Zeit

Sa 4.10.2025
10.15 - 18.30

Ort

Museum

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© @charlie.spies
Performance, Tanz, TheaterEröffnungFilmKonferenzVortragWorkshop

Ecofeminist practices in art & activism - DAY 2

Symposium im Rahmen der Saisoneröffnung von WUK performing arts

Das Symposium widmet sich aktuellen ökofeministischen Ansätzen in der Kunstproduktion, angesichts einer zerstörten und ausgebeuteten Welt. Unser Anliegen ist, entgegen autoritärer Repressionen, Orte zu beschützen, feministisch-diskursive Räume und soziale Infrastrukturen in Kunst und Kultur zu stärken und Austausch zu fördern. Das Symposium befasst sich mit Praktiken der Nachhaltigkeit und queeren Gegenerzählungen zu Ökozid und Formen der Gewalt. Wie können wir als politische Akteur*innen im Kunstbetrieb bestehende Allianzen stärken und was können wir in der aktuellen Situation für das künstlerische Arbeiten in Wien von ökofeministischen Ansätzen lernen?

Organisiert von Natalie Assmann, Sophie Lingg und Mir Raggam-Alji im Rahmen von DANUBE REQUIEM by RRRIOT – Verein zur Förderung und Vermittlung feministischen Kulturschaffens.

Programm TAG 2 – SAMSTAG 04.10.

10.15 – 11.45 Uhr

seeing has never been believing hosted by Imani Rameses
Bodywork Session
(in Englischer Sprache)
*Seeing has never been believing, and I dare you to find out why. Join me for a short workshop in moving your eyes to the back of your head...to a place o**ut of sight, out of mind, and finally back into the body.*
 

12.00 – 14.00 Uhr

Introduction by Symposium Organisers Natalie Assmann, Sophie Lingg and Mir Ragam–Alji
(in Deutsch und Englischer Sprache)

A discussion with Dr. Mekhala Dave on Human – Ocean Relations
Lecture by Dr. Mekhala Dave
(in Englischer Sprache)
Guided by water, she will begin with Rob Nixon’s concept of slow violence – the kind of gradual, often invisible environmental harm that disproportionately affects marginalised communities and ecosystems. From this, she will explore how such violences deplete both land and bodies, engaging with questions of legal personhood for water bodies and how these bodies, in turn, flow through and shape relations between human and other-than-human life.

Her approach draws from queer and ecofeminist thinking, centring interconnectedness, embodiment, and care in the face of extractivist violence. The conversation will also address the global commons, focusing on the critical turning point we face with deep-sea mining and the narratives surrounding the clean energy transition. Mekhala will reflect on how grassroots activism, curatorial strategies, and decolonial artistic practices are actively reshaping the discourse, and how art institutions themselves are responding (or failing to respond) to these planetary urgencies.

Ecologies of Care 
Lecture by Urška Jurman and Elke Krasny
(in Englischer Sprache)
Elke Krasny and Urška Jurman will present the Ecologies of Care (EoC) group which includes curators, artists, architects, and researchers working toward new modes of art and cultural practice that enable meaningful social and environmental encounters and that create lasting and transformative relations. Acknowledging that care is always implicated in the given, defined by the aftermath of patriarchal oppression and colonial violence as well as by present-day compulsory neoliberalism and environmental breakdown, EoC work on conflicts related to care and towards the freedom and joy to care.
 

14.00 – 15.00 Uhr 

Eating with Care
hosted Lunch 
(in Deutscher Sprache)

LESECLUB 
hosted by Mir Raggam–Alji & Sophie Lingg
Collective Reading Session 
(in Deutscher und Englischer Sprache)

5 RHYTHMS 
hosted by Natalie Assmann
Bodywork Session
(in Deutscher und Englischer Sprache)
 

16.30 – 18.30 Uhr 

Milaap – where the salt meets the sweet water, PK 2023, 
a documentary by Marvi Mazhar, Zohaib Kazi, Abuzar Madhu
Filmscreening
30:00 min, OV with English subtitles

Bodies of Water
by Julischka Stengele
Filmscreening
OV English
Bodies of Water is a performance short film about the relationship between human and nature, especially queer, overflowing, fluid bodies and water. Movement, voice, text, video, photography and sound are combined into collage, addressing constructions of (un)naturalness and difference as well as questions of connectedness, belonging and kinship, freely after Donna Haraway’s Chthuluzän theory. A poetic encounter of different life forms and materialities making waves together.
Concept, direction, performance: Julischka Stengele; Camera, editing: Magdalena Fischer; Co-produced by Tanzquartier Wien; 2020/2021, 13:43 min

About the artists

Imani Rameses (she/her) works within the fields of cognitive science, choreography, and pedagogy. Rameses is a PhD candidate at the University of Applied Arts, Vienna, where she *looks *at the concept of bio-mythois, as it pertains to sight-specific sites, and new neuro-anatomies of the eye. Rameses has shown/performed work at ImPulsTanz, Wiener Festwochen, BRUT Wien, Digital Arts & Science - Zurich, Society for Artistic Research (SAR), and has presented her research at Harvard University, University of Zurich, and University of Johannesburg.

Dr Mekhala Dave (she/her) is a lawyer and art academic based in Vienna. She is an Ocean Law and Policy Analyst/Researcher, formerly with the Thyssen-Bornemisza Art Foundation (TBA21). She earned a doctoral degree in contemporary art history and curatorial practice from the University of Applied Arts Vienna. In her past and current legal practice, as well as through her doctoral research, she advocates for a social turn in artistic practices and explores encounters located across knowledge spheres and communities in the Global South at the intersection of activism and newly shaping ocean policy. From her lived experiences across borders, she draws inspiration and spiritual guidance from water to the questions of historicity and the search for emerging “new” relations of identity and belonging. She has been mapping deep-sea mining developments from a nuanced and transdisciplinary research at the intersection of art, law, and science, alongside participating at UN platforms like UN Ocean Conference (UNOC) and International Seabed Authority (ISA). She is a member of the international group Deep Currents Collective that envision the deep seabed as an intrinsically relational world on which humans and nonhumans alike depend for their ecological and cultural wellbeing.

Urška Jurman (she/her) is an art historian and a sociologist of culture. She is  active as a curator, editor and writer in the field of contemporary art. She is a co-founder of the Obrat Culture and Art Association with  which she co-authored a number of spatial interventions in Ljubljana, including the community garden _Beyond a Construction Site_ (2010-22).  In 2021 she co-initiated (with Elke Krasny) Ecologies of Care network. Her work intersects art, critical spatial practices, ecology, and  active citizenship. Since 2013, she has been the programme director of the Igor Zabel Association for Culture and Theory in Ljubljana.

Elke Krasny (she/her) is a Professor at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. Dr. Krasny’s research is concerned with histories, epistemologies, and practices of transnational feminisms, with politics of memory and dimensions of care and social and ecological justice in architecture, urbanism and contemporary art. Recent publications include: *Living with an Infected Planet. Covid-19, Feminism and the Global Frontline of Care* (2023) and *Feminist Infrastructural Critique* (2024), edited together with Sophie Lingg and Claudia Lomoschitz, https://fkw-journal.de/index.php/fkw/issue/view/89.

Julischka Stengele (she*/none) is a queer and crip transdisciplinary artist, curator, writer, facilitator and lecturer based in Vienna. After training in cooking, cleaning and serving, Julischka studied design, performance, visual arts and cultural studies in Berlin, Helsinki and Vienna. Julischka’s practice is project based, genre-crossing, multi-medial, formally diverse, thematically broad and focused on creating encounters, atmospheres, relations, experiences and dialogue as a form of art. As a core team member of Kulturverein SALETTL, Julischka co-curates projects that address issues of ecological and social sustainability on the community farm Kleine Stadt Farm in Wien-Donaustadt.

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