WE ARE HERE: Remembrance, Resistance, and the Public Space

Talya Feldman in conversation with Romy Brill Allen

Ìýfirst launched as a digital artwork by the Kunstverein in Hamburg in 2022 and soon afterwards as a model project of the Federal Agency for Civic Education in Germany from 2022-2023. Today, WIR SIND HIER continues to claim spaces of remembrance in public space through the voices and demands of survivors and families of victims of racist and antisemitic violence.

WIR SIND HIER illustrates each family’s struggle for an active remembrance in their cities, the memories of those they have lost as they connect to space and place, and their political, social, and collective fight for a better future.

It invites viewers to imagine how remembrance, from city streets to monuments, could and should look today as an active form of resistance and change. By scrolling over the names of victims, users of the web platform can view maps of their cities and the spaces claimed or being claimed by families and initiatives today, and are given an overview of right-wing extremist attacks and police brutality in Germany and the former GDR within the last 40 years, including cases of violence that have not yet been properly investigated or recognized as hate crimes by state and local authorities.

WIR SIND HIER is a project by Talya Feldman under the auspices of the Network for Remembrance, Change, and Education (NEVA e.V.) in Munich.

Organised by East Wing Biennial Director Romy Brill Allen as part of the programming for RE:VISION, The 16th East Wing Biennial.

19 May 2026

18:30 - 20:00

Free, booking essential

Vernon Square Campus, Research Forum Seminar Room

This event will take place at our Vernon Square Campus (WC1X 9EW).

Speaker:

Talya FeldmanÌýis a time-based media artist from Denver, Colorado. She earned her MFA from the HFBK Hamburg and her BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Through her intercultural and collaborative practice, Feldman generates social transformation through artistic projects that offer alternative and reparative narratives to violence. She has received global recognition for her works combating right-wing terror in cooperation with activist and research-based networks in Europe and abroad. Feldman has achieved numerous awards including: the 2026 Kunstfonds Stipendium, 2023 German Federal Prize for Students, 2022 Berenberg Award, 2021 DAAD Scholarship, and the 2021 DAGESH Prize.

Romy Brill Allen is the Director of the Courtauld Institute’s two-year long exhibition of contemporary art, the East Wing Biennial. She is a final year undergraduate student of History of Art with a particular interest in sexual politics and feminist art. She is a 2026 Peggy Guggenheim Collection Fellow. Romy is driven by her passion for storytelling and her belief in the potential of art to shape the world around us.

Talya Feldman, WIR SIND HIER: Burak Bektaş, 2022, film still. Courtesy of the Artist, Talya Feldman.

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