Kunstinstituut Melly

My Oma

08 Dec 2023 - 12 May 2024

Charlie Koolhaas, Harriet Freezerstraat, 2023, photographs, courtesy the artist. Exhibition overview, My Oma, 2023, Kunstinstitut Melly. Photographer: Kristien Daem
Jota Mombaça, Absence Vessel, or I had to invent a face for you, and now it is your flesh that I am, 2023, handcrafted ceramic vessels, various construction rubble, soil, polyethylene window foil, graphite drawing on canvas, sound installation, courtesy the artist. Exhibition overview, My Oma, 2023, Kunstinstitut Melly.
Photographer: Kristien Daem
Marcos Kueh, EXPECTING, 2023, jacquard tapestries, courtesy Galerie Ron Mandos. Exhibition overview,
My Oma, 2023, Kunstinstitut Melly. Photographer: Kristien Daem
Silvia Martes, Her Ku Heru pt.1.(Iron With Iron pt.1.), 2023, digital video, installation, 23:50 min, courtesy the artist and Edith Russ Haus. Exhibition overview, My Oma, 2023, Kunstinstitut Melly. Photographer: Kristien Daem
My Oma is a curatorial project focusing on the figure of the grandmother.

The project overall explores personal and cultural legacies mobilized by affection as much as by conflict. It convenes artists and narratives, as well as artworks and theory that articulate central issues of our time: experiences of immigration, dissonant heritage, and changing gender roles.

My Oma gives special attention to embodied knowledge and micro narratives. In the light of increasing political polarization, My Oma promotes historical learning, strengthened intergenerational bonds and celebrates knowledges held among diaspora communities. The bilingual title—with the English my and the Dutch oma for grandmother—is meant to communicate this personal approach. As such, we address grandmothers as plural protagonist imbued with agency as well as being the subject of social projections. The figure of the grandmother thereby allows for various approaches to histories, traditions, and ancestry. It also welcomes the reconsideration of gendered and ageist determinations surrounding cultural and material legacy.

Organized by Kunstinstituut Melly, My Oma involves a large group exhibition of contemporary art including new commissions, existing work, performances, and events. Participating artists are: A Maior (Portugal), Funda Baysal (Turkey), Yto Barrada (France), Meriem Bennani (Morocco), Nurul Ain Binti Nor Halim (Thailand), Lia Dostlieva and Andrii Dostliev (Ukraine), Shardenia Felicia (Curaçao), Susanne Khalil Yusef (Germany), Charlie Koolhaas (The Netherlands), Liedeke Kruk (the Netherlands), Marcos Kueh (Malaysia), Berette S Macaulay (Sierra Leone), Silvia Martes (Curaçao), Hana Miletić (Croatia), Jota Mombaça (Brazil), Sheelasha Rajbhandari (Nepal), Anri Sala (Albania), Stacii Samidin (the Netherlands), Kateřina Šedá (Czech Republic), Julia Scher (United States), Buhlebezwe Siwani (South Africa), Judy Watson (Australia), and Sawangwongse Yawnghwe (Shan State, Burma).

My Oma is the closing exhibition and public-engagement project of Sofía Hernández Chong Cuy’s tenure as the director of Kunstinstituut Melly. It marks her six years of transformational institutional work here. The exhibition and its parallel projects result from curatorial research and public outreach conducted by her and her team—including curators Rosa de Graaf, Jessy Koeiman, Julija Mockutė, and Vivian Ziherl—during this span of time. Curatorial advisors to My Oma include: Diana Campbell (chief curator Dhaka Art Summit, Bangladesh), Edward Gillman (director Auto Italia, London, UK), Sun A Moon (director Space AfroAsia, Dongducheon, South Korea), and Manuela Moscoso (director CARA, New York, USA).
 

Tags: Yto Barrada, Meriem Bennani, Sofía Hernández Chong Cuy, Rosa de Graaf, Jessy Koeiman, Hana Miletić, Jota Mombaça, Anri Sala, Julia Scher, Buhlebezwe Siwani, Judy Watson, Sawangwongse Yawnghwe