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Saturday 29 October 2022, 17:00Passed
Conditions
CHF 0.-
October 2022
Saturday 29
17:00 - 18:30
Accessible to the hearing impaired
Accessible to the visually impaired
Accessible to the motor impaired
13 to 99 years old

Switzerland and its limits. NEXPO une exposition nationale

Roundtable: Swiss involvements in colonial pasts and postcolonial presents. Auditorium du MEG. Saturday October 29th. 5:00 to 6:30 pm.
Saturday 29 October 2022, 17:00Passed
Conditions
CHF 0.-
copyright Ayo Akingbade

The roundtable explores the presentation and representation of Swiss involvements in colonial pasts and postcolonial presents disclosed in public spaces, museums, academic spheres, and imaginaries.

With Denise Bertschi, Floriane Morin, and Bernhard Carlos Schär, conceived and moderated by Samia Henni

Through the professional practice of four interlocutors operating in different fields, the panel discusses the roles that institutions and individuals might or must play in undoing those presentations and representations. The term “limits” is meant not only as boundaries and restrictions, but also as breaking points that enable a multiplicity of possibilities and relations and futures.

Biography of panelists:

Denise Bertschi is a doctorante EPFL / HEAD–Genève. She completed her MA in Visual Arts at HEAD-Genève and her BA at ZHdK Zurich. Her work has been shown in diverse art insti­tutions in Switz­erland and elsewhere: in the Aargauer Kunsthaus, the Johann Jacobs Museum in Zurich, LACA in Los Angeles, the Museum für Kunst und Gestaltung MKG in Hamburg, RosaBrux in Brussels, Artsonje in Seoul, WITS University in Johan­nesburg and Corner College in Zurich.

Samia Henni is a historian of the built, destroyed and imagined environments who teaches at Cornell University. She is the author of Architecture of Counterrevolution: The French Army in Northern Algeria (2017, EN; 2019, FR), the editor of War Zones (2018) and Deserts Are Not Empty (2022), and the maker of exhibitions, such as Housing Pharmacology (2020) and Discreet Violence: Architecture and the French War in Algeria (2017–21). She is the co-chair of Beyond France, The University Seminar at Columbia University. She was Albert Hirschman Chair (2021–22) at the Institute for Advanced Study in Marseille, a guest Professor at the University of Zurich’s Institute of History of Art (Fall 2021), and a Geddes Fellow (Spring 2021) at Edinburgh School of Archi­tecture and Landscape Archi­tecture.

Floriane Morin is an art historian who graduated from the Ecole du Louvre in Museology and Pacific Arts and holds an M. A. in African Art History from the University of Paris IV. Between 2004 and 2009, she was curator of the African and Oceanian collections at the Barbier-Mueller Museum in Geneva and produced several inter­na­tional exhibitions and publi­cations under her co-direction. Since 2010, she has been Curator in charge of the African collections at the Ethno­graphy Museum of Geneva. Within the frame of the MEG’s decolonial Strategic Plan 2019-2024, she is currently leading a global project on provenance research and critical history of the collections.

Bernhard Carlos Schär is an SNSF Eccellenza professor at the Institute of Political Studies at the University of Lausanne. He is currently leading a research group that examines Switz­er­land’s imperial and quasi-imperial relations with Brazil, Southern Africa and India through the lens of 19th century missio­naries and merchants. Bernhard studied at the Univer­sities of Berne and Geneva, was a postdoctoral researcher at ETH Zurich and has held fellowships in Singapore, Berlin, Munich, and Leiden. His most recent publi­cation is: Switzerland, Borneo and the Dutch Indies. Towards a New Imperial History of Europe, in Past&Present, 2022.

The round table is preceded by a walk:
Figures of International Geneva

Saturday, 29 October 2022, 2 – 3:30 pm
Guided tour by Aline Mona Zuber
Registration via DIALOGUE EN ROUTE (limited capacity)

What was the role of the major inter­na­tional organizations active in the promotion of human rights or humani­ta­rianism in the "factory of inequa­lities"? By intro­ducing three key figures of inter­na­tional Geneva – Henri Dunant, Gustave Moynier and William Rappard – the walkers will be invited to question this history and its current heritage. The objective of this guided tour lies in a desire to draw the public's attention to the history of the construction of inequa­lities in the 19th and 20th centuries by proposing to "meet" certain perso­na­lities of the local historical landscape celebrated in the space public, who parti­cipated directly or indirectly in these constructions. In doing so, the visit offers a better under­standing of the history of humani­tarian and inter­na­tional organizations from which inequa­lities and discri­mi­nation are not absent. This return to the past in turn sheds light on the “present of inequa­lities.”

Aline Mona Zuber is an historian with a degree in inter­na­tional history from the Graduate Institute of Inter­na­tional and Development Studies (IHEID).

NEXPO will be presented by Samia Henni, historian of built and destroyed environments and professor at Cornell University.

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Photo extraite du film par Ayo Akingbade
Other place
Auditorium
Event type
Conference - Meeting
Target audience
General public
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Event organisation
Event organized by an external organization
Organizer
Musée d'ethnographie de Genève (MEG)
Organizer url
http://www.ville-ge.ch/meg
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Thématiques (ne pas cocher sauf autorisation)
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Contribution service
MEG
Campagne - ça se discute
Yesterday's stars are they that different from contemporary ones ? (history / politics), Accessory or essential ? (appearance), Is history written by the victors ? (expression rights), Yesterday or today ? (Intemporality of artwork)

About the location

MEG
Boulevard Carl-VOGT 65, 1205 Genève