Project

Rendition: A Cinematic Essay

by Euridice Zait


Curated by: Nima Esmailpour

Charles Street Video co-presents with Mayworks Festival of Working People and the Arts, as a part of Every Worker Should Have Equal Labour Rights exhibition.

Every Worker Should Have Equal Labour Rights
features five artists—Dana Prieto & Safaa Alnabelseya, Deja Hosein, Euridice Zaituna Kala, and Randa Maroufi— brought together via 4 distinct projects presented across various venues during the festival:
Each artist, working across different media, critically engages with the lived experiences of working people, drawing connections across histories of labour injustice and worker-led resistance in the Global South.

 Gallery Dates: May 2nd – 30th, 2026
Wednesdays: 12:00pm-4:00pm
Thursday & Friday: 6:00pm-8:00pm
Saturday: 1:00pm-4:00pm


 About the Exhibit:
Rendition is a hybrid cinematic essay that questions the documentation of “history in the mak-ing” by assembling a mosaic of materials-from personal memories and interviews to ongoing protest documentation-to tell the story of the Madgermans.
In 1979, 15,000 Mozambicans emigrated to East Germany (GDR) as contract workers, only to be abruptly sent back to Maputo after the reunification of Germany in 1989. Returning with a wave of Western gadgets that briefly flooded the popular imagination, these workers were left waiting for the balance of their contracts to be paid by a new, democratic Mozambican government (FRELIMO). 

Disillusioned by this historical debt and governmental apathy, the Madgermans—a contraction of “Made in Germany”—transformed their political plight into a decades-long public demonstration. They famously appropriated the “Garden of May 28” in Maputo, renaming it the “Madgermans’ garden,” turning a public space into a powerful, permanent political forum. Over time, their protest has evolved into a broader denunciation of national corruption, positioning them as key figures of modern Mozambican dissent.

Despite dwindling numbers due to illness and death, their cause remains suspended in time, revealing the enduring legacy of unfulfilled promises and the failure of international and local governments to address a profound historical partition. [A Cinematic Essay by Eurice Zaituna Kala] 


ABOUT THE ARTISTS:

Euridice Zaituna Kala

Born in 1987 in Maputo, Mozambique, Euridice Zaituna Kala lives and works in Maisons-Alfort. Her work focuses on cultural and historical metamorphoses, their manipulations and their ad- aptations. The artist reproduces the visual vocabulary of historical archives in order to reveal not only their subjectivity, but also those they have invisibilized. She questions the appropriation of black bodies through their representation in archives; but rather than seizing their history, she attempts to reaffirm their existence. Her approach is based on research, with a multi-form expression. Her practice is protean: performances, installations, photographs, texts, videos, sculptures/landscapes, sound pieces. A graduate in experimental photography from the Market Photo Workshop in Johannesburg (South Africa) in 2012 and from the Asiko School in Maputo (Mozambique) in 2015, currently enrolled in a Masters of Arts programme at the École national supérieure d’arts Paris-Cergy (2026). Euridice Zaituna Kala is the first laureate of the Prix Carta Bianca (2025-2026), a finalist for Paulo Cunha e Silva prize (2023). She was also the recipient of the Villa Vassilieff/ADAGP scholarship (2019/2020) and did a residency at the Villa Albertine in New York (2022/2023) and at the Villa Medici in Roma (2023). Zaituna Kala has presented a solo exhibitions such as Daylighting: mais c’est l’eau qui parle, La Criée Rennes (2025), La Loge, Brussels (2026), Kunsthalle, Münster, (2026), En quelques gestes: as if two suns were setting, Galerie Anne Barrault, Paris (2025), Sea(E)scape: Dna (Don’t (N)ever Ask), Salon H, Paris , (2022), and Je suis l’archive, I the archive at Villa Vassilieff in Paris (2020). She also participates in many group shows, such Le Syndrome de Bonnard, Frac Ile-de-France, Paris & Romainville, (2026) The Great Camouflage, Rockbund Art Mu- seum, Shanghaï, China (2025-2026) Primavera, Primavera, Frac MÉCA, Bordeaux (2024), Echos der Bruderländer at the HKW in Berlin and Passengers in Transit in the frame of the Ven- ice Biennale, Prémio Paulo Cunha e Silva, at Porto Municipal gallery (2023), Indigo Waves and Other Stories at Berlin Savvy Contemporary gallery (2023), Fata Morgana at the Jeu de Paume in Paris (2022), This is Not Africa – Unlearn What You Have Learned at the ARoS Museum in Aarhus Denmark (2021), Le pouvoir du dedans at the Galerie, Centre d’Art Contemporain in Noisy-le-Sec (2018). Future Performances inlcude: Trou Noir, et Compositions at La Loge, Brussels (2026), She has presented numerous performances including Sea(E)scapes: Listening Session at the Jeu de Paume (2022), Toetra (based on the text Je suis l’archive ) at the Centre Pompidou (2021), Stranger, Danger : Wait, it’s just a prayer Room at the Centre Pompidou (2019), and Mackandal Turns into a Butterfly: a love portion at the Galerie, Centre d’Art Contemporain in Noisy-Le-Sec (2018). She is an artist-teacher at the École des Beaux Arts of Nantes. She is also the founder and co-organizer of e.a.s.t. (Ephemeral Archival Station), a laboratory and a platform for artistic projects and research, founded in 2017.




 2026

https://mayworks.ca/project/rendition/



Funding

The Canada Council

The Ontario Arts Council

The Ontario Trillium Foundation

The Toronto Arts Council

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