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20/05/2022
Do you remember what you are burning? is a survey exhibition that gathers installations, sculptures, photographs, and films that relate to themes of belonging and displacement by Iraqi Kurdish artist Hiwa K. His artwork evokes political realities, oral histories, alternative teachings, and familial and personal memories inspired by his native homeland of Sulaymaniyah, Iraqi Kurdistan. Rooted in his life story, the works reflect on his experiences of exile and asylum during the Gulf War (1990–91), the disorientating conditions of being uprooted from his country, and his political participation in Iraq’s pro-democracy uprisings of the Arab Spring (2010–13).
Through spontaneous and staged collaborations, Hiwa K engages in performances that position him in the role of activist, bandleader, interviewer, or cook, and oftentimes, he invokes the participation of individuals such as protestors, metal casters, and philosophers. Deeply interested in knowledge structures and power relations, he employs strategies that are intended to democratize and make accessible modes of thinking, learning, and remembering that have been hierarchically structured by the economic and political systems of today. As a way of challenging dominant forms of knowledge found in academic settings, he embraces self-education and considers himself to be an “extellectual,” an individual who draws knowledge from everyday occurrences that foster collaborations and collectivity among people.
Both personal and political, Do you remember what you are burning? traces the powerful connections between migration, geopolitics, and armed conflict through the lens of the artist’s migratory path. Collectively, these poetic works offer critical commentaries on the most urgent humanitarian challenges of our time—the global displacement of citizens as a result of warfare and economic crises.