Foreign Legion and Raby-Florence Fofana amidst the scenography developed for Add to the Cake. Photo by Jenny Peñas for Freunde von Freunden.
Following the A Woman’s Work symposium which I organized with Matylda Krzykowski under our Foreign Legion moniker, we were invited to transform the symposium material into an exhibition at the Museum of Decorative Arts in Dresden. This was an incredible opportunity to further continue working in the themes first developed in the symposium and allowed us to further test and stretch a commonly known format – the exhibition.
We titled the project Add to the Cake: Transforming the Roles of Female Practitioners, and structured it over the course of two iterations. The first was a preview, in which we worked through the themes discussed in the symposium and presented them in a three-dimensional space, surrounded by the many references, examples and role models discussed on that occasion. This was all presented amidst custom scenographic elements developed by Andrea Anner and Raby-Florence Fofana for the occasion.
The second iteration of the exhibition will open on 5 July, and present a variety of visions for the future of female practice specifically commissioned for the show. Below an excerpt of the curatorial text:
Contemporary cultural constructs have us believe that not everyone can get a fair share of the cake, and that only a limited few can write history. In the case of female practitioners in design, architecture and the arts, their erasure from the history and the memory of their disciplines has been systematic; but in the first two decades of the 21st century, they have regained visibility. In this pivotal moment, female practitioners have the chance to usher in an important transformation for their disciplines.
We can – and need to – add to the existing cake: infinite layers for an expanded canon. Adding to museum collections and to historical accounts, adding to collective memory and to possible futures. Most importantly, we must realize that ‘adding’ doesn’t mean ‘taking away’, but that it enriches the existing context with multiple, varied voices and perspectives. Â
The exhibition Add to the Cake is an exercise in enacting the kind of transformation that design, architecture and arts are about to experience. It develops over the course of an exhibition, an active public program, and a series of performative moments over the course of six months.
Add to the Cake could not have been developed without the unwavering support of the Museum of Decorative Arts Dresden’s team, especially Nils Hilkenbach. A few installation shots, all by Klemens Renner, can be seen after the jump.
Exhibition View: First room of the preview of Add to the Cake, curtain with the group picture from the A Woman’s Work symposium
Exhibition View: artwork by Raby-Florence Fofana
Quotes and pictures from A Woman’s Work, exhibits by Hall of Femmes, Depatriarchise Design and Women Design
‘Secrets of the Universe’ by Pinar & Viola
Exhibition view ‘Dismantlers of Existing Conditions’
A Woman’s Work report edited by Foreign Legion and Emma Lucek, designed by AnnerPerrin
Quotes and pictures from A Woman’s Work, exhibits by Common Interest, Kate Dooley, Beyond Change, Christoph Knoth and Posterwoman
Designs of Gertrud Kleinhempel, one of the designers of the Deutsche Werkstätten Hellerau
Exhibits Theresia Enzensberger, Alice Rawsthorn
Quotes and picture from A Woman’s Work
View from Wasserpalais to Bergpalais at Schloss Pillnitz, Museum of Decorative Arts Dresden
Artwork by Raby-Florence Fofana
Outdoor view of the exhibition location, Wasserpalais Schloss Pillnitz with artwork by Raby-Florence Fofana