Category Archives: Chair Theory and Practice of Curating

Memory, identity, transmission: an artistic diorama at the Humboldt Forum

How does personal experience become collective knowledge? And what traces do family biographies leave on our identity?

These questions were addressed in a ten-week social workshop held as part of the Beziehungsweise Familie (Family Matters) cluster at the Humboldt Forum. As a collaborative project combining artistic, therapeutic and scientific perspectives, knowledge was not imparted as finished teaching content. Rather, it emerged as a collaborative process in which the participants were involved in a transversal production of knowledge as equal experts and active contributors. The starting point was personal memories, mementos and everyday rituals as carriers of knowledge that is often passed down through generations.

This intensive collaboration resulted in an artistic diorama and an audio work that bring mementos to life. Together, they reveal the complex interrelationships between individual trauma, transgenerational narratives and the influence of political contexts on personal life paths. At the same time, they invite us to take a fresh look at the interplay between identity and origin.

With Florian Hermes, Honorata Nawrocki, Marisol Ozomatli Malinalli, Leila G., Franziska Pierwoss, Diana Krämer, Alia Rayyan.

The result can be experienced from 24 January to 12 July 2026 in the ‘living room’ of the Humboldt Forum, the special exhibition foyer on the ground floor.

Interested parties are cordially invited to visit the exhibition and gain an insight into this special form of knowledge work.

Besuchende vor dem Diorama
© Alia Rayyan 2026

Lecture series “Family Matters”: Further Dates during Winter Semester

Focus Family Secrets

The focus Family Secrets turns its attention to hidden dimensions of family relationships, where intimacy, protection, and conflict intersect. At the centre are practices of concealment and disclosure that shape individual life stories as well as social orders.

Secrets are more than concealed information: they condense needs for protection and intimacy, as well as feelings of shame, fear of exposure, and the pressure of social norms. As part of biographical experience, family secrets deeply affect personal life narratives. Practices of telling and withholding make visible how relationships are formed, boundaries drawn, and social orders negotiated — revealing how secrets extend far beyond the private sphere to create belonging, mark boundaries, and stabilise or unsettle social structures.

Geheimnisse sind dabei mehr als verborgene Informationen: In ihnen verdichten sich Bedürfnisse nach Schutz und Intimität ebenso wie Scham, Angst vor Bloßstellung oder der Druck sozialer Normen. Als Teil biografischer Erfahrungen wirken Familiengeheimnisse tief in persönliche Lebensgeschichten hinein. Erzählen und Verschweigen machen sichtbar, wie Beziehungen gestaltet, Grenzen gezogen und soziale Ordnungen verhandelt werden – und wie Geheimnisse weit über das Private hinaus Zugehörigkeiten stiften, Grenzen markieren und gesellschaftliche Strukturen stabilisieren oder irritieren.

Upcoming dates:

    • 11.02.2026: The Secret Life of Secrets
      Dr. Michael Slepian (Columbia Business School, New York)
    • 18.02.2026: “Solo Weddings” as a Secret to Happiness in Japan
      Univ.-Prof. Dr. Annette Schad-Seifert (Heinrich Heine Universität Düsseldorf, Institut für Modernes Japan, Düsseldorf)
    • 04.03.2026: Substitute/Family – Forms of living together beyond natural descent. Aspects from popular culture
      Bert Rebhandl (Freier Filmforscher, Berlin)
    • 18.03.2026: Cultural practices of silence as modes of care
      Dr. Lotte Warnsholdt (MARKK Museum am Rothenbaum, Hamburg)

The lecture will be held in German. One exception is the lecture by Dr. Slepian, which will be held in English.

Participation is possible without pre-registration and is open to all interested parties.

Organiser:

Prof Dr Daniel Tyradellis (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)

Dr Alia Rayyan (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)

Dr Laura Goldenbaum (Humboldt Forum Foundation in the Berlin Palace)

Place and time:

each at 6 to 8 pm

in Room 3 (Saal 3), ground floor,
Humboldt Forum, Schlossplatz.

