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July 2023

Zasha Colah, photo: M. Ben Hamouda

Zasha Colah appointed curator of the 13th Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art

The Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art is pleased to announce and warmly welcome the curator of the 13th edition, Zasha Colah.

Zasha Colah is a curator and writer. Her exhibitions and texts have been an exploration of artistic imagination under conditions of sustained oppression, often through the prisms of liveliness and restorative laughter. Her work considers a range of cultural practices as an unspoken infrastructure of acts and channels of counter-expression in disobedient terrains that confound militarization and earthly extraction. She is particularly interested in the point at which these practices may cross over to become collective.

Colah was raised in Lusaka, ZM, and Mumbai, IN where she lived and worked until 2014. She divided her time between Berlin, DE, and Mumbai from 2014 to 2017, and for the last six years has been based in Turin, IT. She is a co-founder of the Clark House Initiative (with Yogesh Barve, Sachin Bonde, Poonam Jain, Prabhakar Pachpute, Amol K Patil, Rupali Patil, Nikhil Raunak, and Sumesh Sharma; Mumbai; 2010–22)—a collaborative of artists and curators concerned with ideas of freedom. Prior to this she served as curator of Indian Modern Art at JNAF/CSMVS Museum and curator of public programs at the National Gallery of Modern Art, both in Mumbai. She was the curator of body luggage, steirischer herbst (Graz, AT; 2016), co-curator of the 3rd Pune Biennale Habit-co-Habit. Artistic Simulations of Some Everyday Spaces in India (with Luca Cerizza, 2017), and part of the curatorial team of the 2nd Yinchuan Biennale Starting from the Desert. Ecologies on the Edge in China (curator: Marco Scotini, 2018). Her doctorate addressed the topic of illegality and meta-exhibition practices in Indo-Myanmar since the 1980s (Sapienza – Università di Roma, IT; 2020). As a member of Archive, a decentralized community of practice (Berlin; Dakar, SN; Milan, IT; since 2020), she co-curates exhibitions, study days, and the serial program on moving multitudes, Choreopoethics. Colah is a lecturer in Curatorial Studies at Nuova Accademia di Belle Arti in Milan (since 2018) and is on the editorial board of GeoArchivi (director: Marco Scotini/NABA, published by Meltemi, Milan, since 2021), a series of books dedicated to rebellious archives. She is the artistic director of Ar/Ge Kunst (with Francesca Verga; Bolzano, IT; since 2023), where she co-develops a program centered around a series of artistic questions that each time forge a new working group of artists and practitioners. She serves on the board of the Institute of Contemporary Art Indian Ocean (Port Louis, MU).


Director Gabriele Horn and the team of the Berlin Biennale warmly welcome Zasha Colah.

The international selection committee for the curatorship of the upcoming Berlin Biennale included: Sebastian Cichocki (chief curator, Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw, PL), Elena Filipovic (director/curator, Kunsthalle Basel, CH), Krist Gruijthuijsen (director, KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin), Dr. Omar Kholeif (senior curator and director of collections, Sharjah Art Foundation, AE, and founding director, artPost21, UK), Manuela Moscoso (inaugural executive director and chief curator, CARA, New York, US), Olaf Nicolai (artist, Berlin), and Ugochukwu-Smooth C. Nzewi (The Steven and Lisa Tananbaum curator, Department of Painting and Sculpture, The Museum of Modern Art, New York).

In deviation from its previous rhythm, the 13th Berlin Biennale will take place in the summer of 2025. More precise dates will be announced at the end of 2023. Future editions will then take place in odd-numbered years.

Oct 2021

Visual identity, 12th Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art, 11.6.–18.9.2022, Martin Wecke Design Code Lab & MBI Graphic & Type Design Fabian Maier-Bode

The 12th Berlin Biennale’s duration and visual identity

The 12th Berlin Biennale takes place from June 11 to September 18, 2022 at various venues in Berlin and is curated by Kader Attia. Martin Wecke and Fabian Maier-Bode developed the visual identity.

