"Scéne d´Amour" and its consequences…
Cultural policy in multicultural EUROPE and its effects on women involved in arts!

one-day exhibition, screening & Panel discussion (german/english)
Saturday the 5th of November 2005
Medienhaus der Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
Wallstrasse 11

 


Scène d´Amour” depicts a love act, focused completely on the female body, in clear white, yellow and red, and with a verse from the Koran (sura 1) in the upper edge of the painting:

“In the name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful.…. (“The Opening”)

This picture was created by Louzla Darabi, an artist of Algerian-French origin. Her pictures created quite an uproar in Göteborg this year:

In February 2005, following protests of Islamic believers, the management of the Swedish Museum for World Cultures gave way to the pressure and had the picture “Scène d´Amour” taken down. A momentous decision: Artists of Muslim origin, who greatly value freedom of speech and the right to pursue their ways of life provided in Europe, feel let down by Europe and its values.

They are afraid that Europe, fearing fundamentalist terrorism, will curtail its own democratic freedom. They are afraid that a very small minority will succeed in ruining those humanist achievements such as unlimited personal freedom, freedom of expression, freedom of the press and the arts, etc. right at the heart of Europe, and that they will succeed in terrorizing those who disagree with their threats in the name of the Islam. Terrorizing them in such a way that an emancipated museum management feels forced to act differently from what is their DUTY. The duty of guaranteeing a protective space for art, in order to engender a world of open conflicts, of divergences, of contrasts and of apparent and real irreconcilabilities. In other words: The protective space that art needs in order to survive.

Where are they now? Where are the critics, the feminists, the guardians of more than 200 years of European achievements in culture? Has the dominance of religion not been banished a long time ago?

This fear seems to be justified, especially after the cold-blooded murdering of the Dutch artist Theo van Gogh, that day, when the mosques were burning in the Netherlands. And it is this fear that will be the topic of our panel discussion in connection with this exhibition. Among others, four European artists (some with, some without a Muslim background) will speak on the panel topic:

 


What is Europe afraid of?

„Europe and the Power of Islamist fundamentalism – Art as a means of emancipation in a new historic context. “

The Topic also deserves a public discussion, as there is no way of questioning that the second and third generations of Muslim immigrants have changed the face of Europe. While one part of them, deprived of their roots, radicalizes and turns to Islamist terror, e.g. in London, Spain, Amsterdam or New York, artists such as Louzla Darabi or Fateme Gosheh take a different approach: Here, art is to be understood as a media for peace and reflection; as a means to legitimize women and humanity in the Islam.

This is why the controversial picture „Scène d´Amour“ can also be understood as a postulate, especially as “physical love is one of the many different ways to reach the threshold of the spiritual world.“ (Louzla Darabi)

PROGRAMM
10.30h. Welcome: Dr. Renate Gahn. Women’s representative, Johannes Gutenberg University, Mainz
10.45h. Introduction to the exhibition:Louzla Darabi and Fateme Gosheh (Videoprojection) 
13.30h. Screening : „Dance Below white Sheet“ ( Swedish with subtitles in English – 48 min.) Regie: Isa Vandi
14.30h  Panel discussion (german/english)
What is EUROPE afraid of?
Europe and the power of Islamic fundamentalism – Art as a means of emancipation in a new historical context
 
Louzla Darabi:  artist; Algeria,France
Renée Padt: curator; Netherlands/,Sweden
Fateme Gosheh: artist; Iran,Sweden
Brigitte Dumez:   choreographer, dancer; France
Peter Herrmann: proprietor of a gallery; Germany
 
Facilitators
Nasrin Amirsedghi; publicist and chair of DIA

Invitation as pdf

We are grateful for the kind support of The State Office for Political Education of Rhineland-Palatinate, Mainz/Germany, and the Ministry for Education, Women and the Young of Rhineland-Palatinate, Mainz/Germany.

    DIA, Association f. Culture & Migration e. V.
Am Gonsenheimer Spieß 18
D - 55122 Mainz
Mail: KultDIA@t-online.de