Further information

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Lecture series “Beziehungsweise Familie” (Family Matters) – January 21, 2026 with Prof. Dr. Carola Lentz

Genealogies, Family Secrets, and a Curious Ethnologist in West Africa

Prof. Dr. Carola Lentz 

(Johannes Gutenburg-Universität Mainz, Institut für Ethnologie und Afrikastudien (ifeas), Mainz)

Family trees, family secrets, and a curious ethnologist in West Africa. Almost four decades ago, Carola Lentz was welcomed into a large Ghanaian family. As in many African families, educational paths and professional careers, places of residence, and lifestyles have diverged greatly over time. This makes the memory of common ancestors and regular visits to the village of origin even more important for the cohesion of the extended family. However, the younger, educated generation has different expectations of a good family history than their rural relatives. The remembered family past is therefore controversial, and some things are marked as “secrets” by some. Memory practices and their media are also new. Memorial services are replacing ancestral sacrifices. Drawn family trees, ancestral tables, and photo albums supplement oral narratives. The lecture explores these changes and the conflicts that accompany them. Family history, it concludes, can not only unite but also divide.

The lecture will be held in German.

Participation is possible without pre-registration and is open to all interested parties.

Organiser:

Prof Dr Daniel Tyradellis (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)

Dr Alia Rayyan (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)

Dr Laura Goldenbaum (Humboldt Forum Foundation in the Berlin Palace)

Place and time:

21. January 2026,

6 to 8 pm

in Room 3 (Saal 3), ground floor,
Humboldt Forum, Schlossplatz.

Further information

Carola Lentz

Carola Lentz is an ethnologist and Senior Research Professor at Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz. Her research focuses on migration, ethnicity and nationalism, colonialism and decolonization, state and family memory politics, as well as educational biographies and middle classes in postcolonial societies.

She studied sociology, political science, German studies, and education in Göttingen and Berlin, earned her PhD in 1987 at Leibniz University Hannover, and completed her habilitation in 1996 at the Free University of Berlin. Her academic career includes professorships in Frankfurt and Mainz, where she significantly shaped the Institute for Ethnology and African Studies. From 2020 to 2024, she served as President of the Goethe-Institut, promoting cultural exchange and international understanding. Her research also focuses on social belonging, mobility, and memory culture in West Africa. For her book Land, Mobility and Belonging in West Africa, she received the Melville J. Herskovits Prize in 2014.

She is a member of the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina and the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences.

 

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Exhibition opening: “Family Matters” at the Humboldt Forum

Father, mother, child? Surprising perspectives on the traditional family model in the past and present.

Family: (Nearly) everyone has a family, and yet every family is different! But what’s the stitching that keeps families together? And who’s really responsible for spinning it? In a year-long programme, the Humboldt Forum is exploring the stuff that family ties are made of. Are they full of holes or tightly woven; do they hang on a thread, or are they patchwork or perhaps macramé?

It is all about networks of relationships – from artistic, historical, scientific, and international perspectives, and in dialogue with the people of Berlin.

Explore what and who family and family relations can encompass, and the broad variety of ways in which living together is experienced. Everyone involved with the project at the Humboldt Forum is collectively looking at the theme of family relations in the present, past, and future, in a variety of formats including exhibitions, performances, discussions, workshops, guided tours, and interventions throughout the museum.

Exhibitions and Interventions

A special feature of this exhibition is that it takes in all the galleries and collections at the Humboldt Forum. The theme is introduced by ten hubs – some of which are interactive – in the Family Matters area on the ground floor, ranging from personal family constellations to a VR community around the table and individual stories about pet names, taking us from global family history, conflicts, and compromises to very personal watershed moments. Here you can question and expand your own ideas about and understanding of what family is!

More than forty selected objects from the Ethnologisches Museum (Ethnological Museum) and the Museum für Asiatische Kunst (Asian Art Museum), from Berlin’s historical royal palace, the Humboldt Labor, and BERLIN GLOBAL, along with Museum Knoblauchhaus, will become a part of this year-long programme, showing how power relations intervene in family biographies. And also how personal family narratives can originate larger stories of power or even religions.

Temporary exhibitions look at the preservation of endangered languages from all over the world and the transgenerational dissemination of knowledge. We also present contemporary positions by international artists, exploring the family realities of queer and migrant experience.

