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Trigger

Trigger is a publication initiated by FOMU that offers space for reflection on photography.

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๐™Ž๐™ค๐™ฃ๐™ž๐™˜ ๐™๐™ง๐™–๐™˜๐™š๐™จ: ๐˜ฝ๐™š๐™™๐™ค๐™ช๐™ž๐™ฃ ๐˜ผ๐™จ๐™จ๐™š๐™ข๐™—๐™ก๐™ฎ ๐™–๐™ฃ๐™™ ๐™Ž๐™ค๐™ช๐™ฃ๐™™ ๐˜ผ๐™ง๐™˜๐™๐™ž๐™ซ๐™š๐™จ by Moโ€™min Swaitat is an ode to the authorโ€™s Palestinian Bedouin background, a people who preserve their identity through sound, and not material archives. Fond memories of the yarghul and a rediscovery of Tariq cassettes, where decades of Arab music have been collected, led to the birth of the Palestinian Sound Archive, a decolonial project focused on celebrating Palestinian music and their links to the countryโ€™s history. Despite the hostility facing their heritage, the people assemble.

๐— ๐—ผโ€™๐—บ๐—ถ๐—ป ๐—ฆ๐˜„๐—ฎ๐—ถ๐˜๐—ฎ๐˜ is a London-based Palestinian Bedouin actor, filmmaker, artist, and label owner. He trained at the Freedom Theatre in Jenin and the London Inter national School of Performing Arts (LISPA) in London and Berlin. In 2020, he founded the Majazz Project and the Palestinian Sound Archive after uncovering thousands of vintage tapes and records in Jenin. His work re issues and reanimates forgotten soundsโ€” from Bedouin weddings to revolutionary musicโ€”combining storytelling, performance, and archival practice to preserve and celebrate Palestinian cultural heritage in contemporary art and sound.

@majazzproject

This essay is part of the archival section of Trigger #6: Assemblies, highlighting the diverse practices and contributions that shape the projectโ€™s evolving archive. This section turns to the archive and engages with the material traces of radical assemblies that reveal resistance as a continuum, persisting whether anyone is watching or not.

Image: Artwork used for the latest Palestinian Sound Archive release (August 2025), a 1970s Bedouin field recording of my uncle Atef Swaitat and vocalist Abu Ali featuring original cas- sette artwork. Design by Hilal.

Guest editor @taous_r_dahmani
@fomuantwerp

Revisited by editors @eline.adriaensen @heyitsabel


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2 weeks ago


In a media landscape shaped by deepfakes, algorithmic image production, and growing distrust in representation, ideas of clarity and objectivity have taken on renewed cultural value.

In her latest article for TRIGGER, writer, editor and curator Ilaria Sponda reflects on how the aesthetics of objectivity continues to shape the way images are read, trusted, and legitimised today.

Through the notion of โ€œsymbolic capital,โ€ the essay considers how visual clarity operates not only as a style, but also as a mechanism of authority within contemporary image culture and the post-truth condition.

Image:
Exhibition view of 'Typologien: Photography in 20th-century Germany'
Curated by Susanne Pfeffer
Photo: Roberto Marossi
Courtesy Fondazione Prada

Article online design by @anastasiamiseyko

Read the full article via the link in bio.

@ilariasponda
@fomuantwerp

@fondazioneprada
@rem_mannheim
@staatsgalerie.stuttgart
@photobasel
@photoespana_
@pinakothekdermoderne


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2 weeks ago

๐™๐™๐™š ๐™Ž๐™ฅ๐™š๐™˜๐™ฉ๐™–๐™˜๐™ก๐™š ๐™ค๐™› ๐™‹๐™ค๐™ฌ๐™š๐™ง ๐™–๐™ฃ๐™™ ๐™ฉ๐™๐™š ๐™‚๐™๐™ค๐™จ๐™ฉ๐™จ ๐™„๐™ฉ ๐™‡๐™š๐™–๐™ซ๐™š๐™จ ๐˜ฝ๐™š๐™๐™ž๐™ฃ๐™™ explores what is left behind from political violence through an examination of archival images of gatherings. A 1926 photo of an execution in Marjeh Square, Damascus is in the focus; the hanged manโ€™s thoughts as the public witnesses. The square is not merely a place for gatherings, but becomes a site for (post)colonial power and discipline, where fear lives and breathes. Death is not where violence ends. Violence lives on in the memory of the people and haunts empty spaces.

๐—ง๐—ต๐—ฒ ๐—”๐—ฟ๐—ฎ๐—ฏ ๐—œ๐—บ๐—ฎ๐—ด๐—ฒ ๐—™๐—ผ๐˜‚๐—ป๐—ฑ๐—ฎ๐˜๐—ถ๐—ผ๐—ป (๐—”๐—œ๐—™) is a Beirut-based independent association dedicated to exploring photography and image practices across the Middle East, North Africa, and the Arab diaspora. With a collection of over 500,000 photographic objects built over two decades, the AIF fosters artistic creation, research, and archiving. Through critical and innovative approaches, it rethinks and activates images to reflect on complex social and political realities. The AIF welcomes artists, researchers, students, and the public to engage with its digital platform, physical space, and collaborative projects worldwide.

