Co-creation: selected projects 2025

Pro Helvetia Johannesburg, Pro Helvetia Le Caire, Pro Helvetia New Delhi, Pro Helvetia Shanghai, Pro Helvetia South America

Note : Cet article n’est pas disponible en français.

Images by hesign

Pro Helvetia is pleased to announce the 17 co-creation projects that have been selected through the 2025 open call.

The co-creation grant supports collaborative projects across all artistic disciplines supported by Pro Helvetia, jointly developed by a Swiss artist, duo or collective and their counterpart in the regions of the liaison offices. This support measure looks to strengthen intercultural exchange and promote artistic collaboration practices that were developed in previous residencies, research trips, or independent past creative endeavours.

This year, 102 applications were submitted via the annual open call. They were carefully reviewed by experts from our liaison offices and specialists in the respective disciplines at the head office in Zurich.

Between the lines بين السطور (performing arts)

Corsin Gaudenz (Switzerland) and Ahmed Elsawy (Sawi Laila) (Egypt)

The two-part project ‘Between the Lines بين السطور ‘ combines performance and participatory engagement. It features a 30-minute theatre and puppetry performance using movement and storytelling to explore boundary-crossing and children asserting agency. This is followed by a workshop designed for children’s groups — a safe, creative space for reflection, questions, and self-expression through art.

The project aims to create intercultural artistic spaces that enable honest dialogue around taboos, using age-appropriate and culturally sensitive language and aesthetics. Touring two to three locations in Switzerland (mainly non-urban, such as Valais or Central Switzerland) and Egypt (particularly upper Egypt, including rural areas), the project explores how child protection strategies resonate in different contexts. It traces the fragile lines between vulnerability and strength, contributing to global conversations on childhood, education, and the transformative power of performance.

Sawi Laila and Corsin Gaudenz met in Switzerland during Sawi’s performance studies in Sierre, where they quickly connected through a shared belief in theatre as a space for social dialogue and transformation. Coming from Egypt, Sawi’s practice is rooted in shadow play, puppetry, and community-based theatre that addresses themes such as violence, exclusion, racism, borders, and resilience — often in collaboration with schools and NGOs in rural areas. Corsin’s work in Switzerland also engages young audiences through participatory performances like ROSA, which explores war and freedom of expression. In 2025, during his residency in Cairo, Corsin began adapting a Swiss folk tale into Egyptian Arabic and collaborated with Sawi. That moment sparked their artistic partnership — grounded in mutual respect and the desire to co-create across languages, borders, and communities.

Two people seated outdoors, speaking in a courtyard setting.
Sawi Laila and Corsin Gaudenz working together © Martina Feubli
Portrait of Corsin Gaudenz
Corsin Gaudenz © Doaa abdin
Ahmed Elsawy (Sawi Laila)
Sawi Laila © Mohamed Anter

Corsin Gaudenz

Uster, Switzerland | Performing arts, theatre

Corsin Gaudenz is an independent Swiss theatre maker, author, and project-based artist. His playful, atmospheric work crosses genre boundaries and includes music theatre, performances, and visual art projects. Recently, he has focused on touch and body boundaries, creating workshops and relaxed performances shaped by sensory experiences.

Website

Ahmed Elsawy (Sawi Laila)

Cairo, Egypt | Performance and theatre

Sawi Laila is a multidisciplinary theatre and performance artist, living between Berlin and Cairo, with a Master of Arts in Public Spheres from EDHEA, Switzerland. Since 2008, he has created immersive performances using theatre, dance, and storytelling, working closely with children and adolescents, exploring body boundaries, and engaging communities through art for social change around borders, migration, and marginalised groups.

Instagram

Derja b Derja (visual arts)

Alan Schmalz (Switzerland) and Louise Dib and Riad Hamed Abdelouahab (Studio Chimbo) (Algeria)

Map background with Arabic and Latin text reading ‘derja b derja’.
Derja b Derja, Studio Chimbo and Alan Schmalz, 2024

Designed as a conceptual and evolving project, ‘Derja b Derja’ explores the role of staircases in Algiers’ urban fabric and daily life. More than mere passages, these structures function as arteries shaping the city’s rhythms. Approached as artistic objects, public and intimate spaces, and connectors between urban layers, this project unfolds through psychogeography, graphic design, contemporary art, and publishing through a series of three physical publications. 

Alan Schmalz, Louise Dib and Riad Hamed Abdelouahab from Studio Chimbo, met in Algiers while working in the same place. Through their respective artistic practices, they developed a shared sensitivity to what lies at the margins, what emerges and grows there. They are drawn to so-called minor practices and to the messages and philosophies carried by some of these movements. Whether independent cinema, experimental music, literature, or fields such as anthropology, social sciences, or history, their interests have often intersected across these domains, leading them to approach certain questions with a rich and dynamic sense of complementarity. 

