tales of europe
Articles tagged with tales of europe
Tag Archive
- African lands
- Afropolitanism
- Ângela Ferreira
- António Gonga
- apartheid
- Ariel Bogault
- artistic
- Barthélémy Toguo
- biden
- Biodiversity
- Black Lives Matter
- Boca Fala Tropa
- Boubacar Boris Diop
- branqueamento
- Câmara Municipal de Lisboa
- caribbean
- ciberespaço
- cinema
- Coleira
- communality
- controversy
- Cristo do Mundo
- cultura visual
- cultural studies
- diálogo
- édouard glissant
- émancipation
- emigrants
- erosion
- european union
- Fernando Medina
- Festival of Essaouira Gnaoua
- film
- fragment
- genocide
- Goli Guerreiro
- guarani-kaiowá
- Guiné Bissau
- history of Africa
- Irene Renée Karanja
- israel
- Italy
- Jeux Sans Frontières
- Johanesburg
- JSF #2
- Leila Kilani
- Literatura
- luanda
- Luís Lopes de Sequeira; Angola; história colonial; nativismo; nacionalismo.
- lusitanismo
- Mahla Filmes
- mamela nyamza
- Mão Morta
- Mário Pinto de Andrade
- martin Luther king jr
- Memories of the Poisoned River
- memory politics
- mitos
- mozambique
- Munique
- music industry
- Neliswe Xaba
- Nova Lisboa
- ocupy wall street
- Orlando Pantera
- patriarchy
- performance
- plantation
- police brutality
- portland
- pos-colonial
- power asymmetries
- programation
- race
- resentment
- resources
- REVISTA JSF#2
- Routledge
- sandwich
- satire
- school
- sello pesa
- senhor
- sequence
- Sociedades Africanas
- sondagens
- study of memory
- Tambla Almeida
- Third Half
- transatlantic
- trauma
- turismo
- undefined
- viagem
- welket bungué
- William Kentridge
- Witchcraft
- woman
- Zé da Guiné
- Zululuzu
 This exhibition presents around 60 works by 21 artists whose family origins lie in the former colonies in Africa. Born and raised in a post-colonial context, they are artists whose works have become unavoidable in European contemporary art, proposing a reflection on their heritage, their memories and their identities.
				This exhibition presents around 60 works by 21 artists whose family origins lie in the former colonies in Africa. Born and raised in a post-colonial context, they are artists whose works have become unavoidable in European contemporary art, proposing a reflection on their heritage, their memories and their identities.		