To the 12th Berlin Biennale's website

Sept 2021

Publication: KW, a history

“It was quiet on Auguststraße, and in the rest of Berlin-Mitte, this area of the former metropolis whose buildings with their bullet-pocked facades had been left to decay for more than four decades since the war. The West had not yet moved eastwards: too dilapidated, too dirty, too dark, poor infrastructure, no telephones, pre-digital, unresolved ownership, the acrid smell of brown coal in the air. Few of the local residents remained. Even before the Wall fell, this neighborhood had been sparsely populated and now many had hurriedly relocated to the West, often leaving all their belongings behind. One sunny afternoon in spring, the five of us stood for the first time in the courtyard of the former margarine factory, most recently home to VEB Elektromontage: 2400 square meters of floor space, ruinous, contaminated, listed, and state-owned. We signed up.”

Alexandra Binswanger in: KW, a History

KUNST-WERKE BERLIN e. V., the supporting association of KW Institute for Contemporary Art and the Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art, celebrates its 30th anniversary in 2021. Released on occasion of the anniversary, the first comprehensive publication about KUNST-WERKE BERLIN e. V. is the fruit of KW fellow Jenny Dirksen’s extensive research into the organization’s history. It presents selections from the sizable archive of KW and the Berlin Biennale and unfurls a polyphonic institutional history on 496 pages, with essays by Klaus Biesenbach, Jenny Dirksen, Susanne von Falkenhausen, and Jan Verwoert, and a detailed timeline with short texts by Eva Scharrer, an exhibition list, photographs, posters, invitation cards, press responses, and recollections of contemporary observers, friends, and associates from three decades.

Edited by Klaus Biesenbach, Jenny Dirksen, Krist Gruijthuijsen, Gabriele Horn / KW Institute for Contemporary Art
20 × 27 cm, 496 pages, numerous color and b/w images, softcover with dust jacket
ISBN 978-3-95476-372-6
September 2021

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Mar 2021

Kader Attia, photo: F. Anthea Schaap

Kader Attia appointed as curator of the 12th Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art

The Berlin Biennale is pleased to begin preparations for the 12th edition with the curatorship announcement. The 12th Berlin Biennale will take place in 2022.

For over two decades, Kader Attia has worked with the concept of “repair” in his artistic practice. It allows him to investigate the dialectic between destruction and repair, in which repair is understood as a way of cultural resistance as well as a means for a society or a subject to reappropriate their history and identity. Raised in Paris and Algeria, Kader Attia studied philosophy and art in Paris and Barcelona; today he lives and works in Berlin and Paris. In 2016, Kader Attia founded La Colonie in Paris’ 10th arrondissement as a space for the exchange of ideas and discussions focusing on decolonization, not only of people but also of knowledge, attitudes, and practices. Driven by the urgency of social and cultural reparation, it aims to reunite what has drifted apart or been broken. Since March 2020, La Colonie has been closed to the public due to the Covid-19 pandemic. In July 2021, the Haus der Kulturen der Welt in Berlin hosts the fourth part of a conference series initiated by Kader Attia, Ana Teixeira Pinto, and Giovanna Zapperi entitled The White West.

Gabriele Horn, director of the Berlin Biennale, and the team warmly welcome Kader Attia.

The international selection committee for the curatorship of the upcoming Berlin Biennale included: Yael Bartana (artist, Amsterdam, NL, and Berlin, DE), Beatrice von Bismarck (professor of art history and visual culture at Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst / Academy of Fine Arts, Leipzig, DE), Anita Dube (artist and independent curator, Greater Noida, IN), Krist Gruijthuijsen (director of KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin), Sohrab Mohebbi (Kathe and Jim Patrinos Curator of the 58th Carnegie International, Pittsburgh, US), Gabi Ngcobo (artist, educator, and independent curator, Johannesburg, ZA), and Gabriela Rangel (writer and director at Fundación Malba – Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires, AR).