ifa-Galerie Berlin presents What does it mean for a place to be loved?
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Tuesday, September 2, 2025


ifa-Galerie Berlin presents What does it mean for a place to be loved?
Sevil Tunaboylu, Keepsake, 2025. Colour pencil on paper, 60 x 82 cmProduced with the support of SAHA Association, Turkey.



BERLIN.- In a time of fractured geographies and contested histories, what does it mean to love a homeland? Is homeland a site of longing or a burden of history? Presenting newly commissioned works by Anita Muçolli and Sevil Tunaboylu alongside earlier pieces by Ian Waelder, this exhibition questions the contradictions of belonging, where love is entwined with alienation, and attachment collides with critique. Navigating exile, resistance, and the fluidity of identity, the artists interrogate the meaning of home, not as a fixed place but as a shifting terrain of politics and emotion.

Together, their works reflect on the effects of migration on both personal and collective identity, tensions between embodying cultural heritage and assimilation, and the emotional legacies of displacement. Arising from chance meetings and ongoing exchanges, the included artists unfold narratives specific to the experience of second and third generation migrants, who inherit both the trauma and the nostalgia.

The exhibition title is drawn from Oxana Timofeeva’s How to Love a Homeland, a publication I encountered almost by accident but whose resonance was immediate and disarming. Like the works assembled in the exhibition, her words lingered as both question and companion. Conversations with the artists unfolded in similar ways: personal and charged with inherited complexity.

Sevil Tunaboylu reflects on her family’s migrations from Skopje to Turkey, her grandfather’s carpentry, and her ongoing collaboration with her father. Her work draws on archival materials and oral histories from a research trip to Skopje. Spanning the 1950s to today, the project gathers fragments of inherited memories, unspoken stories, and the image of childhood doors. The works form a constellation of objects that reflect not only on migration, craftsmanship, ghosts, restlessness, and the act of inhabiting life. In her work, the distinction between object and image collapses. Tunaboylu does not attempt to recreate home but reflects how it is remembered and disjointed, investigating how memory clings to things.

The in-betweens are also examined in Anita Muçolli’s newly commissioned installation that examines the emotional and bureaucratic thresholds of her family’s migration from Kosovo to Switzerland in the early 1990s. Drawing from personal stories, family photographs, and bureaucratic documents, she explores how the social ecosystem and its familiar codes to migrants remain incomprehensible to bureaucratic systems built on statistics. She asks: what did it mean to inhabit a country not as guests, but as undocumented individuals? Her works render questions tactile, creating a temporal zone of endurance and illegibility. In doing so, her work asks how the body remembers what the system forgets.

This inscription of how memory lingers in the body, as a trace or inherited sensibility, continues in the work of Ian Waelder, which explores familial migration and the physical remnants of history. In his sound installation FRIEDRICH (2020), Waelder collaborates posthumously with his grandfather, a German-Jewish pianist exiled in Chile during the Third Reich. The record plays back loss and continuity: sound as a living archive, improvisation as survival. Waelder’s research often begins with objects. The Opel Olympia, once owned by his grandfather and sold to fund his exile, becomes a vehicle for tracing intergenerational trauma and displacement. This story becomes sculptural through plaster reproduction of the Olympia, made with his father, sculptor Juan Waelder. The car’s fragility speaks to the difficulty of reconstructing lost things. In counterpoint, a photograph of a Monstera plant, gifted to his parents on his birth and still thriving, becomes a living archive and a botanical memory amid metallic history.

Together the works echo that homeland is neither inherited nor chosen, but constructed from fragments of memory, gestures, unresolved emotions, and unanswered questions. Through doors, photographs, documents, cars, plants, and soundscapes, the artists attest to how attachment emerges not despite displacement, but because of it. Homeland here is shown as a process constantly unfolding. In Timofeeva's words, “Across all states’ borders tying us to a certain territory by protocol, the love for homeland must be free, so that every time, coming back to a new, unprecedented place, every one of us can say: I am from here.”

Curator: Hana Halilaj

[1] Oxana Timofeeva, How to Love a Homeland, 2020, Cairo: Kayfa Ta, pp. 43.

The exhibition will open on the occasion of Berlin Art Week 2025.










Today's News

September 2, 2025

The Gibbes Museum's 1858 Prize for Contemporary Southern Art

Ancient Greek vases tell hidden stories through scribbled notes and signatures

Mika Tajima's 'Anthesis' to open at Pace's London gallery

Hauser & Wirth exhibition explores the 'Interior Worlds' of Koak, Ding Shilun, and Cece Philips

Yto Barrada solo exhibition opens at South London Gallery this month

Nara Roesler opens first solo exhibition of works by Alberto Pitta

Mazzoleni announces highlights to be presented at Frieze Seoul

Vleeshal presents Tatar* Kiss

Peter Shilton 'hand of god' shirt to head Budds Valuation Day roadshow

Francisco Carolinum Linz opens exhibitions by Peter Kogler and Claudia Hart

Fondazione Prada Film Fund: The call for entries is open

Exhibition explores hybrid identity at Tempelhof Museum

ifa-Galerie Berlin presents What does it mean for a place to be loved?

Galerie Peter Sillem opens Péter Nádas: Story of Light / New Lights

OFFICE IMPART opens a new project by the artist collective CROSSLUCID

Quartz Studio to open the first solo show in Italy by Romain Dumesnil

2025 SeMA-HANA Media Art Award recognizes Hiwa K, Anocha Suwichakornpong, and Ernest A. Bryant III

Tanoto Art Foundation presents conversation series in Sao Paulo and Singapore

von ammon announces its second solo exhibition by New York-based artist Jacob Kassay

Infamous WWII tank reveals new evidence of desperate final battle

Gagosian to participate in Frieze Seoul 2025




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 




Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)


Editor: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful