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DTSTART:19810329T020000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:news5140@zasb.unibas.ch
DTSTAMP;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20260408T105217
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20260416T180000
SUMMARY:Tuli Mekondjo & Zenaéca Singh: Artist Walk "Material & Memory"
DESCRIPTION:Together with Tuli Mekondjo and Zenaéca Singh\, visitors explo
 re their installations created especially for the exhibition “A Kind of 
 Paradise” and learn more about their work with materials such as sugar\,
  earth\, and light.\\r\\nTuli Mekondjo is a self-taught Namibian artist ba
 sed in Windhoek\, Namibia. Her multimedia works honor her forebears\, fert
 ility\, and continuity\, while commenting on gendered struggle\, intergene
 rational trauma\, and displacement. Drawing on colonial and wartime photog
 raphic archives\, her practice explores Namibian history and identity poli
 tics.\\r\\nZenaéca Singh lives and works in Cape Town. Her work explores 
 the complex legacy of South Africa’s sugar economy\, investigating its c
 onnections to migration\, colonialism\, labor exploitation\, and the gende
 red dynamics of the domestic sphere.
X-ALT-DESC:<p>Together with Tuli Mekondjo and Zenaéca Singh\, visitors exp
 lore their installations created especially for the exhibition “A Kind o
 f Paradise” and learn more about their work with materials such as sugar
 \, earth\, and light.</p>\n<p>Tuli Mekondjo is a self-taught Namibian arti
 st based in Windhoek\, Namibia. Her multimedia works honor her forebears\,
  fertility\, and continuity\, while commenting on gendered struggle\, inte
 rgenerational trauma\, and displacement. Drawing on colonial and wartime p
 hotographic archives\, her practice explores Namibian history and identity
  politics.</p>\n<p>Zenaéca Singh lives and works in Cape Town. Her work e
 xplores the complex legacy of South Africa’s sugar economy\, investigati
 ng its connections to migration\, colonialism\, labor exploitation\, and t
 he gendered dynamics of the domestic sphere.</p>
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20260416T190000
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