Samovar Swell is an installation by the collective Slavs and Tatars that proposes a space-time of communion through reading and tea. Activated by performative and sound-based interventions, the project is conceived as a shared and exuberant experience, where multilingualism takes shape through the dramaturgy of translation, different languages, and the resonance of the voice.
At the center of the installation is a samovar—the traditional vessel used to heat and serve tea from Turkey to Russia and Central Asia—which embodies a gesture of hospitality and gathering. The exhibition space will remain in a state of “boil,” both literally and orally. A series of publications will be displayed on rehal—X-shaped supports traditionally used to hold sacred texts during reading or recitation—alongside kilims to sit on.
Designed to serve tea to a large number of guests, the samovar offers a moment of belonging through a shared ritual: a way of releasing steam in an increasingly heated world; of decompressing, not in diluted form, but infused with discourse and conviviality.
Slavs and Tatars is a collective founded in 2006 whose practice explores the geographic politics and literatures of Eurasia, complicating the ways we understand language, ritual, and identity through publications, installations, and lecture-performances
Exhibition organized by Museo Jumex
Curated by Rosela del Bosque, Associate Curator, and Carolina Estrada García, Curatorial Assistant
Exhibition organized by Museo Jumex
Curated by Rosela del Bosque, Associate Curator, and Carolina Estrada García, Curatorial Assistant
info@fundacionjumex.org
Visitas guiadas y grupos
grupos@fundacionjumex.org