Democreation voices of democracy creating together

Teatro Munganga, Saturday, May 30 at 04:00 PM GMT+2

A participatory performance about democracy. Teatro Munganga in Amsterdam, directed by Claudia Maoli and Carlos Lagoeiro, is since 1987 a house of performance, music and resistance. In this performance, Teatro Munganga will stage an event on the state of democracy in the present day. Our point of departure is that democracy isn’t dead. It is wounded and in need of attention and care.
How could we touch democracy with care, and in turn be touched its vitality, so that we feel compelled to care for her, just like we would care for someone we love? This performance invites voices of democracy to come out of the shadows. Together, we will listen to them and share what we hear when we undo ourselves of learned systems and beliefs.
Sound by sound, word by word, image by image, we will create a reflection of the state of democracy nowadays and maybe also create a vision of a future where democracy is right in our hands. Not as a way to control her, but as a way to care for her. What are the voices of democracy that you would like to lift out of the shadows?
Where do you encounter them?
What do they tell us about democracy? On May 30, 2026, from 16.00 to 20.00 in Teatro Munganga, all participants are invited to join a procession where we’ll carry democracy from the outside into the inside of the theatre, where we will eat together, listen, talk and create.
There will be music, poems, performance, a testimonial documentary, and a couple of short considerations to help us feel the deeper layers of democracy. This is an artistic collaboration with the European project Democracy in Action, coordinated by Leiden University.

https://offbeat.amsterdam/event/democreation-voices-of-democracy-creating-together

after afterlives: film screening and talk programme

W139, Wednesday, May 27 at 08:00 PM GMT+2

What does the ground unleash when it is denied keeping what it holds? How does soil get implicated in the carrying of catastrophe? And how does continuous excavation for artefacts reveal an obsession to erase history in order to create a new one? Against this erasure, how have material knowledges of burning, plastering, and burying offered different approaches to the ground—one where land and flesh are bound together in a rhythm of constant transformation? These are some of the questions we’ll be engaging with during this program, which will expand on the works of Areej Ashhab and Ola Hassanain, in the flour, water, soil exhibition, and bring in the work of Dina Mimi, to open up a conversation about the artefact as witness, the erasure of history through excavation, the objects and topologies of repair, and the relationship of people to their material environments. 

Areej will be sharing excerpts from her film Lime Through the Elements, and connecting them to her new installation, The Ground Keeps What it Holds, commissioned for this exhibition.  The work engages ancient burial practices in Palestine and the aftermath of their settler-colonial excavation. Through field research, experimentation, and collective labor, the film revisits the lost practice of lime making in Palestine and its elemental journey back to limestone as a reflection on return—what survives erasure and elimination.

We will also be screening Dina Mimi’s short film The Eyes That Never See, which narrates the story of Ram(z)i, a lonely working class man who died twice. Ram(z)i was renamed as soon as his first body died, to die again in Jerusalem, under the dusty ground while digging for artefacts from a 6,000 year-old ancient city. Just like in Areej’s work, Dina’s film exposes the obsessions of a settler state that continuously excavates, digging deep into the ground, to find artefacts in order to create new histories.  

Ola will present her spatial installation for the exhibition, Water Collection Points, and contextualise it within her ongoing project Tell The Water What The Clay Kept Secret. The work uses water collection points across the exhibition space to make visible the efforts to repair the environment that emerge at the onset of catastrophes. Framed as a site for the ‘ecology of repair’, Ola examines this collective effort to deal with crisis by highlighting roles within communities—especially those living near water—where watching and listening emerge as spatial practices shaped by environmental and political rupture. 

The films and talks will be followed by a conversation between Ola, Dina, and Areej, moderated by Margarita Osipian—interweaving their individual works and the stories that unfold through them.

Ticket: €7,50Student and solidarity ticket: €5

Buy your tickets via Eventbrite.

Areej Ashhab is an artist and researcher whose work addresses material heritage loss, more-than-human ecologies, and land politics. Areej’s practice spans material experimentation, writing, and film, and often unfolds collectively through walks, workshops, and shared meals. She is the co-founder of Al-Block, documenting lost narratives of the Palestinian landscape through collective walking, and Al-Wah’at, a translocal collective countering anthropocentric and colonial narratives around arid lands and futures. In her recent project A Hand of Fire and Stone, she traced abandoned lime pits in Palestine, built a lime kiln prototype in Bethlehem, and activated this lost architecture through fire, songs, and meals; following the elemental cycle of lime from stone, to paste, and back to stone.

