the impact of neoliberalism/globalization/structural adjustment programs on education, colonial curricula and subaltern alternatives, education and liberation movements, challenging hegemonic languages, the promotion of local literacies and linguistic diversity, neocolonial education and identity construction, colonialism and the construction of patriarchy, canon and canonicity, indigenous knowledges, supranational bodies and their educational frameworks, north-south and east-west relations in education, the politics of representation, unlearning colonial stereotypes, internal colonialism and education, cultural hybridity and learning  in  postcolonial contexts, education and the politics of dislocation, biographies or autobiographies reflecting the above themes, and deconstruction of colonial narratives of civilization within educational contexts. Once again, the field cannot be exhausted.

Table of Contents

  • Furthering the Discourse in Postcolonial Education, by Anne Hickling Hudson & Peter Mayo
  • Resisting the Inner Plantation: Decolonization and the Practice of Education in the Work of Eric Williams, by Jennifer Lavia
  • Neocolonialism, Higher Education and Student Union Activism in Zimbabwe, by Munyaradzi Hwami & Dip Kapoor
  • Reframing Anti-Colonial Theory for the Diasporic Context, by Marlon Simmons & George Dei 
  • Review of The Politics of Postcolonialism: Empire, Nation and Resistance, by Tejwant Chana
  • Review of Actionable Postcolonial Theory in Education, by Joseph Zanoni
  • AERA Postcolonial Studies and Education SIG: Business Meeting, by Joseph Zanoni 

[Click here to access the articles of the issue.]