Hundreds of independent art and museum spaces were forced to close due to the Corona-Crisis. In this series we are celebrating the fantastic artistic events that are right now sitting behind closed doors. The first solo exhibition of Amina Zoubir in Sweden at Södertälje konsthall, shows a selection of sculptures, collages, drawings, wallpaper together with an installation of research on female representation and women’s history in North Africa compiled by the artist during the last three years.
What does it mean to be a woman in Algeria? That question has followed artist Amina Zoubir throughout her upbringing in the country, evolving to an essential orientation within her artistry through video, performance in public space, sculptures, drawings and installations. Growing up in the 1980s and the 90s, she witnessed a violent era of civil war between the government and various Islamic groups changing the society and its public sphere. A war through which Algerian women operated in different roles, while the legacy of a long brutal colonial history with France continued to foster a misogynist society. Hence, social and gender related matters in contemporary Algerian society are very much affiliated with postcolonial issues. Conversation between Amina Zoubir and Joanna Sandell, director Södertälje konsthall on the exhibition Amina Zoubir taking a stance on berber queens: history and mythology. April 27, 2020. *The text above is an excerpt from the curatorial essay of the exhibition written by Sara Rossling, independent curator and writer. Amina Zoubir wants to thank the Swedish Arts Grants Committee’s International Program supporting international exchange for practitioners in the areas of visual art, design, craft and architecture.
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