Events

Numerous events for adults and children offer new perspectives on the theme of family. This year’s Transkontinentale festival will bring family stories from Africa, South America, and Asia to Berlin, as well as the European premiere of the Namibian German music theatre People of Song. Things are going to get particularly lively at the end of October, when the Dia de Muertos celebration of family will be held for the second time at the Humboldt Forum. This is something to look forward to, but please note that there is also a full events programme on the opening days of the exhibition, with our first themed days in October.

Care or Chaos? Themed Days, 3–5 October

On three consecutive themed days immediately after the exhibition opens, the Humboldt Forum will focus on care, nursing, and family relations. Small gestures, each with a big effect – artistic interventions, performances, readings, and conversations will facilitate a rethinking of family: in the workshop “In the Dreamhouse,” in dance interventions in the permanent exhibition, in a kitchen buffet with medicinal flowers, and with African Street Games for the whole family. The days will feature author and musician Christiane Rösinger, the Resident Music Collective, feminist author Sophie Lewis, and a showing of the film In Prinzip Familie by director Daniel Abma, and much more.

In the museum’s workshops there will be hands-on drop-ins where participants can test out and make their own creations, while the Picture Book Cinema will present fascinating stories on the big screen, read by well-known personalities with musical accompaniment.

Two further themed days are planned for 2026: “Family Secrets” and “Together Against Resistance: Alternative Forms of Living with Each Other.”

The exhibition opens on October 2nd at 6 p.m. – free admission.

Opening program: 

6pm

Welcome:

Hartmut Dorgerloh, General Director of the Humboldt Forum
Julia von Blumenthal, President of Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Sophie Plagemann, Artistic Director and Board Member of the Stadtmuseum Berlin Foundation
Lars-Christian Koch, Director of the Ethnological Museum and the Museum of Asian Art, National Museums in Berlin

Greeting:

Konrad Schmidt-Werthern, Head of Office at the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media

Introductory remarks:

Laura Goldenbaum, Solvej Helweg-Ovesen, Grit Keller, Alia Rayyan, Maria Sobotka, and others

7pm
Short guided tours of the exhibition interventions

7:30pm
Discussion rounds in the foyer

8:30pm
Music set by the Resident Music Collective from their new programme Sonic Affinities

9pm
DJ set: Stella Zekri

The program and the exhibition have been jointly curated by all the stakeholders involved at the Humboldt Forum: Stiftung Humboldt Forum im Berliner Schloss (SHF), Ethnologisches Museum and Museum für Asiatische Kunst (Stiftung Preußischer Kulturbesitz / Staatliche Museen zu Berlin), Stiftung Stadtmuseum Berlin, and Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. Overall curatorial directorship: Dr. Laura Goldenbaum (SHF).

Location: All floors of the Humboldt Forum and at the Stadtmuseum/Museum Knoblauchhaus 

Duration: Fri, October 3, 2025 – Sun, July 12, 2026

Opening hours: Mon, Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat, Sun: 10:30 a.m. – 6:30 p.m.; Tue: Closed

New ticket prices from 3 October 2025, further information under Admission & Tickets

Reduced admission applies during the themed weekend from 3 to 5 October.

Photo credit: Stiftung Humboldt Forum at the Berliner Schloss, Photo: Getty Images, The Image Bank, Karan Kapoor

Lecture series “Beziehungsweise Familie” (Family Matters) – July 2nd, 2025 with Erdmute Alber

On July 2nd 2025 at 18:00 we invite you to the next date of the lecture series "Beziehungsweise Familie" (Family Matters):

Anthropological Perspectives on Parenthood 
with Erdmute Alber (Universität Bayreuth)

The lecture will be held in German.

Participation is possible without pre-registration and is open to all interested parties.

Organiser:

Prof Dr Daniel Tyradellis (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)

Dr Alia Rayyan (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)

Dr Laura Goldenbaum (Humboldt Forum Foundation in the Berlin Palace)

Place and time:

2. July 2025,

6 to 8 pm

in Room 3 (Saal 3), ground floor,
Humboldt Forum, Schlossplatz.

Further information

Erdmute Alber
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