Ola Hassanain is an artist whose work moves through architecture, film, and spatial strategies to reflect on how power becomes visible—and felt—through built environments. Her practice engages with places shaped by climate instability, postcolonial legacies, and displacement, thinking through the politics of inhabiting and how ecological and social systems shape one another across time. As she notes, “observation summons a form of power”.

Dina Mimi is an artist working in experimental film and moving image, exploring how, and when, bodies become sites of resistance. Often using found footage to explore themes including smuggling and tactics of movement, her work adopts non-linear forms of narration. She approaches editing as an open and exploratory process, experimenting with the opacity of footage—images that are in the act of vanishing.

https://offbeat.amsterdam/event/after-afterlives-film-screening-and-talk-programme

kiln as kin: a day of gathering, firing, cooking

W139, Saturday, June 13 at 02:00 PM GMT+2

“What flavors place, what place flavors?” Posed by Christina Sharpe in her book Ordinary Notes, this question lingers in the space between land and taste. How does place, how does land, persist even when territory fractures? What stories, histories, and rituals do we carry with us through food? Ingredients, gestures, and tastes become a living archive carried within and through our daily practices of making—kneading, fermenting, grinding, storing, carrying.

Using food as a way to hold and transmit knowledge, during this day of gathering we will come together to activate a newly created tonir-style clay oven and a small stove at Four Siblings. The oven was built during an earlier workshop in May with transdisciplinary artist Tatiana M. Mélo. We will prepare food, cook, and eat together as a way to share knowledge about food systems, forgotten recipes, and lost rituals. We will be joined by Martina Manterola and Carmen Serra, cofounders of colectivo amasijo, an intergenerational feminist collective who work across art, cooking, and land-based pedagogy. They will join us in activating the ovens through their own rituals, practices, and foods. Together with Tatiana we will also be creating small clay structures and sculptures to bake bread inside of.

The residency of colectivo amasijo is part of the Exchanges programme by the Prince Claus Fund, with the support of the Amsterdam City Council.

Ticket: €10Student and solidarity ticket: €7,50

Buy your tickets via Eventbrite

Location: Four Siblings, President Allendelaan 1, 1064 GW Amsterdam

colectivo amasijo is a feminist collective composed of women from various disciplines and generations, working across art, cooking, and land-based pedagogy. amasijo’s approach centers on collaborative cooking and agriculture as forms of resistance and land regeneration. They are united in their desire to actively reflect on the origin and diversity of our food. Since their formation in 2019 they have been providing a platform for non–dominant voices: the narratives of women close to the land, stories that tell us the real cost of climate change and show us the way towards the regeneration of the land. Through their projects, that can take the form of gatherings, dinners, research, actions, ceremonies, exhibitions, markets, seminars, film, or talks, the collective builds the needed structures to form a community in which taking care of ourselves and taking care of the territory we inhabit is priority. Their practice insists on care, circular knowledge, and embodied time — challenging extractive logics through feminist, decolonial methodologies.

Instagram colectivo amasijo

Tatiana M. Melo is a transdisciplinary artist from Barcelona, living in the countryside of La Garrotxa. She works with clay and ceramics—activating the memory of territory through ritual objects made with stones, ashes, and words gathered from the community. Her practice centers on the transformation of soil into kilns, understood not only as firing tools, but as spaces of encounter, transformation, and ritual. She explores clay as an ancestral material, applying sustainable practices to construction and everyday objects. She has organized workshops and gatherings on collective building, ceramics, and community, collaborating with artists and researchers to rethink the relationship between humans, materials, and the environment.

Instagram Tatiana M. Melo

Four Siblings is a land based art and research project. They come together to create an edible labyrinth in the shape of an artwork in the threshold of the city of Amsterdam. They want to create a sense of belonging to the earth we live on, to the food we eat. They investigate collective ways of generating knowledge and make it as open source as possible.They want to do so in a mutually supportive way—care for our bodies while we care for the land, bring back biodiversity and seed resources, generate new local networks between artists, farmers, permaculturists, and residents, while learning by doing.