@arabimagefoundation

This essay is part of the archival section of Trigger #6: Assemblies, highlighting the diverse practices and contributions that shape the projectโ€™s evolving archive. This section turns to the archive and engages with the material traces of radical assemblies that reveal resistance as a continuum, persisting whether anyone is watching or not.

Image: From the series Execution Squares. ยฉ Hrair Sarkissian

Guest editor @taous_r_dahmani
@fomuantwerp

Revisited by editors @eline.adriaensen @heyitsabel


31
1
2 weeks ago

๐™๐™ง๐™–๐™˜๐™š๐™จ ๐™ค๐™› ๐™๐™ค๐™œ๐™š๐™ฉ๐™๐™š๐™ง๐™ฃ๐™š๐™จ๐™จ: ๐™Š๐™ฃ ๐™ฉ๐™๐™š ๐˜ผ๐™ก๐™š๐™ญ๐™–๐™ฃ๐™™๐™ง๐™ž๐™– ๐™Ž๐™˜๐™๐™ค๐™ค๐™ก ๐™–๐™ฃ๐™™ ๐™ฉ๐™๐™š ๐˜ผ๐™ง๐™ฉ ๐™ค๐™› ๐™‚๐™–๐™ฉ๐™๐™š๐™ง๐™ž๐™ฃ๐™œ chronicles the complexity of research into Arab art history through fragmented archives, and recenters artistsโ€™ agency and lived realities, which have so often been neglected. Within Alexandriaโ€™s art scene as a hub of artistic collaboration, Seif Wanlyโ€™s painting The Wedding Announcement Dinner is highlighted. It depicts a celebration of the marriage between the painter and the artist Ehsan Mokhtar, whose contributions to the field have been severely underappreciated. Through artistic figures such as these, among many others, a picture emerges of a community that flourished on the act of sharing and close-knit connections; a testament to the radicality inherent to working together.

๐—ก๐—ฎ๐—ฑ๐—ถ๐—ป๐—ฒ ๐—ก๐—ผ๐˜‚๐—ฟ ๐—ฒ๐—น ๐——๐—ถ๐—ป is a writer, art historian, and curator whose work focuses on the arts and cultural production of the Arab world and wider region. Born in Cairo, Egypt, she currently lives in London. She holds masterโ€™s degrees in the history of art from The Courtauld and in arts management and cultural policy from Goldsmiths, University of London, and a bachelorโ€™s in visual arts from the American University in Cairo.

@nadinenour

This essay is part of the archival section of Trigger #6: Assemblies, highlighting the diverse practices and contributions that shape the projectโ€™s evolving archive. This section turns to the archive and engages with the material traces of radical assemblies that reveal resistance as a continuum, persisting whether anyone is watching or not.

Guest editor @taous_r_dahmani
@fomuantwerp

Revisited by editors @eline.adriaensen @heyitsabel


13
2 weeks ago

๐™๐™ง๐™–๐™˜๐™š๐™จ ๐™ค๐™› ๐™๐™ค๐™œ๐™š๐™ฉ๐™๐™š๐™ง๐™ฃ๐™š๐™จ๐™จ: ๐™Š๐™ฃ ๐™ฉ๐™๐™š ๐˜ผ๐™ก๐™š๐™ญ๐™–๐™ฃ๐™™๐™ง๐™ž๐™– ๐™Ž๐™˜๐™๐™ค๐™ค๐™ก ๐™–๐™ฃ๐™™ ๐™ฉ๐™๐™š ๐˜ผ๐™ง๐™ฉ ๐™ค๐™› ๐™‚๐™–๐™ฉ๐™๐™š๐™ง๐™ž๐™ฃ๐™œ chronicles the complexity of research into Arab art history through fragmented archives, and recenters artistsโ€™ agency and lived realities, which have so often been neglected. Within Alexandriaโ€™s art scene as a hub of artistic collaboration, Seif Wanlyโ€™s painting The Wedding Announcement Dinner is highlighted. It depicts a celebration of the marriage between the painter and the artist Ehsan Mokhtar, whose contributions to the field have been severely underappreciated. Through artistic figures such as these, among many others, a picture emerges of a community that flourished on the act of sharing and close-knit connections; a testament to the radicality inherent to working together.

๐—ก๐—ฎ๐—ฑ๐—ถ๐—ป๐—ฒ ๐—ก๐—ผ๐˜‚๐—ฟ ๐—ฒ๐—น ๐——๐—ถ๐—ป is a writer, art historian, and curator whose work focuses on the arts and cultural production of the Arab world and wider region. Born in Cairo, Egypt, she currently lives in London. She holds masterโ€™s degrees in the history of art from The Courtauld and in arts management and cultural policy from Goldsmiths, University of London, and a bachelorโ€™s in visual arts from the American University in Cairo.

