'Archiving Gaza in the Present': Art, Memory, Erasure

Key information

Date
Time
6:00 pm to 7:30 pm
Venue
SOAS Gallery
Room
SOAS Gallery Lecture Theatre
Event type
Launch & Event highlights

About this event

This event will mark the publication of the book Archiving Gaza in the Present, co-edited by Professor Dina Matar and Dr Venetia Porter. 

It will be in a form of a reflexive conversation between the editors and some contributors to the book on what archiving means during genocide and erasure.

About the book

Conflict does more than destroy physical spaces. It extinguishes lives, erases histories and disrupts the collective memory of entire communities. In Gaza, where genocide has wrought catastrophic loss, the destruction of heritage adds another dimension of devastation. Yet amid the rubble, acts of archiving, art-making and storytelling persist.

Archiving Gaza in the Present: Memory, Culture and Erasure brings together voices from Palestine and beyond to document cultural erasure and to explore how creative and archival practices resist it. Contributions from curators, architects, artists, journalists, lawyers and scholars capture Gaza’s once-vibrant cultural life—historic buildings, art centres, universities and museums that existed before October 2023—now turned to rubble.

Featuring rich visual material—from fragmented WhatsApp testimonies to forensic documentation—and including artworks, maps and photographs, Archiving Gaza in the Present is both a living archive and a call to action. It is a vital resource for understanding Gaza’s cultural survival amid destruction.

Registration

This event is free to attend, but registration is required. Seating is on a first-come, first-served basis.

About the speakers

Dina Matar is Professor of Political Communication at SOAS University of London and former Chair of the Centre for Palestine Studies. She is editor, with Helga Tawil-Souri, of Producing Palestine: the Creative Production of Palestine through Contemporary Media (Bloomsbury Academic, 2024), Gaza as Metaphor (Hurst, 2016), and author of What it Means to be Palestinian: Stories of Palestinian Peoplehood (I.B. Tauris, 2010).

Venetia Porter is former senior curator for Islamic and Contemporary Middle East art at the British Museum where she is now honorary research fellow. Her exhibitions include Hajj: journey to the heart of Islam (2012) and she was the lead curator for the Albukhary Foundation gallery of the Islamic World (opened 2018). She is a trustee of the Arab British Centre and her most recent publication is Artists Making Books: Poetry to Politics (British Museum Press 2023).

Organisers