Tanoa Sasraku is included in a group exhibition at Palais de Tokyo, Paris opening 17 October 2024
‘Tituba, Who Protects Us?’
Curated by Amandine Nana
17 October 2024 – 5 January 2025
Palais de Tokyo, 13 Av. du Président Wilson, 75116 Paris, France
“Tituba, qui pour nous protéger ?” is a group show which invites eleven artists from France, Great Britain, and North America with Carribean and African diasporic trajectories to come together around a meditation on the relationships between grief, memory, migration and ancestrality. The exhibition reflects more specifically on the everyday role played by our lost loved ones, our memories, our myths, dreams and the invisible as spiritual protectors and imaginary friends. Bringing together diverse practices including sculpture, film, photography, painting and installation, “Tituba, qui pour nous protéger ?” presents narratives which play out on a scale both intimate and collective, transgenerational and historical, but also symbolic and material. The novel Moi, Tituba, sorcière noire de Salem (1986) by Maryse Condé serves as the departure point for the exhibition. In a poetic and sororal gesture, the eponymous character of Tituba is here invoked as a figure of protection, and the exhibition accordingly weaves together artistic and literary creation.