Alan Schmalz

Geneva, Switzerland and Marseille, France | Visual arts

Alan Schmalz mainly works with drawing, painting, installation, and writing. Like an amateur journalist, he seeks the material for his subjects, both in the happy accidents of everyday life and in broader current events and history.

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Louise Dib and Riad Hamed Abdelouahab (Studio Chimbo)

Algiers, Algeria | Graphic design

Chimbo is a graphic design studio founded in Algiers in 2016. Rooted in urban observation, their practice intertwines graphic design, sensitive cartography, and collective workshops. They approach publishing as an experimental field, where editorial formats act as material extensions of the city, carrying its fragments, voices, and informal narratives.

Instagram

Echoes X Unseen (music, visual arts)

Christophe Fellay (Switzerland) and Johan Thom (South Africa)

Christophe Fellay and Johan Thom will collaboratively explore and document cave sites in Switzerland and South Africa through performative interventions, using sound and visual media to reveal the unseen histories and latent possibilities of these spaces. The project will focus on natural caves in the Cradle of Humankind and human-made underground structures in the Swiss Alps, treating the sites themselves as primary ‘performers.’ Performances — using percussion, voice, and movement — will create acoustic ‘footprints’ that capture the unique properties of each location. These recordings will be compiled into a multi-channel video and sound installation, immersing visitors in the interplay between sound, space, and memory. The ‘X’ in the title symbolises both amplification and site-specificity, emphasising sound as a tool to locate and magnify hidden dimensions. The project bridges visual and sonic practices, drawing on echo acoustics, performance art, and interdisciplinary methodologies to connect past, present, and future through creative research. 

Johan Thom and Christophe Fellay have collaborated extensively on multiple art projects across Switzerland, South Africa, and internationally. Their notable works include The Minotaur Series (2005), a seven-channel synced video projection with mixed media and performative elements by Fellay, created during Thom’s CRIC/Phlosa residency in Sierre (Switzerland) (November 2004–January 2005). The piece premiered at the Forum d’Art Contemporain in Sierre and was later exhibited at the Johannesburg Art Gallery in 2006. In 2019, Thom contributed visual elements to the performance series F Sharp Bright Orange in New York, which resulted in a vinyl album released in 2023. Their recent collaboration, Art in Human Space/Listening At The Edge (2022–23), featured a live performance and the video installation Movement in Three Parts (Isandlwana), exhibited at the Pretoria Art Gallery in 2023. 

Drum set on stage with blurred musician, large screen in the background.
Christophe Fellay © Chris Morgan
Person standing in front of rows of small clay objects arranged on the floor in an empty room.
Johan Thom © Alet Pretorius

Christophe Fellay

Orsières, Switzerland | Music, sound art

Christophe Fellay is a multidisciplinary Swiss sound artist, musician, composer, performer, and improviser, whose artistic practice lies at the intersection of sonic experimentation, performance, and interdisciplinary research. His work explores the interplay between gesture, space, and listening, unfolding through immersive installations, hybrid performances, and compositions for diverse ensembles.

Website

Johan Thom

Pretoria, South Africa | Visual arts

Johan Thom, a South African visual artist, explores the performative relationship between the body, found objects, and raw materials like wood, foam, clay, and plaster. His work often creates messy, corporeal forms that question and animate our evolving material connection to the world.

Website
Instagram

Entrepeaux (performing arts)

Delgado Fuchs (Nadine Fuchs & Marco Delgado) (Switzerland) and Selim Ben Safia (Tunisia)

The project currently under development explores the artists’ choreographic heritages, focusing particularly on folkloric and ritual dances. This is not a patrimonial gesture, but rather a playground and space for reflection, where costumes, bodies, and acts of transmission become living materials to be questioned, reimagined, and transformed.

During the Swiss Dance Days in Zurich in 2024, a candid conversation unfolded between them about their respective artistic contexts. They exchanged perspectives on local realities — constraints, freedoms, and points of friction. Very quickly, the desire to collaborate became evident, not despite their cultural differences, but because of them.

Portrait of Selim Ben Safia
© Selim Ben Safia
Artistic composition featuring multiple people in dynamic poses.
© Nadine Fuchs & Marco Delgado

Selim Ben Safia

Tunis, Tunisia | Performing arts, contemporary dance, performance

Selim Ben Safia is a Tunisian choreographer whose work explores freedom, censorship, and social constraints in the Arab world. Rooted in the body as memory and resistance, his creations engage diverse performers and audiences, making dance a vital space of dialogue, reinvention, and collective transformation.

Instagram
Video

Delgado Fuchs (Nadine Fuchs & Marco Delgado)

Lausanne, Switzerland | Contemporary dance, performance, visual arts

Delgado Fuchs is a Swiss collective by Marco Delgado and Nadine Fuchs. Blending dance and visual arts, their playful, poetic works explore the body’s awareness and plasticity. They have created over twenty pieces, shown in theatres, museums and festivals worldwide, from Vienna to Paris, Montreal, Seoul, and Melbourne.

