Sammy Baloji & Filip De Boeck Urban Now: City Life in Congo. The Power Plant Contemporary Art Centre, The Harbour Front, Toronto, Canada, 29 September - 31 December 2017. This exhibition offers an exploration of different urban sites in Congo through photography and video. CURATOR: DEVRIM BAYAR, CURATOR, WIELS CONTEMPORARY ART CENTRE, BRUSSELS Focusing upon the "urban now," a moment suspended between the broken dreams of a colonial past and the promises of a neoliberal future, the exhibition offers an artistic and ethnographic investigation of what living – and living together—might mean in Congo’s urban worlds. As elsewhere on the African continent, Congo’s cities increasingly imagine new futures for themselves. Today, these new ur...
Anthropologist Filip De Boeck presented Suturing the City: Living Together in Congo’s Urban Worlds (...
Filip De Boeck and Sammy Baloji discuss their book Suturing the City: Living Together in Congo’s Urb...
In 2019, Kinshasa counts some thirteen million inhabitants. By 2075, demographers expect that it wil...
Sammy Baloji & Filip De Boeck Urban Now: City Life in Congo. The Power Plant Contemporary Art Centr...
Focusing upon the ‘urban now’, a moment suspended between lingering precolonial references, the brok...
Filip De Boeck and Sammy Baloji discuss their book Suturing the City: Living Together in Congo’s Urb...
The Centre of Fine Arts (BOZAR) launched the 2016 Summer of Photography in Brussels on the theme ‘Ur...
On the occasion of the opening of "Urban Now, City Life in Congo", an exhibition by anthropologist F...
Visual Essay: In a collaborative effort between anthropology and photography, a collaboration that r...
History and Social Sciences Divisional Speaker The Belgian anthropologist Filip De Boeck will speak...
As elsewhere on the African continent, Congo’s cities increasingly imagine new futures for themselve...
Une exposition sur la vie urbaine au Congo 08.05 – 14.08.2016 Sammy Baloji & Filip De Boeck — Urba...
Filip De Boeck talks about his collaboration with Congolese photographer Sammy Baloji. Their joint r...
The Belgian anthropologist Filip De Boeck will speak about some of the ideas underlying Suturing the...
Filip De Boeck presented some results of his ongoing collaboration with photographer and visual arti...
Anthropologist Filip De Boeck presented Suturing the City: Living Together in Congo’s Urban Worlds (...
Filip De Boeck and Sammy Baloji discuss their book Suturing the City: Living Together in Congo’s Urb...
In 2019, Kinshasa counts some thirteen million inhabitants. By 2075, demographers expect that it wil...
Sammy Baloji & Filip De Boeck Urban Now: City Life in Congo. The Power Plant Contemporary Art Centr...
Focusing upon the ‘urban now’, a moment suspended between lingering precolonial references, the brok...
Filip De Boeck and Sammy Baloji discuss their book Suturing the City: Living Together in Congo’s Urb...
The Centre of Fine Arts (BOZAR) launched the 2016 Summer of Photography in Brussels on the theme ‘Ur...
On the occasion of the opening of "Urban Now, City Life in Congo", an exhibition by anthropologist F...
Visual Essay: In a collaborative effort between anthropology and photography, a collaboration that r...
History and Social Sciences Divisional Speaker The Belgian anthropologist Filip De Boeck will speak...
As elsewhere on the African continent, Congo’s cities increasingly imagine new futures for themselve...
Une exposition sur la vie urbaine au Congo 08.05 – 14.08.2016 Sammy Baloji & Filip De Boeck — Urba...
Filip De Boeck talks about his collaboration with Congolese photographer Sammy Baloji. Their joint r...
The Belgian anthropologist Filip De Boeck will speak about some of the ideas underlying Suturing the...
Filip De Boeck presented some results of his ongoing collaboration with photographer and visual arti...
Anthropologist Filip De Boeck presented Suturing the City: Living Together in Congo’s Urban Worlds (...
Filip De Boeck and Sammy Baloji discuss their book Suturing the City: Living Together in Congo’s Urb...
In 2019, Kinshasa counts some thirteen million inhabitants. By 2075, demographers expect that it wil...