@nadinenour

This essay is part of the archival section of Trigger #6: Assemblies, highlighting the diverse practices and contributions that shape the projectโ€™s evolving archive. This section turns to the archive and engages with the material traces of radical assemblies that reveal resistance as a continuum, persisting whether anyone is watching or not.

Guest editor @taous_r_dahmani
@fomuantwerp

Revisited by editors @eline.adriaensen @heyitsabel


13
2 weeks ago

๐™๐™ง๐™–๐™˜๐™š๐™จ ๐™ค๐™› ๐™๐™ค๐™œ๐™š๐™ฉ๐™๐™š๐™ง๐™ฃ๐™š๐™จ๐™จ: ๐™Š๐™ฃ ๐™ฉ๐™๐™š ๐˜ผ๐™ก๐™š๐™ญ๐™–๐™ฃ๐™™๐™ง๐™ž๐™– ๐™Ž๐™˜๐™๐™ค๐™ค๐™ก ๐™–๐™ฃ๐™™ ๐™ฉ๐™๐™š ๐˜ผ๐™ง๐™ฉ ๐™ค๐™› ๐™‚๐™–๐™ฉ๐™๐™š๐™ง๐™ž๐™ฃ๐™œ chronicles the complexity of research into Arab art history through fragmented archives, and recenters artistsโ€™ agency and lived realities, which have so often been neglected. Within Alexandriaโ€™s art scene as a hub of artistic collaboration, Seif Wanlyโ€™s painting The Wedding Announcement Dinner is highlighted. It depicts a celebration of the marriage between the painter and the artist Ehsan Mokhtar, whose contributions to the field have been severely underappreciated. Through artistic figures such as these, among many others, a picture emerges of a community that flourished on the act of sharing and close-knit connections; a testament to the radicality inherent to working together.

๐—ก๐—ฎ๐—ฑ๐—ถ๐—ป๐—ฒ ๐—ก๐—ผ๐˜‚๐—ฟ ๐—ฒ๐—น ๐——๐—ถ๐—ป is a writer, art historian, and curator whose work focuses on the arts and cultural production of the Arab world and wider region. Born in Cairo, Egypt, she currently lives in London. She holds masterโ€™s degrees in the history of art from The Courtauld and in arts management and cultural policy from Goldsmiths, University of London, and a bachelorโ€™s in visual arts from the American University in Cairo.

@nadinenour

This essay is part of the archival section of Trigger #6: Assemblies, highlighting the diverse practices and contributions that shape the projectโ€™s evolving archive. This section turns to the archive and engages with the material traces of radical assemblies that reveal resistance as a continuum, persisting whether anyone is watching or not.

Guest editor @taous_r_dahmani
@fomuantwerp

Revisited by editors @eline.adriaensen @heyitsabel


13
2 weeks ago

๐™๐™ง๐™–๐™˜๐™š๐™จ ๐™ค๐™› ๐™๐™ค๐™œ๐™š๐™ฉ๐™๐™š๐™ง๐™ฃ๐™š๐™จ๐™จ: ๐™Š๐™ฃ ๐™ฉ๐™๐™š ๐˜ผ๐™ก๐™š๐™ญ๐™–๐™ฃ๐™™๐™ง๐™ž๐™– ๐™Ž๐™˜๐™๐™ค๐™ค๐™ก ๐™–๐™ฃ๐™™ ๐™ฉ๐™๐™š ๐˜ผ๐™ง๐™ฉ ๐™ค๐™› ๐™‚๐™–๐™ฉ๐™๐™š๐™ง๐™ž๐™ฃ๐™œ chronicles the complexity of research into Arab art history through fragmented archives, and recenters artistsโ€™ agency and lived realities, which have so often been neglected. Within Alexandriaโ€™s art scene as a hub of artistic collaboration, Seif Wanlyโ€™s painting The Wedding Announcement Dinner is highlighted. It depicts a celebration of the marriage between the painter and the artist Ehsan Mokhtar, whose contributions to the field have been severely underappreciated. Through artistic figures such as these, among many others, a picture emerges of a community that flourished on the act of sharing and close-knit connections; a testament to the radicality inherent to working together.

๐—ก๐—ฎ๐—ฑ๐—ถ๐—ป๐—ฒ ๐—ก๐—ผ๐˜‚๐—ฟ ๐—ฒ๐—น ๐——๐—ถ๐—ป is a writer, art historian, and curator whose work focuses on the arts and cultural production of the Arab world and wider region. Born in Cairo, Egypt, she currently lives in London. She holds masterโ€™s degrees in the history of art from The Courtauld and in arts management and cultural policy from Goldsmiths, University of London, and a bachelorโ€™s in visual arts from the American University in Cairo.

@nadinenour

This essay is part of the archival section of Trigger #6: Assemblies, highlighting the diverse practices and contributions that shape the projectโ€™s evolving archive. This section turns to the archive and engages with the material traces of radical assemblies that reveal resistance as a continuum, persisting whether anyone is watching or not.