Website
Instagram

Fábulas del Río Nilo (visual arts)

Céline Burnand (Switzerland/Egypt) and Elkin Calderón Guevara and Diego Piñeros García (Colombia/Germany)

The project ‘Fables of the Nile River’ explores the symbolic and ecological role of animals in Egyptian, Colombian and Swiss cultures through a three-week felucca journey from Aswan to Luxor on the Nile River. Combining field research, writing and reinterpretation of fables, and filmmaking, the artists create together with local communities, drawing on oral traditions, local and ecological knowledge, and direct encounters with animals. Each fable links myths and realities from different continents, addressing themes such as power, migration, and human-animal relationships. Inspired by the Vinciane Despret book ‘What would animals say if we asked them the right questions?’, the project, based on travel, listening and collective authorship, reimagines rivers and animals as living archives of connection.

The project team consists of Céline Burnand, Elkin Calderón Guevara and Diego Piñeros García. Their partnership began when they met in 2019 during an artist residency at Villa Ruffieux in Switzerland, organised by Pro Helvetia and the COINCIDENCIA programme. Based on their friendship and an ever-evolving artistic dialogue, the artists have since developed multiple joint projects. In 2021, at the invitation of Diego and Elkin, Céline conducted research at Lugar a Dudas in Cali, exploring local practices related to snakes with Diego’s support. In 2023, Céline and Diego collaborated on Figuras de la Memoria for the Cali International Dance Festival, with the support of Pro Helvetia, where Diego worked as producer and field guide along the Colombian Pacific coast. Meanwhile, Céline and Elkin have maintained an ongoing exchange, meeting frequently in Berlin and, most recently, in Nyon during the premiere of Elkin’s film at the Visions du Réel Festival.

Three people crouching near a statue at night with fireworks shooting upward.
Céline Burnand, Elkin Calderón Guevara and Diego Piñeros García during their residency at Villa Ruffieux in Sierre, Switzerland

Céline Burnand

Lausanne, Switzerland and Cairo, Egypt | Visual arts, film installations, drawings, photography, archive-based research, writing

Céline Burnand works with installation, drawing, film, photography, text, and performance. Her practice explores recurring gestures and visual forms across time, space, and cultures, inspired by Warburg’s Pathosformel and her own heritage. She divides her time between Switzerland and Egypt, combining artistic practice with teaching, research, and collaborative projects.

Website
Video
Instagram

Elkin Calderón Guevara and Diego Piñeros García

Bogotá, Colombia and Berlin, Germany | Film, video, photography, writing and publications

Elkin Calderón and Diego Piñeros merge art and cinema to revisit forgotten stories and connect the ruins of the past with the realities of the present. Through a poetic-political lens, their works explore memory, non-hegemonic discourses, and non-human life, blurring fiction and reality to create alternative narratives and lead to new readings of reality.

Video
Instagram

I shook the MacBook (visual arts)

Ernestyna Orlowska (Switzerland) and Funa Ye (China)

Videostill of an artistic performance with two figures wearing decorative headpieces among chandeliers.
Videostill ‘Big Dream Show’ © Ye Funa

The artists intend to create a video installation project together, where their skills and interests meet and catalyse one another. Their collaborative project aims to explore the lifecycle of MacBooks — from design and production to consumption and disposal — through the lens of waste management practices in China and Switzerland. By juxtaposing the two countries’ approaches, they seek to create a multi-layered narrative that challenges conventional perceptions of waste and sustainability in the global industry. The artists are particularly interested in how products cultivate a lifestyle centred on digital minimalism, and how this intersects with global patterns of extraction, labour, and obsolescence. The work aims to tell a ‘post-utopian myth’ of the MacBook: a speculative, poetic narrative that reveals what remains after the dream of seamless design fades.

Ye Funa and Ernestyna Orlowska met in 2017, when Ye Funa underwent a residency at Stadtgalerie Bern. Pro Helvetia had supported the residency, as well as appointed Ernestyna as Ye Funa’s side local art guide. Ernestyna ended up performing in one of Ye Funa’s video works, which was later exhibited in Shanghai and New York. Since then, the two artists have stayed in touch. They share an interest in crafty art production with a DIY aesthetic. Also, there are both interested in themes such as capitalist production, selfhood, labour, and the hidden infrastructure of logistics in digital networks and the influence it has on the creation of the self.

Portrait of Ernestyna Orlowska
Ernestyna Orlowska © Carolina Misztela
Portrait of Funa Ye
Funa Ye © Gong Jian

Ernestyna Orlowska

Bern, Switzerland | Visual arts, performing arts

Through visual arts and performance, Ernestyna Orlowska explores neoliberalism’s impact on existence, engaging with aesthetics of struggle and echoes of performance art’s origins. By interrogating tensions of identity, endurance, and agency, the work challenges boundaries and situates itself within critical dialogue between historical precedents and contemporary paradigms.

Website
Instagram

Funa Ye

Beijing, China | Visual arts

Funa Ye’s practice is mainly concerned with the relationship between the realities of everyday life, the perceived connection between authority and many areas of social life such as different power structures, ethnic groups, and the fictional space for the concept of ‘perfection’ in an ideological system.

