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2025-10-09 | Georges Senga: in a group exhibition 'Shapeshifters' at Framer Framed

Our fellow Georges Senga is participating in a group exhibition 'Shapeshifters' at Framer Framed, Amsterdam. This group exhibition brings together works by al-yené, Antonio Jose Guzman & Iva Jankovic, Georges Senga, Kader Attia, Kosisochukwu Nnebe, Leah Zhang, Pei-Hsuan Wang, Sammy Baloji & Cécile Fromont, Mirelle van Tulder and Anna Safiatou Touré. Together, their practices examine how colonialism has shaped the ways museums, archives and other institutions of knowledge are perceived and understood, revealing the (im)material scars imposed by systemic violence.


Shapeshifters invites visitors to refigure one’s own relationship to these power structures by stepping into relations built on curiosity and empathy. The exhibition title draws from science fiction writer Octavia E. Butler, for whom ‘shapeshifting’ refers not only to the ability to transform at will but to a survival strategy, an imaginative technology and a means of resisting domination. In the same vein, the artists in Shapeshifters use their work as a device to unsettle fixed narratives, confront entrenched systems of power and open space for alternative ways of knowing, relating and being in the world.

Working across various research-driven practices including film, sonic installation, sculpture, painting and other media, the participating artists trace how stories, identities and objects have been categorised, controlled or erased across different sociopolitical contexts. Just as importantly, their works reclaim and reimagine these subjects, allowing them to shift, resist and take on new forms.


At its core, Shapeshifters explores the (im)possibilities for knowledge institutions to evolve and move forward based on care and reciprocity. Questions of ownership, value, loss and repair run through the exhibition. The artworks encourage continuous becoming and challenge what is remembered, who is represented and how institutions might embrace a shape-shifting process: to reorganise space and time for connection, where spirituality and wisdom can grow.


The scenography of the exhibition by Bureau LADA creates an extended platform within the space for reflection, dialogue and exchange – this includes an opening symposium on 17 October contextualising core topics of the exhibition, as well as guided tours, film screenings, participatory workshops and performances.


Opening

Wednesday 15 October 2025, 18:00. Register here.


You can see the exhibition until 11 January 2026.


Photo: Graphic Design by Chen Jhen


More information here

Thami Mnyele Foundation promotes the exchange of art and culture between Africa, African Diaspora and Amsterdam, the Netherlands

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