Website Four Siblings

https://offbeat.amsterdam/event/kiln-as-kin-a-day-of-gathering-firing-cooking

gathering grounds: a festive market day

W139, Sunday, July 12 at 12:00 PM GMT+2

flour, water, soil, unfolds through acts of gathering: conversations, reading sessions, workshops, shared meals, foraging, and collective actions that extend beyond the works themselves. These moments and gestures activate the space as a lived, living, and sustaining environment.

To continue these gestures, we invite you to join us for a festive market day, where we will gather to celebrate the final day of flour, water, soil. The exhibition will transform into a freely accessible market where we can all come together to eat, talk, buy seeds, engage in learning sessions, and collectively activate the works one last time.

More information and the lineup coming soon.

Free entry.

https://offbeat.amsterdam/event/gathering-grounds-a-festive-market-day

Keti Koti Dialoogtafel #1: Achter de komma – hoe nu verder?

Plein Theater, Sunday, June 21 at 01:00 PM GMT+2

Sunday 21 June

Keti Koti Dialoogtafel #1: Achter de komma – hoe nu verder?

Genre: Talk & FoodLineup: Sylvana Simons (politicus en activist), Arwin Ralf (geneticus)Time: 13:00 - 18:00 hrsTickets: € 17,50 Tickets

Maand voor Keti Koti in het Plein Theater

In de aanloop naar Keti Koti op 1 juli staat de maand juni in het teken van herdenken en reflecteren op het Nederlands slavernijverleden en de sporen die dit nalaat in het heden.

Als theater van Amsterdam-Oost, gelegen aan de rand van het Oosterpark en op steenworp afstand van het Nationaal Monument Slavernijverleden, voelen wij ons sterk verbonden met deze periode van herdenking, bewustwording en viering.

Juist in deze maand – maar ook gedurende de rest van het jaar – geven we ruimte aan verhalen die het slavernijverleden, kolonialisme en hun doorwerking zichtbaar en bespreekbaar maken. We creëren een plek voor gesprek, ontmoeting en gezamenlijk eten. Daarbij kijken we niet alleen terug, maar richten we juist ook onze blik op de toekomst: hoe gaan we nu verder?

Activist, buurtbewoner en chefkok Peggy Burke verzorgt sinds twee jaar de keuken van het Plein Theater. Vanuit haar maatschappelijke en culturele betrokkenheid initieert zij programma’’s waarin samen eten het bindmiddel vormt voor ontmoeting, uitwisseling en dialoog.

In de maand juni hebben we een verdiepend programma vormgegeven, met als apotheose ruimte voor reflectie en ontspanning ná de herdenking in het Oosterpark op 1 juli. Onze deuren zijn dan open voor een Surinaams broodje, een kopje koffie en een goed gesprek.

Kom kijken, meedoen en proeven! #GetInvolved

Meer informatie over het programma >

Keti Koti Dialoogtafel #1: Achter de komma - hoe nu verder?

Op deze middag zijn politicus en activist Sylvana Simons en geneticus Arwin Ralf te gast.

Meer informatie volgt.

https://offbeat.amsterdam/event/keti-koti-dialoogtafel-1-achter-de-komma-hoe-nu-verder

to she who treads water

Perdu, Friday, May 22 at 08:00 PM GMT+2

Finding voice in a world that often only feels moved by silences and violent erasures, a cut has been made in our ability to practise. Together we try to step through. Ada Maricia Patterson and Yael Davids, together with M. Maria Walhout, call and respond through poetry, voice, sound, music and movement.

to she who treads water makes space for a close interfacing between lived experiences in this global political moment: colonial terror and the eradication of transfeminine life. With what little words we have to speak to unspeakable conditions, our bodies—inscribed by our being in this world—write back.

This project is dedicated to honouring the hesitations in finding voice; that even though our words might not be enough to move the world differently, that while our usual survival tactics and ways of making might suddenly feel toothless, surrendering to silence is not an option.

Forsaken in the wilderness, talking to God when God feels absent, floating directionless in open seas, to she who treads water offers a score that laments, grieves, rages, yearns and loves.