Website
Instagram

幻月流 Luna Drift (music)

Shuyue Miao Zhao (Switzerland) and Cuiamo (Mo) (China)

‘幻月流 Luna Drift’ is a co-creation project between Shuyue Miao Zhao and Cuiamo (Mo), shaped by their respective environments — Zurich and Guangzhou. Through fieldwork, composition, and performance, the project explores how geographic and cultural contexts influence listening and embodied experience. The work unfolds in two phases: first, a remote exchange in which each artist develops sound material in response to their local surroundings; then, a second phase in Guangzhou, where they meet to further transform the material through collaborative performance. Embracing difference and entanglement, the artists seek common ground through music and a shared commitment to sonic experimentation.

Their collaboration is grounded in mutual artistic curiosity and a personal connection that began during Zhao’s 2025 China tour and research trip in Shanghai, which included a pivotal meeting in Hong Kong.

‘We were drawn to each other’s practices through a shared dedication to experimental sound, improvisation, and live performance, as well as a deep interest in how listening is shaped by social, political, and spatial conditions. Driven by a strong desire to collaborate further, we continued our musical exchange remotely and have since developed several ideas for joint projects. At this stage, creating music together remains our top priority.’

– Shuyue Miao Zhao and Mo

Soundcloud

Musician performing on stage with a bass clarinet and electronic equipment.
Zhao © Francesca Camila
Black-and-white photo of a person in motion wearing a light dress during a performance.
Mo © 大河

Shuyue Miao Zhao

Zurich, Switzerland | Music

Shuye Miao Zhao’s work operates through hardware-based generative audio environments and processed bass clarinet, feeding sonic organisms that mutate in real time — refusing stability, rejecting linear narrative between harmonic instability, signal collapse, and saturation. Each performance is an encounter with unpredictability: an improvisation of noise, rupture, and irrational musical logic.

Website
Instagram

Cuiamo (Mo)

Guangzhou, China | Music

Mo’s work explores industrial noise through hardware gear such as mixers, pedals, and synthesisers. Using no-input mixer feedback, she creates heartbeat-like rhythms inspired by emotional fluctuations. Live and improvised, her performances blend deep drones with sharp mechanical surges, crafting shifting sonic textures that mirror the body’s dynamic emotional pulse.

Instagram

Material interactions (design)

Nadya Suvorova (Switzerland) and Heidi Jalkh (Argentina)

Material Interactions is a collaborative project by Argentinian designer Heidi Jalkh and Swiss artist-designer Nadya Suvorova that explores how emergent materials can act as expressive, interactive agents. What does it mean for a material to be ‘alive’? The project investigates this question through small kinetic haptic displays that transform active, bio-based materials sourced from labs in Switzerland and Argentina into subtle, responsive mechanisms. Each piece serves as both an interactive sculpture and a research artefact, revealing how materials perform, react, and resist. It also invites intuitive, embodied encounters where matter moves, senses, decays, and fosters engagement. This playful investigation of ‘living’ and ‘life-like’ materials explores their potential influence on design culture.

Heidi and Nadya first connected in Zurich during Heidi’s research trip, ‘Material Design: Focus on Biomaterials,’ where they discovered shared interests in material behaviour, transformation, and interactivity. Heidi was drawn to Nadya’s interactive explorations of material behaviours, while Nadya was intrigued by Heidi’s interest in making materials active through form and her research-based approach to shaping bio-based materials. Soon after, Nadya invited Heidi to the Soft Materials Lab at ETH Zurich, where both immersed themselves in research, exchanging ideas with scientists.

Their exchange deepened around how physical and digital systems can inform each other through material interaction. Later, during Heidi’s workshop ‘IN A SEASHELL’ (2024) in Berlin and Nadya’s ‘Future of Materials’ platform, they continued exploring how their complementary practices merge across design, research, and artistic experimentation.

Portrait of Heidi Jalkh
Heidi Jalkh © Patricio Ditzel
Portrait of Nadya Suvorova
Nadya Suvorova © Désirée Good

Heidi Jalkh

Buenos Aires, Argentina | Design

Heidi Jalkh is an experimental designer, educator, researcher, and curator based in Buenos Aires. She explores how materials inform design as both a process of making and a way of knowing. As the lead of ‘Sistemas Materiales’, she investigates bio-inspired and biofabricated materials through interdisciplinary research and craft-based processes, bridging design, science, and material fabrication.

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Nadya Suvorova

Zurich, Switzerland | Design

Nadya Suvorova is a designer, material agent, and creative director exploring how matter shapes ideas and experiences. As co-founder of Future of Materials, she curates cutting-edge materials and fosters collaborative futures in design and technology. Her interdisciplinary practice bridges art, science, and innovation across digital and physical realms.

