ANTWERP.- FOMU presents 3 new exhibitions.These Branching Moments brings together six artists who are active in the visual arts and electronic music. Step into a world where art and music cross-pollinate, and where the night is celebrated as fertile ground for resistance and renewal. .tiff 2025 offers a fresh look at contemporary photography. With .tiff, FOMU annually supports 10 promising artists and photographers with a Belgian connection. The participatory project 'OM/Mother bundles photos taken by women and girls from the Tel Rumeida district in Hebron Palestine. Barbarba Debeuckelaere collected the photos in a book. A selection is on view at FOMU this summer.
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THESE BRANCHING MOMENTS
28.06.25 - 28.09.25
These Branching Moments brings together six artists, Amari, Tosh Basco, Juliana Huxtable, Jim C. Nedd, Rebecca Salvadori, and Kajol Singh, who work between the spheres of visual arts and electronic music.
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Through photography and video, these artists explore questions of belonging and how it takes shape in todays world: Where can we feel safe and find community? How and where can we express ourselves authentically? Moving between art and music, day and night, the participating artists envision temporary worlds that suspend the micro- and macro-aggressions of everyday life.
The exhibition finds refuge in the night as a space for experimentation, freedom, and imagination, with the artists resisting a world that increasingly imposes control. They do this by creating elusive, ever-changing moments where complexity and mystery are allowed to exist. Featuring contributions from diverse communities from experimental electronic musicians and queer strippers of colour to performance artists and Caribbean youth at mass gatherings the exhibition reveals how like-mindedness, freedom, and solidarity can be found in the shadow zones of normative society.
Together with curator Evelyn Simons and inspired by the artists work, the designers of Espace Aygo have conceived a sensorial and immersive scenography for the exhibition, while Atelier Brenda is responsible for the graphic design. Step into a world where art and music cross-pollinate, and where the night is celebrated as fertile ground for resistance and renewal.
.TIFF 2025 - EMERGING BELGIAN PHOTOGRAPHY
28.06.25 - 28.09.25
For the 13th edition of .tiff , FOMU presents a new selection of emerging Belgian artists.
.tiff 2025 includes work by Mohamed Almamoun, Veronika Breuer, Tim Theo Deceuninck, Alice Dooreman, Natalia Majchrzak, Camille Poitevin, Anna Safiatou Touré, Adel Setta, Jaka Terek and Bo Vloors.
Each year, FOMU supports 10 artists and photographers that have a Belgian connection. Offering fresh perspectives on the possibilities of photography, .tiff showcases the diverse and dynamic landscape of Belgian photography. The concept is flexible and responds to the needs of emerging artists. In addition to the magazine and group exhibition the artists are given several opportunities to present their work to an international professional audience.
FOMU invited three external jurors to help select the artists. This years jury consisted of Laure Cottin Stefanelli (artist and .tiff 2019 alumna), Koi Persyn (artistic director at Jester) and Bindi Vora (senior curator at Autograph London and artist).
In the autumn of 2025 the exhibition will travel to the Flemish Arts Centre De Brakke Grond in Amsterdam.
.tiff is part of FUTURES, a collaboration between FOMU and a growing group of European partners. FUTURES organises a range of events each year with a focus on young talent.
'OM/MOTHER - A PARTICIPATORY PHOTOGRAPHY PROJECT FROM HEBRON
28.06.25 - 28.09.25
Featuring work by: Om Abdul, Abeer, Ahed, Om Ahmad, Aroub, Aseel, Awatif, Ayla, Aysha, Barbara, Dallal, Om Emad, Eman, Eylul, Fatima, Gina, Hayam, Om Hazem, Jana, Janat, Jory, Julia, Kawthar, Kawthar, Lamar, Layan, Lojain, Maram, Om Muntasser, Nidaa, Ola, Qais, Qamar, Rahaf, Sarah, Shahd, Sham, Shirihan, Siline, Soundos, Sundus, Om Tamer, Om Wisam, Om Yusuf, Zaina, Zainab
Om/Mother is a participatory project showcasing photographs taken by Palestinian women and girls from the Tel Rumeida neighbourhood of Hebron, Palestine. The photos were taken in September 2023, shortly before the Hamas attack of 7 October and the Israeli bombings in Gaza and the West Bank, which claimed tens of thousands of lives.
In just a few short weeks, nearly fifty women from eight families created an archive of more than a thousand colourful photographs that capture daily life in their occupied city. Using analogue cameras, they built an impressive archive of images that depict intimate family scenes at home and how staying in Hebron has become a quiet act of resistance. The images reveal what is often left unseen. With tenderness, they show how people strive to preserve everyday routines in an occupied village and how a sense of community exists even there. Photography is the glue that binds these women together and the project has helped them form a close-knit community. The photos were compiled into a book by Barbara Debeuckelaere, with all proceeds going back to the women of Tel Rumeida.
Tel Rumeida is a village in H2, an area of Hebron under Israeli military control. Hebron is the only place in the West Bank with an Israeli settlement in the heart of a Palestinian city. The freedom of Palestinian residents was already severely limited by countless road closures and checkpoints, restricted access to healthcare, and minimal public services. Since October 2023, this situation has worsened dramatically. A third of the homes in Tel Rumeida now stand empty, as many residents have either been killed or forced to flee.
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