Guest editor @taous_r_dahmani
@fomuantwerp

Revisited by editors @eline.adriaensen @heyitsabel


13
2 weeks ago

In ๐™‹๐™ž๐™š๐™ง๐™˜๐™ž๐™ฃ๐™œ ๐™ฉ๐™๐™š ๐˜ผ๐™ง๐™˜๐™๐™ž๐™ฉ๐™š๐™˜๐™ฉ๐™ช๐™ง๐™–๐™ก ๐™๐™ง๐™–๐™ข๐™š, Sara Sallam engages with colonial archival photography in Egypt, examining how images produced under British rule shaped what was seen, and what was erased. Through the archive of K. A. C. Creswell, Sara Sallam interrogates how architectural documentation often obscures the presence of Egyptians and the violence of the empire behind a focus on monuments and built form.
By reworking and collaging archival fragments, the project recentres the bodies, voices, and lived realities that existed outside the frame, disrupting the colonial logic of visibility and preservation.

๐—ฆ๐—ฎ๐—ฟ๐—ฎ ๐—ฆ๐—ฎ๐—น๐—น๐—ฎ๐—บ is a multidisciplinary artist who grew up in Egypt and now lives in the Netherlands. Her research-based practice includes photography, moving images, writing, voice narration, archival interventions, and book-making. She focuses on retelling contested histories through counter-narratives centred around empathy to decolonise her Egyptian heritage.

@sarasallam

This essay is part of the archival section of Trigger #6: Assemblies, highlighting the diverse practices and contributions that shape the projectโ€™s evolving archive. This section turns to the archive and engages with the material traces of radical assemblies that reveal resistance as a continuum, persisting whether anyone is watching or not.

Image: Revolution, Not an Aqueduct, from the series Piercing the Architectural Frame, Sara Sallam, 2024. Courtesy of the artist. Developed during a Jameel Fellowship at the Victoria & Albert Museum.

Guest editor @taous_r_dahmani
@fomuantwerp

Revisited by editors @eline.adriaensen @heyitsabel


60
1
2 weeks ago


๐˜ผ๐™จ๐™จ๐™š๐™ข๐™—๐™ก๐™ž๐™š๐™จ ๐™ค๐™› ๐™๐™š๐™จ๐™ž๐™จ๐™ฉ๐™–๐™ฃ๐™˜๐™š, ๐™’๐™๐™š๐™ง๐™š ๐™ˆ๐™š๐™ข๐™ค๐™ง๐™ฎ ๐™๐™š๐™›๐™ช๐™จ๐™š๐™จ ๐™ฉ๐™ค ๐˜ฟ๐™ž๐™š explores Kurdish archival memory as an evolving field shaped by struggle, collective identity, and political becoming. Drawing on personal family archives and the Kurdish liberation movement รŠvar Huseynรฎ reflects on how images of everyday life and anticipated martyrdom coexist.
Framed through process philosophy and assemblies of self-determination, the essay positions remembrance as a form of political continuity where the past is continually reassembled in the present.

Eฬ‚var Huseyniฬ‚ is a Kurdish artist and archivist based in London. Her multidisciplinary practice explores Kurdish genealogies, colonial violence in archives, and their impact on Kurdish feminism and identity. She investigates how archives shape collective memory, perpetuate bias, and affect the freedom of occupied peoples. Her work spans handmade books (Cries of Soil, K-land), films (Fruit of the Dead, my Mum, my Aunt), large-scale installations, and experimental archiving rooted in personal and communal histories of Kurdistan.

@evarhuseyni

This essay is part of the archival section of Trigger #6: Assemblies, highlighting the diverse practices and contributions that shape the projectโ€™s evolving archive. This section turns to the archive and engages with the material traces of radical assemblies that reveal resistance as a continuum, persisting whether anyone is watching or not.

Guest editor @taous_r_dahmani
@fomuantwerp

Revisited by editors @eline.adriaensen @heyitsabel


32
1
2 weeks ago

๐˜ผ๐™จ๐™จ๐™š๐™ข๐™—๐™ก๐™ž๐™š๐™จ ๐™ค๐™› ๐™๐™š๐™จ๐™ž๐™จ๐™ฉ๐™–๐™ฃ๐™˜๐™š, ๐™’๐™๐™š๐™ง๐™š ๐™ˆ๐™š๐™ข๐™ค๐™ง๐™ฎ ๐™๐™š๐™›๐™ช๐™จ๐™š๐™จ ๐™ฉ๐™ค ๐˜ฟ๐™ž๐™š explores Kurdish archival memory as an evolving field shaped by struggle, collective identity, and political becoming. Drawing on personal family archives and the Kurdish liberation movement รŠvar Huseynรฎ reflects on how images of everyday life and anticipated martyrdom coexist.
Framed through process philosophy and assemblies of self-determination, the essay positions remembrance as a form of political continuity where the past is continually reassembled in the present.

