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Don’t You Know Who I Am? – Art After Identity Politics

Exhibition

13 Jun - 12 Oct 2014

Don’t You Know Who I Am? – Art after identity politics brought together emerging talent from around the world. In recent decades, various social groups have defined themselves according to political, economic or social categories, such as race, ethnicity, gender or sexuality to increase their visibility and counter marginalisation.

The exhibition, presented on two floors in the museum and on several off-site locations, was designed as a large-scale study of the modes and means by which identity and identification can be considered. New generations of artists investigated the formation of identity/identities in the world by means of strategies, such as performativity, abstraction, reification, logic and aesthetics of anything digital, activism, the analysis of the self from cultural and scientific perspectives, or the study of the role of the spectator.

Artists

Some thirty artists were invited to show both existing works and newly produced works: Anthea Hamilton, Augustas Serapinas, Donna Kukama, Eloise Hawser, Ermias Kifleyesus, Guan Xiao, Haegue Yang, Hedwig Houben, Iman Issa, Imran Qureshi, Juha Laakkonen, Katja Novitskova, Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Liesbeth Doms, Maria Safronova, Maria Taniguchi, Massimo Grimaldi, Nadezhda Grishina, Nastio Mosquito, Oleg Ustinov, Onkar Kular & Noam Toran, Oscar Murillo, Patrizio Di Massimo, Pedro Barateiro, Pennacchio Argentato, Shilpa Gupta and Wu Tsang


On view

Assem Hendawi, Everything Under Heaven (still), 2021. Single-channel video, 18 min. Courtesy the artist

Exhibition

The Geopolitics of Infrastructure. Contemporary Perspectives

13 Jun – 21 Sep 2025

The Geopolitics of Infrastructure brings together artists who consider the enchantment and power relations of infrastructure. It also considers the possibilities of artistic imagination in conceptualising new and alternative infrastructural models.

In Situ

Özgür Kar — MALAISE

24 May – 7 Sep 2025

The first institutional solo exhibition of Özgür Kar in Belgium, MALAISE, features a new site-specific installation. The presentation includes theatrical sound and video installation that explores themes of collective unease, stagnation, and endurance.

Archive

King Kong: Between Cinephilia and Leftist Activism

24 May – 7 Sep 2025

From 1974 to 1982, cultural centre King Kong was a vibrant space in Antwerp where film, debate, and activism came together. In addition to offering a broad spectrum of film classics and contemporary auteur cinema, King Kong also served as a platform for socially critical documentaries, feminist films, queer cinema, and revolutionary Third Cinema.

Collection

Panamarenko — Journey to the Stars

25 Jan – 7 Sep 2025

‘Journey to the Stars’ delves into Panamarenko’s fascination with the cosmos. By showcasing major works such as Bing of the Ferro Lusto, Flying Cigar Called Flying Tiger, and De Grote Plumbiet together for the first time, complemented by calculations, sketches, and photographs from the archive, the artist’s thought process and imagination are brought to light.

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