
(PHOTO)Forum-Talks
By Photoforum

(PHOTO)Forum-TalksMar 26, 2022

Forum-Talk #4
For the 4th episode Ursina Leutenegger talks with Emmanuel Van der Auwera, a Belgian artist who's work challenges the self-evident nature of found documentary images. His photographs, films and video installations use polarising visual material circulating in digital spaces, addressing the ethical responsibility in dealing with images of violence and collective trauma. In regard to the recent school mass shootings in the USA, the works on display are frighteningly topical. They can be read as a plea for a critical approach to mediatised depictions of violence. At the same time, they provide a fascinating insight into the merciless kaleidoscope of the digital image flux by questioning our visual literacy: How do images of contemporary mass media operate on various publics and to what end? Where is the borderline to voyeurism? Which images do we trust and why do they go viral?
Emmanuel Van der Auwera (*1982, BE) lives and works in Brussels, Belgium. His work has been shown in numerous exhibitions, such as Centre Pompidou (Paris), Palais de Tokyo (Paris), Pinakothek der Moderne (Munich, Germany) or Ars Electronica (Linz, Austria). Recent solo shows comprise presentations at HEK (Basel, Switzerland) 2022 and at Botanique (Brussels, Belgium) 2019.
Cover: Detail of the photograph of a bullet looking like a flower, part of the Full Alice-Series shown at Photoforum Pasquart.

Forum-Talk #3

Forum-Talk #2
The second episode is a conversation between Joud Toamah (artist), Sorana Munsya (guest-curator) and Ursina Leutenegger.
Joud Toamah’s (*1992, SY) artistic practice is interested in the relationship between photography and memory. Her work often uses archives of digitized images of family albums that the artist sources from acquaintances, friends and family members in Syria and the diaspora. Toamah collects pictures that have undergone processes of scanning, uploading, searching, renaming, forwarding, etc. in order to create digital archives of private and intimate images. By doing so, photography becomes a place where relation is possible. She has recently shown work during the .tiff exhibition as part of Futures Photography project, at Aair Antwerp for the group exhibition ‘What Stories Want’, and was selected for the 2020 funds for a solo exhibition under the title ‘A sense of what I Remember’ at Fomu, Antwerp, 2022.
Sorana Munsya (DR Congo/Belgium) is a curator and psychologist based in Brussels. In her curatorial practice and writings, she focuses on the connections between art and individual as well as on collective healing strategies and practices. Working on contemporary visual art created by African artists, she served as assistant curator of the 5th Lubumbashi Biennale of Contemporary Art. Moreover, she recently curated a solo exhibition of artist Léonard Pongo at Bozar, Brussels, and a solo exhibition of artist Michële Magema at Kunsthal Extra City, Antwerp. Munsya is part of the editorial team of the Belgian art magazine HART and founder of the platform LOBI that initiates conversations and projects between artists and practitioners from different disciplines.
The exhibition is part of the Journées photographiques de Bienne.
Cover: Exhibition view Photoforum Pasquart, 2022

Forum-Talk #1
The first episode introduces the artist Akosua Viktoria Adu-Sanyah who was invited for a residency exhibition in early 2022. Akosua Viktoria Adu-Sanyah (*1990) is an internationally exhibited and published German-Ghanaian visual artist and documentary photographer based in Zürich, Switzerland. Her work is frequently awarded for exploring new territories through image-making, research, and human connection. The artist and photographer’s work has been exhibited internationally since 2012 and has received numerous nominations and awards, including the Prix Photoforum 2020. Akosua Viktoria Adu-Sanyah is co-hosting the regular NFT Photography Twitter Space “On Looking” together with Matthew Morrocco and Laurent Chevalier.
Cover: Akosua Viktoria Adu-Sanyah, Source Behind Behold the Ocean, 2022