Eฬ‚var Huseyniฬ‚ is a Kurdish artist and archivist based in London. Her multidisciplinary practice explores Kurdish genealogies, colonial violence in archives, and their impact on Kurdish feminism and identity. She investigates how archives shape collective memory, perpetuate bias, and affect the freedom of occupied peoples. Her work spans handmade books (Cries of Soil, K-land), films (Fruit of the Dead, my Mum, my Aunt), large-scale installations, and experimental archiving rooted in personal and communal histories of Kurdistan.

@evarhuseyni

This essay is part of the archival section of Trigger #6: Assemblies, highlighting the diverse practices and contributions that shape the projectโ€™s evolving archive. This section turns to the archive and engages with the material traces of radical assemblies that reveal resistance as a continuum, persisting whether anyone is watching or not.

Guest editor @taous_r_dahmani
@fomuantwerp

Revisited by editors @eline.adriaensen @heyitsabel


32
1
2 weeks ago

๐˜ผ๐™จ๐™จ๐™š๐™ข๐™—๐™ก๐™ž๐™š๐™จ ๐™ค๐™› ๐™๐™š๐™จ๐™ž๐™จ๐™ฉ๐™–๐™ฃ๐™˜๐™š, ๐™’๐™๐™š๐™ง๐™š ๐™ˆ๐™š๐™ข๐™ค๐™ง๐™ฎ ๐™๐™š๐™›๐™ช๐™จ๐™š๐™จ ๐™ฉ๐™ค ๐˜ฟ๐™ž๐™š explores Kurdish archival memory as an evolving field shaped by struggle, collective identity, and political becoming. Drawing on personal family archives and the Kurdish liberation movement รŠvar Huseynรฎ reflects on how images of everyday life and anticipated martyrdom coexist.
Framed through process philosophy and assemblies of self-determination, the essay positions remembrance as a form of political continuity where the past is continually reassembled in the present.

Eฬ‚var Huseyniฬ‚ is a Kurdish artist and archivist based in London. Her multidisciplinary practice explores Kurdish genealogies, colonial violence in archives, and their impact on Kurdish feminism and identity. She investigates how archives shape collective memory, perpetuate bias, and affect the freedom of occupied peoples. Her work spans handmade books (Cries of Soil, K-land), films (Fruit of the Dead, my Mum, my Aunt), large-scale installations, and experimental archiving rooted in personal and communal histories of Kurdistan.

@evarhuseyni

This essay is part of the archival section of Trigger #6: Assemblies, highlighting the diverse practices and contributions that shape the projectโ€™s evolving archive. This section turns to the archive and engages with the material traces of radical assemblies that reveal resistance as a continuum, persisting whether anyone is watching or not.

Guest editor @taous_r_dahmani
@fomuantwerp

Revisited by editors @eline.adriaensen @heyitsabel


32
1
2 weeks ago

๐™๐™๐™š ๐™Ž๐™š๐™š๐™™๐™จ ๐™ค๐™› ๐™Š๐™ช๐™ง ๐˜พ๐™ค๐™ก๐™ก๐™š๐™˜๐™ฉ๐™ž๐™ซ๐™š ๐™ƒ๐™ค๐™ฅ๐™š engages with publishing, archiving, and circulation as practices of resistance across Southwest Asia and North Africa. Through encounters with dispersed archives, bookshops, and publications such as Lotus, Fehras Publishing Practices reflect on how printed matter becomes a living site of memory, shaped by movement, displacement, and collective care.

๐—™๐—ฒ๐—ต๐—ฟ๐—ฎ๐˜€ ๐—ฃ๐˜‚๐—ฏ๐—น๐—ถ๐˜€๐—ต๐—ถ๐—ป๐—ด ๐—ฃ๐—ฟ๐—ฎ๐—ฐ๐˜๐—ถ๐—ฐ๐—ฒ๐˜€ is a cultural workersโ€™ collective spanning Lebanon, Syria, and Iran. Their work interrogates questions of memory, political infrastructure of cultural spaces, and history-making. In 2024, Fehras collective members were mentors-in-residence in Neither on Land nor at Sea, a research project initiated and curated by UNIDEE visiting curator 2022โ€“2024 Chiara Cartuccia. They currently work and live in Berlin.

@fehras_publishing_practices

This essay is part of the archival section of Trigger #6: Assemblies, highlighting the diverse practices and contributions that shape the projectโ€™s evolving archive. This section turns to the archive and engages with the material traces of radical assemblies that reveal resistance as a continuum, persisting whether anyone is watching or not.

Image: โ€˜Hader Halal Sessionsโ€™, Dโ€™EST cycle #2: Postsocialism as Method. Anti-Geographies of Collective Desires, district*school without center c/o Flutgraben e.V., Berlin.

