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How can exhibitions help visitors engage more actively with complex sociopolitical themes? Can a space itself be activating - bringing forward underrepresented voices, inviting visitors to listen carefully, and opening room for reflection? Can we experience the messages of an exhibition by moving through its spaces, rather than only reading about them? This roundtable, a collaboration of VOX-POP and NARDIV hosted at Goethe-Insitut, brings together scholars and practitioners from the cultural field to reflect on these questions.
Kerngegevens van evenement Spatial Encounters #1: The politics of Display
Datum
30 oktober 2025
Tijd
18:00 -20:00
Locatie
Goethe-Institut

We are living through turbulent times. Rhetorics of hate and racism spreads like wildfire, while the far right is on the rise across the globe. In response, cultural institutions are becoming more aware of their responsibility towards society and especially those who have been long marginalized and excluded. Increasingly, museums are beginning to confront their authoritative, exclusive, and colonial legacies, and to engage with urgent sociopolitical themes, often through contemporary art.

But what happens with their spaces and the ways exhibitions themselves are designed? Curation and exhibition design are not neutral; they can be powerful tools for conveying socially engaged, even radical, messages.

How can exhibitions help visitors engage more actively with complex sociopolitical themes? Can a space itself be activating — bringing forward underrepresented voices, inviting visitors to listen carefully, and opening room for reflection? Can we experience the messages of an exhibition by moving through its spaces, rather than only reading about them?

This roundtable, a collaboration of VOX-POP and NARDIV hosted at Goethe-Insitut, brings together artists and practitioners from the cultural field to reflect on these questions. Together, they will explore how the synergy between art and space can critically activate audiences, foster new forms of engagement and counter passivity against the grim backdrop of our times.

Practical information
This Roundtable takes place at Goethe-Institut (Herengracht 470). The programme starts at 18:00 and lasts until 20:00 with short speaker presentations, a small creative break and a roundtable discussion. Entrance is free. Informal drinks will follow.

Speakers

Emilienne Fernande Bodo - Curatorial Assistant for Architecture and Spatial Practices, Haus der Kulturen der Welt (HKW) 

Emilienne Fernande Bodo lives and works in Berlin. Since 2023, she has been part of Haus der Kulturen der Welt (HKW), where she serves as Curatorial Assistant for Architecture and Spatial Practices. In this role, she curates the annual pavilion series Shaped to the Measures of the People’s Songs. Within HKW’s exhibitions, Bodo collaborates closely with the exhibition designer and the exhibition practices team, mediating between architectural and curatorial languages. Alongside exhibition planning, she has also designed exhibitions herself. Her contributions align with HKW’s overarching commitment to fostering cultures of conviviality and hospitality, while exploring pathways toward more peaceful and sustainable forms of coexistence.

Bodo studied architecture in Beijing, Zurich, São Paulo, and Munich, gaining a deep appreciation for diverse architectural approaches and techniques. She began her career at Sou Fujimoto Architects in Tokyo, where she contributed to the design of the Ishinomaki Cultural Centre—an emblematic project dedicated to community and cultural engagement. She later joined the UNESCO World Heritage Centre in Paris, where she worked on international urban development programs focused on the preservation and promotion of World Heritage sites.

Mercedes Azpilicueta - Visual Artist

Mercedes Azpilicueta is a visual and performance artist from Buenos Aires, living and working in Amsterdam. Her practice gathers characters from the past and present who address the vulnerable and collective body from a decolonial feminist perspective. Through fluid, associative connections, she challenges rigid historical narratives to make space for affective and dissident voices.


Working across performance and installation, she draws from speculative Latin American literature, Neo-Baroque art, popular culture, and new materialism, combining “precarious” craft-based techniques with industrial production.

Martha Echevarria - Exhibitions Manager and Curator, World Press Photo Foundation

Martha Echevarría is an international curator and cultural producer specializing in documentary photography. Based in Amsterdam, she works with World Press Photo to produce and coordinate its annual traveling exhibition, presented in more than eighty cities worldwide, and has led special exhibitions such as Resilience: Stories of Women Inspiring ChangeCelebrating Communities (with NOOR Images and Tony’s Chocolonely), and the 70th anniversary show What Have We Done? Unpacking Seven Decades of World Press Photo. Independently, she is curating an upcoming exhibition on violence in Latin America for El Colegio de México. Her work explores press freedom, ethics in photojournalism, and visual literacy through international collaborations and public programs.

Laurien de Gelder - Curator Archaeological Collections of West Asia and the Greek World, Allard Pierson 

Laurien de Gelder is the curator of a part of the archaeological collections in the Allard Pierson. Her specialization is in the history of Mediterranean archeology, museum archaeology and the history of archaeological collecting and provenance research. She teaches at the UvA in courses about current issues in (archaeological) museums and object-based research.