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Moridjakitengebanza publication

Book Launch – Moridja Kitenge Banza: A Thousand Ways to Talk About It

  • Event
  • Past Event
  • Contemporary Art
  • Mixed Arts
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407 Saint-Pierre Street

Montréal, Québec, H2Y 2M3
Espace 1

Doors: 1:30 PM
Conversation: 2 PM

Tickets

General admission Free
No reservations required

The conversation will take place in French and English.

For accessibility information, please refer to our Plan Your Visit page.

Join artist Moridja Kitenge Banza and collaborators for an inside look at the monograph, a discussion of editorial choices, and a Q&A with book signing.

About the Event

As part of Plural Contemporary Art Fair, PHI is pleased to launch Moridja Kitenge Banza’s first publication, A Thousand Ways to Talk About It.

Moderated by Cheryl Sim, this event will feature a conversation between the artist and collaborators to explore the genesis of the publication, the editorial choices that shaped the book, and the role a monograph can play in an artist’s career.

Presented at PHI, this exchange will offer a unique opportunity to discover the behind-the-scenes process of the book and the practice of Moridja Kitenge Banza. The discussion will be followed by a Q&A and a book-signing session.

Full details are available on Plural’s official website.

I often say that in my imagination, several worlds coexist. There’s the world of emotions, the world of feelings, the world of politics, and the world of my reality as an artist. It’s all interrelated.

—Moridja Kitenge Banza

Book Description

Presented in French and English, this is the first monograph dedicated to Moridja Kitenge Banza (b. 1980), a Canadian visual artist of Congolese origin.

Known for dynamic works shaped by the places where he has lived and worked, Kitenge Banza’s art is a subversive blend of reality and fiction that questions and challenges discourses of power while opening new spaces for marginalized histories.

Chronicling a multidisciplinary practice that includes painting, photography, video, drawing, and installation, this volume presents a comprehensive outline of Kitenge Banza’s artistic practice. Texts by curators, historians, and theorists focus on the geopolitics, culture, religion, and iconography of the artist’s lived context, accompanied by more than 100 artworks.

Whether confronting the impacts of resource extraction in his native Democratic Republic of Congo or in his adopted home of Québec, or recasting histories shaped by religion, violence, and colonialism, Kitenge Banza’s work explores how his personal narrative is intertwined with the past. His re-appropriation of the codes, customs, and conventions associated with religious, cultural, political, social, and economic systems serve to underscore the contradictions that construct his identities.

Authors