Queerhana in the context of autonomous movements in Israel/Palestine from 2001-2009
May 27–July 2, 2017
1st floor, entrance via escalator
Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse 11/13
10178 Berlin
Germany
presse@ngbk.de
With: Shiri Blumenthal, Rahel Laurie, Yossef(a) Mekyton, Zvonimir Kontrec, Liad Hussein Kantorowicz, Claudia Levin, Moshe Kutner, Adi Shpigel, Nathi Oh, Aviv Victor, Raafat Hattab, Activestills, Oren Ziv, Shay Ben Efraim, Yossi Bartal, Samira Saraya, Tamara Schreiber, Rapha Hu, León Allez, Boaz Y, Orr Guilat, Michael (Mysh) Rozanov, Nate + Maizta, Malvina R. Schorlé, Yosi Speedy, Gala Weizman and more
In 2002, several queers set up a camp under a highway bridge in Tel Aviv, just a few hundred meters from the huge Gay Parade taking place at the same time. They were equipped with a sound system, DIY art, glitter, and a banner reading “Mi she mekabel jehol lehitkabel“ (Hebrew: He who accepts will be accepted). The party under the bridge grew rapidly and marked the beginning of a queer movement that until 2009 organised parties at different places in Jaffa/Tel Aviv: Queerhana.
The name derives from a wordplay combining “Karachana” (Hebrew: “wild party”, Arabic: “brothel”) and “queer.” Inspired by Hakim Bey’s concept of a “Temporary Autonomous Zone” (1991), Queerhana created free spaces in a society shaped by war and racism that were at once safe spaces and sites of political activity, where deviation from social norms, gender ambiguity, and opposition against the Israeli occupation policy could be expressed in a self-confident and creative way. The movement offered Jewish and Palestinian queers a political and social home, something which they were not able to find in Israel’s mainstream gay scene.
The exhibition THIS IS A FREE ZONE documents the origin and development of Queerhana in the context of other autonomous movements in Israel/Palestine from 2001 to 2009. 15 years later, the project takes a look back and raises questions regarding the connection of party and politics: (How) can one dance during war? What is necessary for creating a common space for Palestinian and Jewish-Israeli queers? Can a “safe space” be created without repeating the same excluding power relations and dichotomies that the zone actually seeks to overcome? Based on these questions, the project searches for inspiration for the present.
Accompanying the exhibition a reader (ISBN 978-3-938515-66-2) with documentation materials and essays and a documentary film with testimonies of queer activists from Israel/Palestine will be released.
Projektgruppe: Orr Guilat, Liad Hussein Kantorowicz, Zvonimir Kontrec, Moshe Kutner, Yossi Lampel, Mascha Nehls, Malvina R. Schorlé
Also currently on show as part of the Art in the Underground project by nGbK:
until May 28
City Skins – Marx und Engels by Various & Gould, Place Internationale (Open land near U5 Cottbusser Platz)
until June 24
Accompanying exhibition in station urbaner kulturen (Auerbacher Ring 41, 12619 Berlin, Entrance Kastanienboulevard)
Marx-Engels-Forum – Ja! by Erik Göngrich
City Skins – Marx und Engels by Various & Gould - the documentary
until October 31
Namibia Today by Laura Horelli, Underground station Schillingstraße, U5, platform
Laboratorium der Solidarität by Saskia Köbschall & Claude Gomis, Underground station Kaulsdorf-Nord, U5, footbridge
A Migrant’s Journey by Elizabeth Wood, Underground station Cottbusser Platz, U5, platform