Domènec exhibited at "ZONES DE (NON)ÊTRE"

Le 19, Centre régional d´art contemporaine de Montbéliard

With works by Tania Candiani, Nicolas Daubanes & Louisa Yousfi, Domènec, Armand Gatti, Laila Hida, Adelita Husni-Bey, Laura Molton, Groupe Medvedkine Sochaux, Maeva Totolehibe, Carole Roussopoulos, Erika Roux, María Ruido, and Nil Yalter.


Curators: Violeta Janeiro Alfageme and Adeline Lépine


“Each of us carried, one by one,
tired and uncontrollable dreams.
We fell into silence,
into orphaned solitude,
we abandoned ourselves
so that the world could be a better place.”


Meral Şimşek, excerpt from dream and reality in Incir Karasi or Refugee Dreams, 2022.


The exhibition Zones de (non)être began its reflection with the local labor history and traced back to the political demands of May 1968 in France. These demands called not only for improvements in working conditions, but also laid the foundations for a broader critique of forms of exclusion and social domination. Throughout the 1970s, these struggles expanded and resonated with other historically marginalized groups, such as women, who began to make visible their subordinate position, even within the labor movements themselves. Thus, the horizon of social transformation initiated by the working class broadened, integrating feminist, anti-racist, and anti-colonial demands that challenged not only economic exploitation but also structural inequalities across all areas of life.


The exhibition also adopts a critical reflection on the zones of exclusion or relegation of minority or invisibilized subjects within structures created by patriarchy, capitalism, and colonization. In dialogue with Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak’s question — “Can the subaltern speak?” —, Zones de (non)être interrogates the possibility of representing the emancipation of these groups without it being co-opted by hegemonic discourses. The works brought together here share a situated sensibility, sometimes taking the form of ethnographic research, sometimes of testimony. All question, within our contemporary society, who can produce knowledge and who has the right to speak, while daring “to raise the ever-urgent question of the legitimacy of the voices of the ‘dominated,’ of the necessity of hearing their voices and listening attentively, of their right to impose their own words […] it is also to grant them the right to speak their own language.”


Furthermore, the essential issue of preserving these memories also unites the works and practices gathered in Zones de (non)être. Personal experiences can once again be embodied, transmitted, shared, and then felt by those who receive them. The exhibition deliberately raises more questions than answers: What continuity exists between past labor struggles and today’s forms of social and professional precarity? In what ways does the discourse of progress conceal the structural tensions that continue to reproduce inequalities and forms of alienation? How can the activation of memories in the present encourage us to converge our personal struggles toward a collective revolution?

 
Septiembre 29, 2025