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Next Generation, Please! YOUth Days #1, #2, #3
Hosted by: Bozar
October 27, 2021 | 2 PM GMT 2 November 3, 2021 | 5 PM GMT 2 November 10, 2021 | 3 PM GMT 2
Rue Ravensteinstraat 23, 1000 Brussels, Belgium
As part of the Next Generation, Please! exhibition, young people are taking the floor at Bozar to present the artistic projects they have been working on during the 2020-2021 season. Bozar hosts every Wednesday, the 'YOUth days' where you can discover film premieres, a round table on decolonisation or a workshop on space.
YOUth day #1: A collective creative reflection on space and lockdown
Wed., October 27, 2021
From conversation to body to mind
Get engaged in a collective self-reflection in relation to the spaces we inhabit, to their significance for us as human beings, especially now, when social restrictions tend to become part of our normality. This workshop aims to give insight into the creative process that the participants of My Space - My life: a participatory art project by OURB – exhibited in Next Generation, Please! – undertook, discovering connections between the spaces they inhabit(ed) and visit(ed) during lockdown, or construct(ed) in their heads. Through practices of authentic movement, bodily and spatial exploration, imagination, memories and storytelling, you will explore your personal relation to space, the impact and importance of the different environments you live in.
Limited capacity, registration in advance recommended.
YOUth day #2: Screenings & Performance with D'Broej and La Claque
Wed., November 3, 2021
5:00 – 5:45 pm: Scar the Car Hall Horta In tandem with their film Mauvaise (Gr) Haine, youngsters from the D’Broej project invite the audience to enjoy the performance of Scar the Car by artist Eric Van Uytven. This Brussels artist, the son and grandson of local car mechanics, invites the audience to a collective and personal mourning process by scarring a car. How do we mourn? How do we remember someone or deal with the loss of a loved one? Every culture, every belief, every individual has their own rituals and their own way of coping with grief. Scar the Car prompts us to mourn what has been lost and what each of us wants to hold on to. During the performance, the video Mourning Walk will be shown. Spectators will follow a car through the streets of Brussels, from Gare de l’Ouest (Molenbeek) to Kanal, the final destination for the car-turned-sculpture, which is then cut into pieces; its scars are collected into a book.
6-6.50pm: Premier of Mauvaise (Gr) Haine Followed by a Q&A with the team Studio The three friends behind the Mauvaise (Gr) Haine project are regulars at the D’Broej youth centre – Riad Bekhakh, Mohammed Benassar and Donovan N’Tumba. They have come together driven by a pressing need to honour their friend, Dimitri Lu, a victim of street violence. Anxious to own the debate around their friend’s death and to speak out about the reality of daily life for young people in Brussels, the trio asked for advice from Brussels-based director Julian Bordeau. Together they wrote a script; the three boys played their own roles and left the directing to Julian. In this short film, they re-enact the hours before their friend’s funeral, questioning with emotion and sincerity the importance of personal and collective mourning.
6.50-8pm: Premier of "Now That We're Here" Followed by a Q&A with the team Studio During the 2021-22 school year, artists Gilles Escoyez and Laurie Perissutti brought together a dozen youngsters from the Foyer des Jeunes des Marolles for an ambitious two-part artistic project: a play and a film about the meeting between the young adults from Brussels and another group of youngsters from the Swiss Jura. The short film Maintenant qu'on est là (Now that we’re here) tells the story of these young people’s journey, from their first correspondence, to travelling and meeting in Switzerland, and the process of writing a play. A humorous portrait of a young generation questioning its future and its place in society.
Limited capacity, registration in advance recommended.
YOUth day #3: Telling and teaching colonial history in postcolonial times
Wed., November 10, 2021
As part of the Next Generation, Please! exhibition at Bozar, Brussels, this round table presents the monumental installation by students at Athénée Léonie de Waha High School in Liège, in collaboration with British artist Bruce Clarke. The project focuses on Rwanda’s modern history and the country’s post-genocide process of remembrance. The round table aims to prompt reflection about the effects of post colonialism on art, and on how the country’s colonial history is taught, with a particular focus on secondary school programmes and sources of information. Several experts and actors on the ground will share their visions, beliefs and experiences: a combination of individual, artistic, educational and institutional perspectives.
Limited capacity, registration in advance recommended.
The Next Generation, Please! YOUth Days are part of the STUDIOTOPIA project supported by the Creative Europe Programme of the European Union.
Are you curious about the process behind this project? Follow Next Generation, Please! on Instagram.
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