Performance — Sep 18, 2014

New performance work by writer, theater maker, and artist Quinsy Gario, intertwining colonial narrative with the postcolonial condition.

Price
entrance price to the Stedelijk Museum + € 2.50
Location
Teijin Auditorium
Time
Sep 18, 2014, 7 pm until 7.30 pm
Main language
English
Admission
It is necessary to make a reservation. Send an email to reservations@stedelijk.nl, stating your full name, email ddress, telephone number and the date of the program you want to attend.

On the occasion of the opening of the exhibition How Far How Near: The World in the Stedelijk, the Public Program of the Stedelijk presents the performance A Village Called Gario, by Quinsy Gario and the Afrovibes festival.

This performance is actually less related to the Gairo’s personal experience and family history than the title might suggest; instead, it focuses on patterns of migration, both general and specific, which are relevant to family histories in different ways. Taking an existing village called Gario in the Central Republic of Africa as a point of departure, the artist tells the partly fictional, partly factual story of a global journey.The inspiration for this one-man performance comes from the travelogues of colonial explorers. Like them, Gario combines locally collected knowledge with imagined stories.
His work addresses topics such as migrations and the resulting rise of trans-locality, themes that are currently discussed in the exhibition How Near How Far. A previous performance of Gario, Zwarte Piet is Racism, had a broad (international) public debate as a result. 

About Quincy Gario

Quinsy Gario was born in Curaçao and raised in St. Maarten and the Netherlands. Under the pseudonym T. Martinus, Gario has self-published two poetry collections. He won the Hollandse Nieuwe prize for theater makers in 2011 and in 2012 he started his own radio show called Roet in het eten (Spanner in the works). His video work produced under the banner of NON EMPLOYEES has been shown on MTV Netherlands, and he is a member of the pan-African artist collective The State of L3. Group exhibitions include Galleri Image (Denmark); Museum van Hedendaagse Kunst, Antwerpen (Belgium); and SMART Project Space and Stedelijk Museum Bureau Amsterdam (Netherlands). He has performed in MC Theater (Amsterdam, Netherlands) and Ballhaus Naunynstraße (Berlin, Germany). In June 2014, Gario performed A Village Called Gario at MACBA, Barcelona.