How does knowledge become democratized through transmission? In episode six of Artists in the World, writer, art historian, and curator Zahia Rahmani and Ryan Inouye, associate curator of the 58th Carnegie International, explore this question and more.
Zahia Rahmani
Zahia Rahmani (b. 1962, Makouda; lives between Paris and the Oise region) is a writer, an art historian, and a curator. She works at the Institut National d’Histoire de l’Art (INHA), Paris, where she is the head of the program “Histoire de l’art mondialisée” (Globalized art history). From 1999 to 2003, she created and directed the postdiploma research program for the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-arts, Paris. She has worked at the Villa Arson/National School of Art, Nice, and at the Jeu de Paume, Paris. In 2012, she set up at INHA the program “Made in Algeria”, dedicated to the mapping of colonized Algeria, and she cocurated the eponymous exhibition at the Musée des Civilsations de l’Europe et de la Méditerranée, Marseille (2016). In 2015, she launched the “Observatory: Global Art Prospective” program at INHA, with a group of researchers and exhibition curators. She developed and designed the research program Seismography of Struggles: Towards a Global History of Critical and Cultural Journals, the result of a long process of collective, multilingual, and decentralized research led by the INHA. Since 2017, Seismography of Struggles has been shown at Kulte, Rabat; Beirut Art Center; Dhaka Art Summit; Centre Pompidou, Paris; Middelheim Museum, Antwerp; and Museum of Contemporary Art, Barcelona, among many other places. A regular lecturer in France and abroad, Rahmani is the author of several books, including France,Story of a Childhood (2016), Made in Algeria, généalogie d’un territoire (2016), and “Muslim”: A Novel (2019), which received the Albertine Book Prize in 2020.
Ryan Inouye
Ryan Inouye is associate curator for the 58th Carnegie International. He served most recently as senior curator at Sharjah Art Foundation in Sharjah, United Arab Emirates, where he curated exhibitions and co-organized the 2018 edition of the March Meeting, an annual program that explores developments in culture through contemporary art. Previously, he served as associate curator of Sharjah Biennial 12: The past, the present, the possible (2014–2015) and held curatorial posts at the New Museum in New York, focusing on the 2012 New Museum Triennial and Museum as Hub initiative, as well as at REDCAT in Los Angeles. Inouye received an MRes from Goldsmiths, University of London, and a BA from the University of California, Los Angeles.