Instagram

Microplastic fictions – Light and Sonic Entanglements (visual arts)

Alan Bogana (Switzerland) and Po-Hao Chi (Taiwan)

Video call screenshot showing two people talking.
Screenshot of a common call

‘Microplastic fictions – Light and Sonic Entanglements’ is a collaborative research project by Swiss visual artist Alan Bogana and Taiwanese sound artist Chi Po-Hao. It investigates microplastic pollution as both material and metaphor, tracing its entanglement with human and non-human ecosystems. Through light-based sculptures, custom optics, and UV imaging, Alan explores microplastics as spectral contaminants that destabilise ideals of purity associated with light. In parallel, Po-Hao employs sound synthesis and sonification to reveal their fragmented sonic materiality, translating environmental and bodily data into immersive compositions. The resulting modular installation will interweave sculptural and auditory elements, creating a contemplative space that renders perceptible the pervasive yet elusive presence of synthetic residues in contemporary environments.

Portrait of Alan Bogana
Alan Bogana © Noemi Caraban, CERN
Portrait of Po-Hao Chi
Po-Hao Chi © PY Chiang

Alan Bogana

Geneva, Switzerland | Visual arts

Alan Bogana is a Swiss visual artist based in Geneva. Working across installations, sculptures, holograms, and time-based media, he explores light as both subject and medium. His poetic investigations reveal how technoscientific imaginaries shape perception, ecology, and the ways we understand and construct reality.

Website
Instagram

Po-Hao Chi

Taipei City, Taiwan | Sound arts, media arts

Po-Hao Chi is an interdisciplinary artist working at the crossroads of art, music, and technology. His work often explores the boundaries and connections that link different aspects of daily life, ranging from conceptual to virtual art, software to hardware, and performance to installation.

Website
Instagram

Penumbra (music)

Elia Buletti (Switzerland/Germany) and Suvani Suri (India)

‘Penumbra’ refers to a specific shadow — one that is illuminated. In this project, the aim is to explore how this concept could serve as a conceptual and methodological framework to bring the artists’ practices together — in artistic research, storytelling, sound sculpting and performance — as an attempt to develop a hybrid form of making and transmissions, both performative and participatory.

The project is conceived in two complementary phases: the development of a sonic fiction resulting from the collaboration between the two artists, and the sharing and cross-pollination of this research through pop-up events and workshops. The artists are envisioning an experimental lecture, whose final format is multiple and variable: live art, workshop and publication. Sound-scored theory-fictional meanderings evolve through a participatory approach that will link both artists networks.

Suvani Suri was appointed as Elia Buletti’s coach when he spent three months in India in autumn 2024 for a Pro Helvetia music residency. They met in Berlin, as Suvani was invited for the Dystopia Sound Art Biennal and their first meeting was at her lecture. During the residency, Suvani and Elia naturally became curious about each other’s practices, discovering on several occasions a spontaneous affinity of intent. A shared interest in storytelling, experimental music, and ways of experiencing art and knowledge that blossomed into the idea of a co-creation. The joint project ‘Penumbra’ is the crystal sphere of this affinity, aiming to investigate the format of the lecture as a sonic fiction — in a hybrid form of both creating and sharing.

Portrait of Elia Buletti
Elia Buletti © Caterina Montesi
Portrait of Suvani Suri
Suvani Suri © Amarnath Prafful

Elia Buletti

Berlin, Germany and Switzerland | Music

Elia Buletti’s musical research moves in the field of abstract and experimental electro-acoustic music, with a twist of post-electronica. He works on studio and field recordings that he processes and layers to create ephemeral sound fictions. He also runs a confidential music label called ‘Das Andere Selbst’, releasing limited editions.

Suvani Suri

New Delhi, India | Music, sound, curation, research

Suvani Suri is an artist working with questions around sound, technologies of reproduction and recording, and voice. She is interested in producing situations and scenes for associative practices that critically engage with mediatic and sonic sensoriums, uncanny flows and uncommon infrastructures. Alongside this, she has recently set in motion the project ‘Uncanny Stations – an axis, frame and scene of co-listening and thinking’.  

Website
Instagram

Pillow Menu (visual arts)

Quynh Dong (Switzerland) and Ha Dao (Vietnam)

‘Pillow Menu’ is a collaborative multimedia project exploring the politics of rest, now a luxury in multiple senses of the word. It is set against the backdrop of a five-star Swiss resort on Vietnam’s tropical coast, an architectural fiction that embodies a transnational network of leisure, desire, and soft power. The resort complex is treated as both subject and stage, repurposing the idea of the ‘self-contained destination’ to craft parallel moving image narratives. The project involves conducting research and fieldwork, co-developing a script, and finally producing a video installation that compresses the dissonant realities resulting from Vietnam’s active participation in the global economic order. The work will be presented in both Vietnam and Switzerland in 2026 and 2027.

