Born in exile during Namibia’s war of independence (1966–89) and within the historical context of the trauma of the country’s past under Germany’s violent colonial rule (1884–1915), Tuli Mekondjo’s artistic practice has been a labour of belonging, re-creation, and restitution. Her work is based on the stories she carries with her from her family and community in Namibia— where she returned after the country gained independence in 1990—as well as in her persistent research with and against colonial archives. In Ounona vedu, Mekondjo recreates a series of fertility dolls, which were formerly passed down from generation to generation to practise motherhood and connect to fertility in her community, the Aawambo people, while her canvases recompose a context through which archival photographic portraits of Aawambo women return the colonial gaze. By burning, washing, embroidering, cutting, and mending, the canvases become a space of transformation, to heal and honour the interrupted ancestral lineages. Her works draw the viewer into the renewing force of life that bonds and births generations. Mekondjo proposes a reimagining of restitution as the restoration of ancestral fertility channels and their strength to remember and recreate beyond institutional museum repatriation centred on ownership.

Commissioned by Haus der Kulturen der Welt (HKW), co-produced by Tuli Mekondjo and HKW, 2023.

Works in the exhibition: Ovadali vounona (Birthers of children) I (2023), painting, silk fabrics, linen fabric, archival image transfer, cotton embroidery threads, paint markers, acrylic paint, gold leafing marker, copper leafing marker, 270 × 217 cm; Ovadali vounona (Birthers of children) II (2023), painting, silk fabrics, linen fabrics, archival image transfer, cotton embroidery threads, paint markers, acrylic paint, gold leafing marker, copper leafing marker, 270 × 217 cm; Ounona vedu (Children of the soil) (2023), installation, wood, antique glass beads, shell, shell beads, cowrie shells, copper beads, seeds, safety pins, human hair, nails, brass beads, suede, leather, springbok fur and skin, buttons, metal beads, ostrich egg shell beads, suede, cotton yarn, cotton fabric, linen fabric, rusted metal rings, sticks, red ochre, modelling clay, dimensions vary. Courtesy of the artist