Hosts: Marija Cetinić & Jimena Casas.

https://offbeat.amsterdam/event/to-she-who-treads-water

Coming up in the next few hours:
00:00UTC The Global Classical Hour. Shawn Klein with an hour of global #ClassicalMusic.
01:00UTC Radio Ecoshock repeat: #ClimateChange, the #economy, and #peace. #EnvironmentalScience #talk.
02:00UTC L.A. Connection: It's Emperor Rosko your transatlantic dj. #Movies, #Radio, #tv #PopMusic
04:00UTC The Country Jamboree: Mike & Maureen have your #ClassicCountry & #bluegrass fix.
05:00UTC Tripledutch repeat in Dutch): #music from nowadays.
【雑談】夜にぶっちゃけて語る女【周防パトラ】

YouTube

Leiden Shorts x Ventilator Cinema

OT301, Saturday, May 23 at 02:30 PM GMT+2

Genre: Short Films, Festival
Open: 14:30 - 17:00 hrs
Tickets: € 10

From May 29 until June 02, @leidenshorts returns to Leiden for its 18th edition, transformingthe city into a space for short-form cinema that engages directly with the realities shaping ourpresent. Across five days, the festival will present a wide-ranging programme of internationaland national works, bringing together filmmakers who reflect on the conditions we live in today.

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On Saturday May 23, Leiden Shorts and Ventilator invites you to a preview screening of three short films from different sections of the 2026 programme.
'Daria’s Night Flowers’ (International Competition), ‘And still, it remains’ (Artists in Focus: Arwa Aburawa & Turab Shah), and ‘Last Seen, Long Ago’ (We need to talk about... Venezuela) collectively explore lives shaped by conflict, repression, colonial violence, anddisplacement.
Join us for the screening, and stay for a drink and and reflections afterwards!

Doors open: 14:30 pm (Walk-in)
Film program starts: 15:30 pm - 17:00pm

Stay for drinks till 22:00 pm or jump into short films made by women in Egypt at 18:00 pm.

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Film Credits:
Daria’s Night Flowers / Maryam Tafakory / 16’ / Iran, United Kingdom, France / 2025
And still, it remains / Arwa Aburawa, Turab Shah / 28’ / Algeria, United Kingdom / 2023
Last Seen, Long Time Ago (Última vez hace mucho tiempo) / Santiago Martín / 24’ / Venezuela / 2026

Leiden Shorts: Instagram / Website

Ventilator Cinema: @ventilator_cinema (on the second floor of @ot301adam)

Location: Overtoom 301, Amsterdam

https://offbeat.amsterdam/event/leiden-shorts-x-ventilator-cinema

rik tan, giu nunez & aram mukanay

murmur, Saturday, June 20 at 06:00 PM GMT+2

for the evening rik tan, gia nunez and aram mukanay come together with their selections.
Talking about eclectic DJs, Rik Tan stands out as a selector with a strong focus on global sounds within a club context. His sets move effortlessly between Cape Verdean rhythms, Brazilian influences, Afro, Latin, and electronic dance music, creating a distinctive style built on groove and rhythm.
As a resident at Tempo Não Para, a platform celebrating music from different cultures, Rik’s approach is rooted in connection rather than genre boundaries. He blends warm percussion, danceable electronics, and organic rhythms into cohesive, flowing journeys on the dancefloor.
His selections feel playful yet intentional, always leaving room for surprise without losing momentum. Rik Tan is known for his open musical vision and his ability to bring different worlds together in a single set.
For the past 16 years, Giu Nunez has been shaping a distinctive sound through deep vinyl digging and an eclectic approach to mixing genres. Starting her career at 18, her curiosity and versatility quickly made her a standout name in Brazil’s electronic scene and beyond, including a headline appearance at Amsterdam Dance Event.
Now based between São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, she is part of the Domply collective, exploring experimental and electronic music through parties and radio shows worldwide.
Amsterdam-based Aram Mukanay brings the groove wherever he goes. His sound dives deep into early ’80s boogie, dubby disco, and soulful house. Whether it’s a dusty boogie cut or a dreamy house track, one thing ties it all together: the funk. Expect slick basslines, disco divas, and percussive rhythms. Always smooth, always moving.
click here to reserve for dinner ♡

https://offbeat.amsterdam/event/rik-tan-giu-nunez-and-aram-mukanay