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  • Lofty exhibition space with several large screens hanging from the ceiling. Samia Henni stands in front of one of the screens, pointing to the left. A group of people sitting in front, look in the direction Samia is pointing at.

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    Exhibition tour with Samia Henni of her Performing Colonial Toxicity, Framer Framed, Amsterdam, January 2024. Photo: Megan Hoetger.

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    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gkWY_qsQsOY

Between 1960 and 1966, the French colonial regime detonated four atmospheric atomic bombs, thirteen underground nuclear bombs and conducted other nuclear experiments in the Algerian Sahara, whose natural resources were being extracted in the process. This secret nuclear weapons programme occurred during and after the Algerian Revolution, or the Algerian War of Independence (1954–62). The resulting toxification of the Sahara spread radioactive fallout across Algeria, North, Central and West Africa, and the Mediterranean (including Southern Europe), causing irreversible and still ongoing contaminations of living bodies, cells and particles, as well as in the natural and built environments.

The exhibition Performing Colonial Toxicity presents available, offered, contraband and leaked materials from these archives in an immersive multimedia installation. It creates with them a series of audio-visual assemblages, which trace the spatial, atmospheric, and geological impacts of France’s atomic bombs in the Sahara, as well as its colonial vocabularies, and the (after)lives of its radioactive debris and nuclear waste. Taking on an architectural scale, these “stations”, as Henni refers to them, are meant to be moved through and engaged with. Visitors are invited in to draw their own connections between what is present in the installation, as well as what is absent from it.

Henni’s exhibition formed part of the commission Performing Colonial Toxicity, which Hoetger led as part of the Edition IX - Bodies and Technologies biennial program (2022-2023) for If I Can’t Dance, Amsterdam. The exhibition was conceived by Henni in collaboration with Hoetger and co-production partners at Framer Framed, Amsterdam where it was on view 7 October 2023 - 14 January 2024. Special thanks to Ashley Maum, Jean Medina, and the produciton team at Framer Framed for their support throughout the process. Parts of the exhibition have since travelled on to gta exhibitions⁠(opens in a new tab), Zurich (6 March - 2 April 2024) and The Mosaic Rooms⁠(opens in a new tab), London (22 March - 16 June 2024).