Guest editor @taous_r_dahmani
@fomuantwerp

Revisited by editors @eline.adriaensen @heyitsabel


17
3 weeks ago

๐™”๐™š๐™จ๐™ฉ๐™š๐™ง๐™™๐™–๐™ฎ, ๐˜พ๐™ค๐™ข๐™š ๐˜พ๐™ก๐™ค๐™จ๐™š๐™ง engages with Palestinian memory through an expansive counter-archival practice that resists fixation, linearity, and closure.
Bringing together photographs, texts, posters, drawings, sound, and digital platforms, Ibrahem Hasan constructs a dispersed field of images and voices where memory is experienced as something relational, broken into fragments, resonating across time, but remaining alive.
Assembly becomes a method of resistance: a way of holding multiplicity without reducing it, and of insisting on presence against the archival impulse to contain or define.

๐—œ๐—ฏ๐—ฟ๐—ฎ๐—ต๐—ฒ๐—บ ๐—›๐—ฎ๐˜€๐—ฎ๐—ป is a Palestinian American artist and visual storyteller born and raised on Chicagoโ€™s South Side and now based in Brooklyn. Formerly a senior creative director at Nike, he uses photography, film, text, and installation to explore authenticity, memory, and belonging. His recent book Yesterday, Come Closer (2024), a 728โ€page nonโ€linear exploration of Palestinian collective memory, received widespread acclaim. Hasanโ€™s work emphasises elevating marginalised voices and forging emotional connections through nuanced visual narratives.

@ib.hasa.n

This essay is part of the archival section of Trigger #6: Assemblies, highlighting the diverse practices and contributions that shape the projectโ€™s evolving archive. This section turns to the archive and engages with the material traces of radical assemblies that reveal resistance as a continuum, persisting whether anyone is watching or not.

Guest editor @taous_r_dahmani
@fomuantwerp

Revisited by editors @eline.adriaensen @heyitsabel


31
3 weeks ago

The essay ๐™๐™ž๐™ก๐™ข๐™ž๐™˜ ๐™๐™–๐™—๐™ช๐™ก๐™–๐™ฉ๐™ž๐™ค๐™ฃ engages with archival film as a decolonial practice of reworking history through image, sound, and narrative.
Drawing on Saidiya Hartmanโ€™s notion of โ€˜critical fabulation,โ€™ Mahasen Nasser-Eldin explores how filmmaking can return to fragmented and colonial archives to recover displaced Palestinian womenโ€™s histories and challenge the violence embedded in archival structures.

๐— ๐—ฎ๐—ต๐—ฎ๐˜€๐—ฒ๐—ป ๐—ก๐—ฎ๐˜€๐˜€๐—ฒ๐—ฟ-๐—˜๐—น๐—ฑ๐—ถ๐—ป is an award-winning filmmaker and researcher from Al-Quds (Jerusalem) who tells stories of resistance and resilience, breathing new life into forgotten figures. Her work focuses on decolonial archival practices and displaced womenโ€™s histories, drawing from archive studies, subaltern histories, transnational feminism, and subjectivity.

@mahasen_nassereldin

This essay is part of the archival section of Trigger #6: Assemblies, highlighting the diverse practices and contributions that shape the projectโ€™s evolving archive. This section turns to the archive and engages with the material traces of radical assemblies that reveal resistance as a continuum, persisting whether anyone is watching or not.

Image: The Matson Photograph Collection, Library of Congress. Image used in The Silent Protest: 1929 Jerusalem directed by Mahasen Nasser-Eldin.

Guest editor @taous_r_dahmani
@fomuantwerp

Revisited by editors @eline.adriaensen @heyitsabel


19
1
3 weeks ago

๐™’๐™๐™š๐™ฃ ๐™‹๐™–๐™ง๐™–๐™ก๐™ก๐™š๐™ก ๐™‡๐™ž๐™ฃ๐™š๐™จ ๐™„๐™ฃ๐™ฉ๐™š๐™ง๐™จ๐™š๐™˜๐™ฉ reflects on displacement, belonging, and the fragile infrastructures of community that emerge in diaspora. Moving between Beirut, Brussels, and Ghent, this essay maps how cultural dispersion reshapes daily life, where memory, friendship, and shared practice become forms of survival and care.
Through Tashattot Collective, assembly becomes both response and necessity: a space to remain connected, to hold distance together, and to build a sense of home in motion.โ€จ
Tashattot is also currently part of Tenderly There at FOMU, a group exhibition where artists from the SWANA region explore, commemorate, and affirm experiences of queer intimacy.

๐—ง๐—ฎ๐˜€๐—ต๐—ฎ๐˜๐˜๐—ผ๐˜ (Arabic for dispersion) is a socio-cultural collective based in Brussels that aims to connect artists and cultural practitioners from the SWANA region living in or passing through Europe. Tashattot offers a platform for these artists to showcase their works, share their narratives, and engage with diverse audiences, through the curation of an array of artistic initiatives โ€“ including exhibitions, events, workshops, residencies, performances and more.

@tashattot.collective

This essay is part of the archival section of Trigger #6: Assemblies, highlighting the diverse practices and contributions that shape the projectโ€™s evolving archive. This section turns to the archive and engages with the material traces of radical assemblies that reveal resistance as a continuum, persisting whether anyone is watching or not.

Guest editor @taous_r_dahmani
@fomuantwerp

Revisited by editors @eline.adriaensen @heyitsabel


18
1
3 weeks ago


๐™’๐™๐™š๐™ฃ ๐™‹๐™–๐™ง๐™–๐™ก๐™ก๐™š๐™ก ๐™‡๐™ž๐™ฃ๐™š๐™จ ๐™„๐™ฃ๐™ฉ๐™š๐™ง๐™จ๐™š๐™˜๐™ฉ reflects on displacement, belonging, and the fragile infrastructures of community that emerge in diaspora. Moving between Beirut, Brussels, and Ghent, this essay maps how cultural dispersion reshapes daily life, where memory, friendship, and shared practice become forms of survival and care.
Through Tashattot Collective, assembly becomes both response and necessity: a space to remain connected, to hold distance together, and to build a sense of home in motion.โ€จ
Tashattot is also currently part of Tenderly There at FOMU, a group exhibition where artists from the SWANA region explore, commemorate, and affirm experiences of queer intimacy.

๐—ง๐—ฎ๐˜€๐—ต๐—ฎ๐˜๐˜๐—ผ๐˜ (Arabic for dispersion) is a socio-cultural collective based in Brussels that aims to connect artists and cultural practitioners from the SWANA region living in or passing through Europe. Tashattot offers a platform for these artists to showcase their works, share their narratives, and engage with diverse audiences, through the curation of an array of artistic initiatives โ€“ including exhibitions, events, workshops, residencies, performances and more.

@tashattot.collective

This essay is part of the archival section of Trigger #6: Assemblies, highlighting the diverse practices and contributions that shape the projectโ€™s evolving archive. This section turns to the archive and engages with the material traces of radical assemblies that reveal resistance as a continuum, persisting whether anyone is watching or not.

Guest editor @taous_r_dahmani
@fomuantwerp

Revisited by editors @eline.adriaensen @heyitsabel


18
1
3 weeks ago

Nadia Yahlom reflects on the Archives des luttes des femmes en Algรฉrie as an act of collective resistance and remembrance, foregrounding womenโ€™s central role in shaping histories of struggle.
Navigating between personal memory and political history, this essay explores how womenโ€™s stories are often excluded from dominant archives, and how they are instead painstakingly assembled through fragments, testimony, and lived experience.
In doing so, it positions archiving itself as a political practice that resists erasure and insists on visibility, agency, and collective memory.

๐—ก๐—ฎ๐—ฑ๐—ถ๐—ฎ ๐——๐—ถ๐—ป๐—ฎ ๐—ฌ๐—ฎ๐—ต๐—น๐—ผ๐—บ is a London-based artist, anthropologist, and curator of British and Palestinian Jewish background. Her interdisciplinary work explores the supernatural and colonial aftermaths between Palestine and the UK. As co-founder of the Sarha Collective, she creates participatory works combining film, sound, photography, and installation to engage with memory, resistance, and invisible worlds.

@archivesfemmesdz

This essay is part of the archival section of Trigger #6: Assemblies, highlighting the diverse practices and contributions that shape the projectโ€™s evolving archive. This section turns to the archive and engages with the material traces of radical assemblies that reveal resistance as a continuum, persisting whether anyone is watching or not.

Image: Protest against the Gulf War and in support of Palestine, Algiers, January 24, 1991. Photograph by Rafik Zaidi. Photographerโ€™s archive.

Guest editor @taous_r_dahmani
@fomuantwerp

Revisited by editors @eline.adriaensen @heyitsabel


26
3 weeks ago

Introducing the idea of the โ€˜aestheticisation of political failure,โ€™ Joumaa explores in her essay ๐˜พ๐™ค๐™ช๐™ฃ๐™ฉ๐™š๐™ง-๐˜ผ๐™ง๐™˜๐™๐™ž๐™ซ๐™–๐™ก ๐™‹๐™ง๐™–๐™˜๐™ฉ๐™ž๐™˜๐™š๐™จ: ๐˜ฝ๐™š๐™ฉ๐™ฌ๐™š๐™š๐™ฃ ๐™‹๐™š๐™ง๐™›๐™ค๐™ง๐™ข๐™–๐™ฃ๐™˜๐™š ๐™–๐™ฃ๐™™ ๐˜ฟ๐™ค๐™˜๐™ช๐™ข๐™š๐™ฃ๐™ฉ๐™–๐™ฉ๐™ž๐™ค๐™ฃ how politics today operate through images that promise change while remaining structurally unable to deliver it. In this way, the image of change becomes more powerful than the change itself.
Rather than recovering a fixed truth, the counter-archive opens a space for friction, where โ€˜officialโ€™ narratives are unsettled and the gap between representation and reality becomes visible.

