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CATPC - gesprek | Why Plantations Matter

Cercle d’Art des Travailleurs de Plantation Congolaise

CATPC is an art cooperative of plantation workers from Lusanga, Democratic Republic of Congo. In this talk, they will tell you all about their work.


You can also visit their film programme with a combi-ticket with discount: 
Conversation & film 31 augustus
Film & Conversation 31 augustus

Entrance
€ 7,-
Duration
60 minutes
Language
English
Location
Nova - Noorderplantsoen
Accessibility
Check times
© Peter Tijhuis

Why Plantations Matter

CATPC is an art cooperative of plantation workers from Lusanga, Democratic Republic of Congo. This year, CATPC represents the Netherlands at the Venice Biennale. The artworks – mainly sculptures made of clay and reproduced in materials from the plantation (cacao, palm oil, and sugar) – convey the pain and evil of colonialism. At the same time, they are objects of hope and recovery: with the proceeds from their art, CATPC aims to buy and restore hundreds of hectares of former plantation land for future generations. Three members of CATPC, Mbuku Kimpala, Ced’art Tamasala, and Matthieu Kasiama, are at Noorderzon to explain their work.

This performance falls under the Me in the mirror theme and you can get theme discounts. For more information, check out this page

Morally, it was the most ambitious contribution I saw in Venice

Dates

Saturday 31 August

Available times

15:00 19:00

About the artist

CATPC – ‘Cercle d’Art des Travailleurs de Plantation Congolaise’ or ‘Congolese Plantation Workers Art League’ in full  – is an art cooperative of plantation workers from Lusanga, Democratic Republic of Congo. The organization was founded in collaboration with renowned environmental activist René Ngongo in 2014. With the proceeds from their art, CATPC aims to secure hundreds of hectares of former plantation land for future generations. In the middle of this land, they have built a museum: the White Cube.