
Podcast: Ep15: Why do we think that the past is dead?
31. Juli 2022
Autor(en): Radio for the Arts
Podcast: Ja Ja Ja Nee Nee Nee
1 / 1Why do we think that the past is dead?
- 1. Why do we think that the past is dead?
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We visit Milena Bonillaâs studio to hear about Rosa Luxemburg and granite wrapped in amaranth, the flower that resists. Milenaâs research-based practice is currently invested in epistemological colonialism and the different ways it affects organisms, language and social structures. Her studio is in Amsterdam and her website is milenabonilla.info.
âWhy do we think that the past is dead? Because itâs very convenient to have it as a relic, to bring nostalgia, to bring ideological biases. Itâs a sickness.â (Milena Bonilla)
âOne of the most mistreated words that i have seen lately in the world is solidarity. Solidarity comes from structures of understanding of how the world operates. Itâs not charity - that is what I see spread all around here. And I talk about this with a lot of rage.â (Milena Bonilla)
See an amaranth-wrapped stone on Milenaâs website here. Photograpies of Milena's show at Galeria Municipal do Porto are available at here and at e-flux.
Hosted by Arif Kornweitz and Andrea GonzĂĄlez. Edit and post-production by Julius van Ijperen.
Ja Ja Ja Nee Nee Nee is an online radio platform for contemporary art. Our website is jajajaneeneeneee.com.
Podcast

Arif Kornweitz & Radna Rumping
Contemporary art podcast hosted by Arif Kornweitz & Andrea Gonzalez. Get in touch with us through info@jajajaneeneenee.com Our jingle is by Josh da Costa. Ja Ja Ja Nee Nee Nee is a radio space for curatorial and artistic practices. We commission sound and performance pieces, related to the research strands we set for our annual programme. We also host and produce radio shows and podcasts, by and with artists and designers. Our mobile studio has been at academies, biennials and museums. In 2022, we started an artist-in-residency programme.