๐—๐—ผ๐˜†๐—ฐ๐—ฒ ๐—๐—ผ๐˜‚๐—บ๐—ฎ๐—ฎ is a Lebanese Canadian visual artist and writer based between Beirut, Montreal, and Amsterdam. Her work focuses on microhistories within Lebanon, as a way to understand how past structures inform the present moment. Central to her practice is an interest in the political charge inscribed in space and the social psychology that unfolds out of this tension.

@joycejoumaa

This essay is part of the archival section of Trigger #6: Assemblies, highlighting the diverse practices and contributions that shape the projectโ€™s evolving archive. This section turns to the archive and engages with the material traces of radical assemblies that reveal resistance as a continuum, persisting whether anyone is watching or not.

Guest editor @taous_r_dahmani
@fomuantwerp

Revisited by editors @eline.adriaensen @heyitsabel


46
1
3 weeks ago

Introducing the idea of the โ€˜aestheticisation of political failure,โ€™ Joumaa explores in her essay ๐˜พ๐™ค๐™ช๐™ฃ๐™ฉ๐™š๐™ง-๐˜ผ๐™ง๐™˜๐™๐™ž๐™ซ๐™–๐™ก ๐™‹๐™ง๐™–๐™˜๐™ฉ๐™ž๐™˜๐™š๐™จ: ๐˜ฝ๐™š๐™ฉ๐™ฌ๐™š๐™š๐™ฃ ๐™‹๐™š๐™ง๐™›๐™ค๐™ง๐™ข๐™–๐™ฃ๐™˜๐™š ๐™–๐™ฃ๐™™ ๐˜ฟ๐™ค๐™˜๐™ช๐™ข๐™š๐™ฃ๐™ฉ๐™–๐™ฉ๐™ž๐™ค๐™ฃ how politics today operate through images that promise change while remaining structurally unable to deliver it. In this way, the image of change becomes more powerful than the change itself.
Rather than recovering a fixed truth, the counter-archive opens a space for friction, where โ€˜officialโ€™ narratives are unsettled and the gap between representation and reality becomes visible.

๐—๐—ผ๐˜†๐—ฐ๐—ฒ ๐—๐—ผ๐˜‚๐—บ๐—ฎ๐—ฎ is a Lebanese Canadian visual artist and writer based between Beirut, Montreal, and Amsterdam. Her work focuses on microhistories within Lebanon, as a way to understand how past structures inform the present moment. Central to her practice is an interest in the political charge inscribed in space and the social psychology that unfolds out of this tension.

@joycejoumaa

This essay is part of the archival section of Trigger #6: Assemblies, highlighting the diverse practices and contributions that shape the projectโ€™s evolving archive. This section turns to the archive and engages with the material traces of radical assemblies that reveal resistance as a continuum, persisting whether anyone is watching or not.

Guest editor @taous_r_dahmani
@fomuantwerp

Revisited by editors @eline.adriaensen @heyitsabel


46
1
3 weeks ago

Introducing the idea of the โ€˜aestheticisation of political failure,โ€™ Joumaa explores in her essay ๐˜พ๐™ค๐™ช๐™ฃ๐™ฉ๐™š๐™ง-๐˜ผ๐™ง๐™˜๐™๐™ž๐™ซ๐™–๐™ก ๐™‹๐™ง๐™–๐™˜๐™ฉ๐™ž๐™˜๐™š๐™จ: ๐˜ฝ๐™š๐™ฉ๐™ฌ๐™š๐™š๐™ฃ ๐™‹๐™š๐™ง๐™›๐™ค๐™ง๐™ข๐™–๐™ฃ๐™˜๐™š ๐™–๐™ฃ๐™™ ๐˜ฟ๐™ค๐™˜๐™ช๐™ข๐™š๐™ฃ๐™ฉ๐™–๐™ฉ๐™ž๐™ค๐™ฃ how politics today operate through images that promise change while remaining structurally unable to deliver it. In this way, the image of change becomes more powerful than the change itself.
Rather than recovering a fixed truth, the counter-archive opens a space for friction, where โ€˜officialโ€™ narratives are unsettled and the gap between representation and reality becomes visible.

๐—๐—ผ๐˜†๐—ฐ๐—ฒ ๐—๐—ผ๐˜‚๐—บ๐—ฎ๐—ฎ is a Lebanese Canadian visual artist and writer based between Beirut, Montreal, and Amsterdam. Her work focuses on microhistories within Lebanon, as a way to understand how past structures inform the present moment. Central to her practice is an interest in the political charge inscribed in space and the social psychology that unfolds out of this tension.

@joycejoumaa

This essay is part of the archival section of Trigger #6: Assemblies, highlighting the diverse practices and contributions that shape the projectโ€™s evolving archive. This section turns to the archive and engages with the material traces of radical assemblies that reveal resistance as a continuum, persisting whether anyone is watching or not.

Guest editor @taous_r_dahmani
@fomuantwerp

Revisited by editors @eline.adriaensen @heyitsabel


46
1
3 weeks ago


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