Whose voice are you willing to listen to?

— ACOUSTIC FRAGMENTS —

European Ethnographic Museums have for long been seen as the only valid voices to produce knowledge around these artifacts.

Do you feel that the discourse around the artifacts reflects how we would want our history to be “narrated” ?

Do you think these objects represent a cultural loss?

Do you think this affects your connection with your own heritage?

As a young Afro-descendant, what is your opinion on the fact that part of Africa’s cultural heritage is being exhibited and preserved in the present museum?

Pause. Listen. Reflect. Engage.

ACOUSTIC FRAGMENTS
(THE VISITOR IS PRESENT)

In response to multiple visitor requests for access to the full transcript of the workshop, we propose a different approach: acoustic fragments. Providing the full 50-page transcript of the workshop would not only be impractical and likely go unread but would also undermine its performative and experiential essence. Rather than offering a fixed, exhaustive document, we acknowledge that the interpretation of our input is deeply tied to our lived experience, shaped by evolving perspectives on race, identity, and belonging. The full transcript risks flattening, misrepresenting or oversimplifying these complexities, reducing rich, dynamic discussions to static words rather than ongoing, fluid dialogue.

Our intention is not to make these conversations digestible but rather accessible—offering an entry point that invites reflection, curiosity, and engagement with the layers of meaning beyond words alone. Unlike a written record, sound carries nuances and encourages a more immersive encounter. Rather than passively reading, visitors are prompted to pause, listen, and reflect. The act of listening becomes part of the experience, aligning with the fragmentary nature of the text and the themes of presence and belonging at the core of our contribution.

Each listener can choose to engage in their own way—whether by keeping their eyes open, absorbing the surrounding space, or closing them to focus purely on the voices, tones, and silences. These fragments embrace incompleteness. Each stands alone while simultaneously gesturing toward a larger whole—one that remains elusive, shifting with each listener’s perception.

It is not what is spoken that speaks, but what is heard. It is not the sound that matters, but the echo within us!

IMPLEMENTATION

  • Headphones are placed along the side walls, subtly embedded within the space.
  • No chairs provided to maintain an active, engaged role for the visitor—mirroring the necessity of active participation in conversations on belonging and identity.