Rabih Mroué
Sand in the Eyes
septembersept 22
Sunday september 22
11h30
A non-academic lecture by Rabih Mroué. Collaboration research Andrea Geißler. Translation to English Ziad Nawfal. Translation to German Lisa Wegener. Assistant Petra Serhal. Special thanks to Maria Magdalena Ludewig, Lina Majdalanie and Bilal Khbeiz.
Produced by Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin, as part of the project “100 years of present”, funded by the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media in Germany
Co-production with the Hessisches Staatstheater Wiesbaden
In partnership with L'Orient Le Jour
Lafayette Anticipations and the Festival d'Automne à Paris present this programme in co-realisation.
As part of Lafayette Anticipations' Échelle Humaine festival, organised with the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation - Delegation in France.
Rabih Mroué's objective with his “non-academic conferences” is to subvert, via the perspective of performance, the principle of the conference. He does so by imitating the mechanisms at work within the conference format. He does not set out to make fun of the principle of the conference itself, but rather to exploit the power of the exercise as a form of public address. This is achieved by operating a shift of a voluntarily ambiguous nature, passing from presentation to representation and from reality to the imagination. The illusion it sets up is a disturbing one: the tone is neutral, the expertise seems well proven, and the documents supporting the speech suggest authenticity. This, of course, is precisely the aim of the whole mischievous, moving and intellectually stimulating operation.
Sand in the Eyes (2017) explores the manipulation of opinion which is inherent in audiovisual production, as well as in the field of documented presentation. Using extracts from propaganda videos made by both the Islamic State (IS) organization and official anti-terrorist communications released by the heads of the military, staged killings and images captured by military drones, the speaker challenges our representations of violence, in particular the act of killing, regardless of its sources.
Interview with Lina Majdalanie & Rabih Mroué
In the same place