Ha Dao and Quynh Dong first met in Hanoi in 2019 during a residency at Heritage Art Space, where both produced video works and became acquainted. They reconnected intermittently in Vietnam and later more regularly in Zurich in 2024, when Ha undertook a Pro Helvetia–supported studio residency. Through conversations about art and life over home-cooked meals, they came to recognise and deepen shared concerns. Both artists work with the camera, drawn to the poetic and conversational, and their approaches meet at the threshold of autobiography and fantasy, often referencing pop culture and mainstream media. This collaboration grows out of that ongoing dialogue and from their individual practices that are grounded in critical exploration of (self-)representation.

Portrait of Ha Dao
Ha Dao © Vu Khoi Nguyen
Portrait of Quynh Dong
© Quynh Dong

Ha Dao

Hanoi, Vietnam | Photography, moving image

Ha Dao is an artist working with photography and moving image, based in Hanoi (Vietnam). Inspired by the quiet drama of everyday life, she explores how personal fates intersect with larger histories, reflecting on the notion of distance, with the camera as both witness and intermediary.

Website
Instagram

Quynh Dong

Zurich, Switzerland | Moving image, performance, objects

Quynh Dong was born in Hai Phong (Vietnam) and is based in Zurich (Switzerland). Drawing on elements of kitsch, pop culture, and traditional Asian iconography, she creates hyper-stylised worlds where cultural identity, femininity, and the diasporic experience intersect. Through playful yet critical compositions, she explores the construction of self within shifting cultural narratives, using the body as both subject and symbol.

Website
Instagram

Retrofitting the tropical paradise – a journey through identity, memory and space with Julia da Silva-Bruhns (visual arts)

Eva Ruof (Switzerland) and Helena Ramos (Brazil)

Computer screen showing multiple video call windows with participants holding cameras.
© Helena Ramos and Eva Ruof

As the year 2025 marks the 150th anniversary of Thomas Mann, the project takes the life of his mother, Julia da Silva-Bruhns, and her often overlooked identity and memories as a starting point. Born in 1851 in Paraty (Brazil), Julia grew up in a colonial mansion cared for by her enslaved nanny before being sent to Lübeck (Germany), at age eight. By revisiting the spaces of her life, the artists address the absence of visual records of her early life. Their fictional archival retrofit aims at revealing colonial legacies, exoticised imagery, and the material traces of wealth built on enslaved labour.

The collaboration between Eva Ruof and Helena Ramos began in 2024 through an introduction highlighting our shared interests in urban counter practices and their visual documentation. At the time, Eva was preparing for a residency in São Paulo and researching the city’s nightlife, a subject Helena had long documented. This initial connection fostered exchanges, both virtual and in-person, on gentrification, cultural production, and the socio-political dimensions of the built environment in our respective contexts.

In 2025, upon Eva’s arrival in Brazil, the collaboration developed through two joint projects: a series of body scans of performance artists in São Paulo’s nightlife scene and a video projection intervention on construction sites, hovering between reality and imagination. The partnership is grounded in mutual engagement with experimental media and spatial practices, allowing us to integrate our distinct disciplinary and cultural perspectives.

Portrait of Eva Ruof
Eva Ruof © Helena Ramos
Portrait of Helena Ramos
Helena Ramos © Samuel Esteves

Eva Ruof

Zurich, Switzerland | Architecture, visual arts

Eva Ruof is an architect and researcher exploring the socio-political dynamics and economic forces that shape the built environment and contemporary landscapes. Using the body and its presence in space as a tool, she experiments with visual documentation to trace power structures and reveal their material manifestations across different contexts.

Website
Instagram

Helena Ramos

São Paulo, Brazil | Architecture, visual arts

Helena Ramos is an architect, artist, designer, and researcher. She develops work in the fields of photography, fashion, architecture, and design, moving across different languages and media. She has created various projects in the visual, graphic, and exhibition fields, always seeking to explore the intersections between disciplines.

Website
Instagram

The kitchen and the self (literature and visual arts)

Heike Fiedler (Switzerland) and Manmeet Devgun (India)

The project embodies an interdisciplinary, socio-artistic inquiry rooted in the everyday space of the kitchen, a site traditionally associated with domestic labour, gender roles, and social reproduction.

Deliberately abstracting from the functional aspects of the kitchen, the project seeks to transform this familiar environment into a space of artistic reflection, social critique, and intercultural dialogue. It explores the social, environmental, and feminist dimensions embedded within the kitchen as a symbolic, and material site. The team will collect sound and images (still, moving), write poems or short statements and use those ‘ingredients’ to prepare upcoming expositions/installations and performances, in Switzerland and in India.

Person standing on stage next to a projected image with the word ‘resistance’ written in red.
© Heike Fiedler
Person seated on the floor writing in a notebook on an orange mat with a dark object placed in front.
© Manmeet Devgun

Heike Fiedler

Geneva, Switzerland | Poetry, performance, sound and visual arts

Heike Fiedler is a writer, performer, sound and visual artist, exploring the in between of different languages and media, of the public and private spheres. She interrogates and destabilises dominant structures, present in everyday life. Unexpected moments may become a surfaces for interaction, a space for experimental explorations. 

