When The Jackal Leaves The Sun
Forschungswerkstatt: Kolonialgeschichte
Exhibition at Tempelhof-Schöneberg Museum
19th May - 3rd October 2017
in collaboration with Anaïs Héraud
Exhibition at Tempelhof-Schöneberg Museum
19th May - 3rd October 2017
in collaboration with Anaïs Héraud
photo: Anguezomo Mba Bikoro
When The Jackal Leaves The Sun: Decentering Restitution | Pedagogies of Repossession
A collective project in Nairobi, Dar Es Salam, Kigali, Windhoek, Cape Town, Dakar, Joal-Fadiout & Berlin
A collaboration with Refuge Worldwide, District*School Without Center, International Women* Space, Nyabinghi Lab, SOMA, Wali Chafu Collective
A collective project in Nairobi, Dar Es Salam, Kigali, Windhoek, Cape Town, Dakar, Joal-Fadiout & Berlin
A collaboration with Refuge Worldwide, District*School Without Center, International Women* Space, Nyabinghi Lab, SOMA, Wali Chafu Collective
WHEN THE JACKAL LEAVES THE SUN: Decentering Restitution | Pedagogies of Repossession is a decolonial feminist infrastructure for memory politics, art and transformative justice connecting Nairobi, Windhoek, Kigali, Dresden, Dar Es Salam, Dakar, Sinne Saloum, Jaol-Fadiouth, Cape Town and Berlin. Initiated by Anguezomo Mba Bikoro, Jennifer Kamau, Memory Biwa, Michael Bader, Rehema Chachage, Reneé Akitelek Mboya and Suza Husse.
“It is not that Europe has denied its colonial history – that would be too crude. It is instead that Europe has developed a way of telling the story of its colonial history that ultimately seeks to erase that history.” – Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Presenting a challenge to dominant institutional discourses of repair, When the Jackal leaves the Sun brings together artists, activists, curators, lawyers, and cultural practitioners to create interventions and pedagogical tools that currently come to life throughout 6 Chapters. Grounded in radical Black, queer and feminist positions, When The Jackal Leaves The Sun creates an independent and transterritorial infrastructure and platform for artistic and transdisciplinary collaborations on memory, cultural and educational work from summer 2022 to summer 2024 in Nairobi, Windhoek, Cape Town, Kigali, Dresden, Dar Es Salam, Dakar, Sinne Saloum, Jaol-Fadiouth, Berlin and online. When the Jackal leaves the Sun connects an intersectional spectrum of artists, curators, activists, lawyers, cultural practitioners and collectives to develop an account of Pedagogies of Repossession. Through co-developing and facilitating a process toward Pedagogies of Repossession, When the Jackal leaves the Sun seeks to disrupt and counter persistent colonial violence through artistic and political means, fostering memory, cultural education, and spiritual healing.
For more information visit www.whenthejackalleavesthesun.com
“It is not that Europe has denied its colonial history – that would be too crude. It is instead that Europe has developed a way of telling the story of its colonial history that ultimately seeks to erase that history.” – Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Presenting a challenge to dominant institutional discourses of repair, When the Jackal leaves the Sun brings together artists, activists, curators, lawyers, and cultural practitioners to create interventions and pedagogical tools that currently come to life throughout 6 Chapters. Grounded in radical Black, queer and feminist positions, When The Jackal Leaves The Sun creates an independent and transterritorial infrastructure and platform for artistic and transdisciplinary collaborations on memory, cultural and educational work from summer 2022 to summer 2024 in Nairobi, Windhoek, Cape Town, Kigali, Dresden, Dar Es Salam, Dakar, Sinne Saloum, Jaol-Fadiouth, Berlin and online. When the Jackal leaves the Sun connects an intersectional spectrum of artists, curators, activists, lawyers, cultural practitioners and collectives to develop an account of Pedagogies of Repossession. Through co-developing and facilitating a process toward Pedagogies of Repossession, When the Jackal leaves the Sun seeks to disrupt and counter persistent colonial violence through artistic and political means, fostering memory, cultural education, and spiritual healing.
For more information visit www.whenthejackalleavesthesun.com