- / Can you Sea?
The Mediterranean as a Political Body
- / Decolonizing Malta:
Polyphony is Us - / The Counterpower of Piracy
- / The Matri-Archive of the Mediterranean
- / Public Program
Hydrography in Malta goes as far back as 60AD, the island has been in turn a refuge, a hideaway, a port, a silo, a defender, and a ‘brave fortress’ – this multi-faceted identity highlights that the geopolitical significance of this island is indelibly linked to its maritime identity.
We focused on the word Melite, meaning refuge, which was the name bestowed by the Phoenicians to these islands. We can affirm that it is the sea that has shaped the land and defined Malta’s trajectory. It lays claim to territorial waters of 12 nautical miles – the waves that flow towards the shore, just as soon bounce back until they reach another, and in this way the people of this region have always been connected, travelling across the sea that is irremediably wild and refractory to domestication, alien to containment and control.
As we steered from land to sea, from air to water, we proposed for the participatory artists and voices of the biennale to explore ways to occupy this ‘space’ without claiming it, steering away from the confinements of territorial discourse toward a dialectic that was free and unbound, just at the sea has always been.
Curatorial Team
ARTISTS: Aaron Bezzina / Adrian Paci / Agnes Questionmark / Andreco / Anna Raimondo / Anne Immelé / Anthony Spagnol / Basim Magdy / Claude Borg - Mariah Borg - Rebecca Mifsud - Sumaya Ben Saad / Edson Luli / Joseph Cochran II / Josian Bonello / Karyn Olivier / Laure Prouvost / Leo Chircop / Rosa Barba / Simon Benjamin / Siwani Buhlebezwe / Tania Bruguera / Teresa Busuttil / Zineb Sedira