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  • Villa Vassilieff

    Villa Marie Vassilieff
    Chemin de Montparnasse
    21 avenue du Maine

    75015 Paris
    +33.(0)1.43.25.88.32
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  • Events

    Past events

    From September 20 to 25 – Student work­shop
    Collage d’Archives with Paris 8 uni­ver­sity
    Learn more

    Wednesday, December 16, 6.30pm
    Online event: Listening Session: Geographies of Sound

    Conversation with Léopold Lambert, Robert Machiri and Euridice Zaituna Kala
    Learn more

    Saturday, December 19, 11am, at Villa Vassilieff –
    Instagram Live: Le silence des archives

    Conversation with Amandine Nana and Euridice Zaituna Kala
    Inscription required by mail at : info(at)villavas­silieff.net
    Learn more


    Student Workshop, Archive Collage with Paris 8 University


    Workshop from the 20th to the 25th of September 2020 - Euridice Zaituna Kala with fine arts Master’s students from Paris 8 University, Visit at the Villa Savoye

    From September 20 to 25, Euridice Zaituna Kala invited stu­dents from Paris 8 University to immerse them­selves in her work for the exhi­bi­tion I, the Archive pre­sented at Villa Vassilieff, in order to col­lect per­sonal and col­lec­tive sto­ries. From urban wan­der­ings, they were able to each create a sound piece, exploring their own area of interest.

    The notion of oth­er­ness is at the heart of the artist’s work, and it is there­fore in the rela­tion­ship with others that the pro­ject is inscribed. Sound becomes the vibrating space between two bodies; the frag­ments of sound col­lected, mod­eled and merged, create a bridge between one­self and the other, making it pos­sible to rethink the col­lec­tive.

    Working with a ques­tion: "how to build a world that suits me? ", The stu­dents have appro­pri­ated pieces of the city and left a part of them­selves there.

    The visits to Montparnasse, to the Villa Savoye, have led us on the traces of a past that can be guessed through a moving archi­tec­ture, a living archi­tec­ture. The archive is there, all around, revis­ited over time. It is inscribed in our inti­mate rela­tion­ship with archi­tec­ture, inviting us to merge with it, to become it, to be the archive.

    All of the works made by the stu­dents during the work­shop are avail­able on the web­site made by the artist and the stu­dents.

    Workshop from the 20th to the 25th of September 2020 - Euridice Zaituna Kala with fine arts Master’s students from Paris 8 University, Work Session at Villa Vassilieff
    Workshop from the 20th to the 25th of September 2020 - Euridice Zaituna Kala with fine arts Master’s students from Paris 8 University, Sound recording at Villa Savoye
    Workshop from the 20th to the 25th of September 2020 - Euridice Zaituna Kala with fine arts Master’s students from Paris 8 University, Sound recording in front of Bal Blomet


    Online Event – Listening Session: Geographies of Sound


    Conversation between Léopold Lambert and Robert Machiri, mod­er­ated by Euridice Zaituna Kala.
    Wednesday, December 16 at 6:30pm

    On December 16, 2020 at 6:30 pm, Euridice Zaituna Kala will mod­erate an online con­ver­sa­tion with Léopold Lambert, editor-in-chief of The Funambulist and Robert Machiri, co-cre­ator of the col­lab­o­ra­tive pro­ject Pungwe. This time of dis­cus­sion will be an oppor­tu­nity for the par­tic­i­pants to reflect on their pro­jects and the how inte­gral sound is in each other prac­tices.
    They will inter­ro­gate the geogra­phies and the archi­tec­ture of sound, exploring the polit­ical impli­ca­tions of sound and its rela­tions with post-colo­nial and per­sonal nar­ra­tives. Are sounds inscribed in par­tic­ular geogra­phies? Where are we when we listen to the sounds of some­where else?
    The ses­sion will fea­ture frag­ments of pod­casts, infil­trating the con­ver­sa­tion’s inter­stices in a way to pro­pose a non-linear approach to lis­tening, echoing with Euridice Zaituna Kala’s sound piece for her exhi­bi­tion I, the Archive.

    To reg­ister for the online con­ver­sa­tion, click here.
    The con­ver­sa­tion will be in English.