Website
Instagram

Manmeet Devgun

New Delhi, India | Multidisciplinary performance art

Manmeet Devgun grounds her multidisciplinary practice in lived and inherited experiences of womanhood. Her work reclaims the personal as political, using performance, text, sound, and other mediums to question patriarchal structures, explore domestic intimacies, and assert the female body as a site of memory, resistance, and repair.

Website

Instagram

The secret diary of Henri Pittier (SDHP) (design)

Frederic Siegel (Team Tumult) (Switzerland) and Rodrigo Garcia and Carlos Zerpa (MECHA) (Venezuela)

Swiss and Venezuelan artists unearth ‘The Secret Diary of Henri Pittier’ (SDHP), a new media storytelling exploration of the Swiss scientist’s complex legacy: a conservationist pioneer nurtured by a dictator in Venezuela, embittered by the lack of recognition of his motherland. The creative collaboration begins with a residency at the Rancho Grande Ecological Station in Henri Pittier National Park, Venezuela, followed by a work week at Team Tumult’s studio. SDHP interweaves authentic documents — such as Pittier’s field notes and correspondence — with original illustrations, animations, and creative writing, presented through an experimental narrative device. By blurring the line between fact and fiction, the project encourages critical engagement with the hidden stories within official legacies to spark a dialogue on corruption, biodiversity loss, and Eurocentrism.

Carlos Zerpa and Rodrigo Garcia, members of MECHA, participated in the Villa Sträuli artist residency in 2022, sponsored by Pro Helvetia South America. They met Frederic Siegel at an event organised by Swissanimation, and later visited Team Tumult’s studio, where he works. After some back-and-forth online, they decided to blend their backgrounds and skills in this new, experimental collaboration.

For MECHA, this collaboration presents an opportunity to learn from a trend-setting artist, amplifying the impact of their socially-driven narratives, and showcasing a different side of Venezuela in the arts landscape.

Frederic Siegel dedicated to crafting deeply personal, character-driven, and uniquely charming animated pieces. By collaborating with a like-minded collective, but from a different cultural perspective, this project allows him to expand his creative European framework.

Portrait of Frederic Siegel
© Frederic Siegel
Portrait of Rodrigo Garcia and Carlos Zerpa
© Rodrigo Garcia and Carlos Zerpa

Frederic Siegel (Team Tumult)

Bern, Switzerland | Animation, visual arts

Frederic Siegel is a Swiss animation director, illustrator and visual artist. His work explores the turbulent inner worlds of ordinary characters influenced by technology, societal pressure, and mental challenges, conveying a fluid sense of reality through digital hand-drawn motion and limited but vivid colour palettes. He is a co-founder of the animation collective Team Tumult.

Website
Instagram

Rodrigo Garcia and Carlos Zerpa (MECHA)

Caracas, Venezuela | Animation, transmedia storytelling

MECHA is a creative cooperative based in Venezuela and Colombia, focused on crafting artistic projects from a transgressive, irreverent, and change-provoking perspective. With a diverse and multidisciplinary team, their animation stories often emerge from an urgent need to build an emotional bridge toward solidarity and social justice.

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Transcontinental languaging: decolonising voice, orality, and embodied language (visual arts)

Nicole Bachmann (DEARS) (Switzerland) and Kamayani Sharma (India)

Nicole Bachmann and Kamayani Sharma will co-develop a research project that will culminate in a publication through an open call, a podcast and live activations of texts. It will bring together Indian and European writers and artists. One particular axis they are interested in exploring together is the decolonisation of language, by examining the voice in traditions of Indigenous and Adivasi orature and literature. Their tactics of traversal between the oral-aural and the scriptorial challenge the colonial primacy of print and text. The project draws on the discursive potency of a historically disempowering act like listening, assigned to the voiceless.

The duo initially met during a research trip in New Delhi, after which Kamayani came to Switzerland on an arts writing residency, where Nicole was her mentor. Both are invested in exploring modes of language through acts of writing and listening in various contexts. Taking a cue from writer Sonya Huber’s assertion that voices are ‘the engines inside us that summon and refract meaning’, they share an interest in the idea of ‘voice’ in its many aesthetic, political and social meanings. While Nicole unpacks the idea of voice through performances and participatory processes, Kamayani Sharma looks at its transformations in the rhetoric of art writing, across the medium of the page that is read and the podcast that is heard.

Together they ask: what does it mean to write aloud and read audibly?

Website

Person kneeling on a pebbled beach filming with a camera mounted on a stabilizer rig.
Nicole Bachmann © Samuel Rodgers
Portrait of Kamayani Sharma
Kamayani Sharma © Merly Knörle Izquierdo

Nicole Bachmann (DEARS)

Zurich, Switzerland | Visual arts

Nicole Bachmann (DEARS) works across video, text, sound, installation and performance. The voice is at the centre of her work. Through it, she questions dominant narratives and investigates the wider socio-political implications of how meaning is made and who has access to making it.