    Before the event, you are invited to listen to the fol­lowing episodes:

    The Funambulist
    Podcast n°129 There Is Neither Truth Nor Reconciliation in South Africa with Tshepo Madlingozi (in English)
    Podcast série Quartiers Populaires n°7 Les potagers, Nanterres with Mabrouka Lahbaïri, Boubakar Mazari, Mogniss H. Abdallah and Cherif Cherfi (in French)

    Pungwe
    Listening to a lis­tening, Pungwe, Capetown (in English)
    Listening to a lis­tening, Pungwe, Chalewote Accra, Ghana (in English)

    About the par­tic­i­pants

    Léopold Lambert was trained as an archi­tect and is the editor-in-chief of the English-speaking magazine The Funambulist, which he cre­ated in 2015. His research focuses on the polit­ical dimen­sion of space and bodies in dif­ferent geo­graph­ical con­texts, par­tic­u­larly in Palestine and within the French colo­nial con­tinuum. He is the author of the books Weaponized Architecture: The Impossibility of Innocence (2012), Topie Impitoyable: Les poli­tiques cor­porelles des vête­ments, du mur et de la rue (2015) and La poli­tique du bull­dozer: La ruine pales­tini­enne comme projet israélien (2016). His next book, États d’urgence: Une his­toire spa­tiale du con­tinuum colo­nial français, will be pub­lished in 2021 by Premiers matins de novembre (PMN).

    The Funambulist is a magazine that engages with the pol­i­tics of space and bodies. Our hope is to provide a useful plat­form where activist/aca­demic/prac­ti­tioner voices can meet and build sol­i­dar­i­ties across geo­graph­ical scales. Through arti­cles, inter­views, art­works, and design pro­jects, we are assem­bling an ongoing archive for anti­colo­nial, antiracist, queer, and fem­i­nist strug­gles. The print and online magazine is pub­lished every two months and oper­ates in par­allel with an open-access pod­cast and a blog.

    Robert Machiri, Chi aka Chimurenga (b. 1978 Robert in Zimbabwe) is a DJ and hoarder of things inspired by his music col­lec­tion and interest in objects related to sound. Machiri is based in Johannesburg. His work exists at the junc­ture of two streams of prac­tice; his cura­to­rial con­cepts and a multi-dis­ci­plinary ideas that draw on de-colo­nial dis­courses pre­sented through embodied cri­tique, learning and unlearning, inter­weaving sound, music and image making. His most notable pro­ject PUNGWE is an inter-dis­ci­plinary pro­ject cir­cling African sound­ings with related con­tem­po­rary arts dis­courses and spaces. Pungwe has pro­duced col­lab­o­ra­tive works PUNGWE NIGHTS, Listening to a lis­tening at Pungwe and Sugar free///Pungwe. His cur­rent work is pre­sented through a dialectic between object and sub­ject, with inter-medial expe­ri­ences of sound and image.

    Listening to a Listening : A con­ver­sa­tion between Memory Biwa and Robert Machiri , is a col­lab­o­ra­tive pro­ject where we re-listen to the use of voice, lan­guage, instru­ments, bodily move­ments and sound tech­nology in record­ings, both archival and con­tem­po­rary. We acti­vate these sonic moments through instal­la­tions and per­for­mances, as a way of decon­structing colo­nial archival prac­tices, re-posi­tioning sub­jects, and re-ori­enting sonic prac­tices from our regions. We pro­pose new publics, so as to col­lec­tively hear/feel/create a new knowl­edge about the space and time in which we live.


    Le silence des archive


    Conversation with Amandine Nana and Euridice Zaituna Kala
    Saturday, December 19, 11am
    Instagram Live

    On the 19th of December at 11am, join Euridice Zaituna Kala and Amandine Nana on Instagram for a con­ver­sa­tion around the exhi­bi­tion I, the Archive, where they will share expe­ri­ences and con­cep­tual approaches on the matter of his­tory’s neglected black genealo­gies. This dis­cus­sion time will be an occa­sion to go back to Euridice Zaituna Kala’s work on the Marc Vaux archive. Of which (hi)story is this pho­to­graphic archive the name of and why did it spark her interest? Which pro­to­cols and research methods did she set up? Does this work of rereading through marginal­ized (hi)sto­ries really sub­vert the power of the center? They will also touch upon ques­tions around the black models and the anonymized black sub­jects whom the artist met during her research, and how she is looking to give them back a form of agency, inter­twining the archives’ silences with her per­sonal (hi)story.

    To par­tic­i­pate, reg­ister at : info(at)villavas­silieff.net
    The con­ver­sa­tion will be in French

    Amandine Nana is an inde­pen­dent author, curator and editor based in Paris. Winner of the Prix Dauphine pour l’art con­tem­po­rain 2020, she cre­ated Transplantation, a rhi­zomatic entity that is at the same time an impro­vised pro­duc­tion/pub­li­ca­tion/dis­sem­i­na­tion organ, and archive which con­text includes dias­poric prac­tices and objects, joining her per­sonal inves­ti­ga­tion on crit­ical black gram­mars. In par­allel, she studies art his­tory at ENS Ulm and Paris 1 and at the Urban School of Science Po Paris.

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