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Kamayani Sharma

Dehradun, India | Writing and podcasting

Kamayani Sharma is a writer, podcaster and translator. Her critical practice explores the relationship between writing and listening through aural-oral forms, from conversation to poetry, that trouble the hegemony of text. Her work draws on the metaphor of the ‘vestibular’ to explore connections between listening, imagination and liberation.

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Instagram
Linktree

Tuning, digital instruments and the post-traditional music in Africa and Europe (music)

Basile Huguenin Virchaux (Switzerland) and Samuel Karugu (Kenya)

The project focuses on reappropriating and expanding tuning heritage from East Africa, making it easily accessible for music production. This includes the development of a MPE-based VST plugin, research into ways of playing selected tunings on the saxophone, and the creation of an improved version of the instrument, made in Nairobi. The project will be carried out with an open source philosophy, and all relevant materials will be shared freely online. Samuel Karugu and Basile Huguenin Virchaux will also showcase their results and lead workshops to encourage others to use the released tools, and build their own. They will also compose an album, which will serve as both a guide for developing ideas as well as a demonstration of what can be achieved with East African tunings today.

Basile Huguenin-Virchaux and Samuel Karugu met ten years ago in an online group dedicated to Pure Data. Samuel was eager to learn more about the programme, and Basile was happy to share his insights. Later, Samuel became the producer and beatmaker of the band DUMA, and Basile was impressed by its unique blend of noise, electro grind and East African underground music. DUMA featured Basile during a show at L’Usine, Geneva (2022), which is when Samuel and Basile knew they had to collaborate. They laid the ground of their collaboration in Neuchâtel (2023), where they enjoyed exchanging ideas and playing music. They met again in Nairobi (2025) where they created an embaire-like instrument with the help of Astrid Bin and played three shows.

Two individuals working on a music setup with keyboard and audio equipment at a table.
Basile Huguenin-Virchaux and Samuel Karugu © Kilele

Basile Huguenin Virchaux

Neuchâtel, Switzerland | Music

Basile Huguenin-Virchaux is a saxophonist and multi-instrumentalist active in the local scene in Neuchâtel, as well as a Pure Data programmer. He explores alternative tunings and experimental music in general. He also develops digital tools in the same spirit of exploration.

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Samuel Karugu

Nairobi, Kenya | Music

Samuel Karugu is a musician, producer, sound designer, Pure Data and M4L programmer, and tinkerer based in Nairobi (Kenya), and Kampala (Uganda). He explores experimental music by sampling instruments, creating and modifying them, and exploring timbre, tuning, rhythm, volume and intensities and traditions in music.

Website
Instagram

Wool as witness – weaving solidarity across borders (design, visual arts)

Samira Vogel (Switzerland) and Lara Salous (Palestine)

Outdoor installation projecting images onto a textured fabric hanging on a wall.
© Samia Vogel and Lara Salous

The project ‘wool as witness’ brings together the artists’ mutual interests in textile traditions, social justice, and cross-cultural solidarity through art, research, and hands-on engagement with communities in both Switzerland and Palestine. This partnership emerges from a deep concern for the survival of shepherding and wool-based traditions in the face of economic and political pressures — be it Israeli settler violence and land dispossession in Palestine, or the marginalisation of shepherding and local wool industries in Switzerland and across Europe. The aim of this project is to connect these distant-yet related struggles by producing artistic work that uplifts the voices of shepherding communities and foregrounds the ecological and cultural significance of their practices.

The collaboration between Swiss artist Samira Vogel and Palestinian artist Lara Salous began during Samira’s Pro Helvetia residency in September 2023 in Bethlehem (Palestine), where they first connected and began planning to work together on collective weaving. Following the intensified attacks on Gaza and Palestine after 7 October, 2023, Samira’s residency in Palestine was interrupted. The residency continued at MMAG Foundation in Jordan in March 2024, where they met again and had the opportunity to weave together while exchanging perspectives on the difficulties Palestinian shepherds and weavers face in their daily practice. Since then, they have remained in contact, exchanging ideas to develop a meaningful project together that sheds light on these struggles and celebrates the resilience of traditional craft practices.

Two people sitting outside, working on a vertical weaving frame surrounded by benches.
© Samia Vogel and Lara Salous

Samira Vogel

Richterswil, Switzerland | Textile artist and researcher

Samira Vogel is a Swiss artist, weaver, and educator based in Zurich. She views weaving as a technique, storytelling medium, and exploratory tool. Through research-based making and interactive installations, she examines materials through their processes and social-political dimensions, exploring diverse fibres and collectivity to create togetherness through textile art.

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Lara Salous

Ramallah, Palestine | Multidisciplinary and textile artist

Lara Salous is an artist and designer whose work explores the contemporary revival of raw wool and traditional textiles in Palestine. Through material research and community engagement, she investigates the cultural, ecological, and political dimensions of wool, proposing new narratives of making that connect memory, land, and collective identity.

Website
Instagram

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