Born in Senna-Saint-Denis (France) in 1970. He lives and works in Berlin and Algiers Kader Attia (b. 1970, France), grew up in both Algeria and the suburbs of Paris, and uses this experience of living as a part of two cultures as a starting point to develop a dynamic practice that reflects on aesthetics and ethics of different cultures. He takes a poetic and symbolic approach to exploring the wide-ranging repercussions of Western modern cultural hegemony and colonialism on non-Western cultures, investigating identity politics of historical and colonial eras, from Tradition to Modernity, in the light of our globalized world, of which he creates a genealogy. For several years, his research focuses on the concept of Repair, as a constant in Human Nature, of which the modern Western Mind and the traditional extra-Occidental Thought have always had an opposite vision. From Culture to Nature, from gender to architecture, from science to philosophy, any system of life is an infinite process of repair. He is the winner of 2017 Joan Miró Prize and in 2016 he won the Prix Marcel Duchamp.
Recent exhibitions include Reflecting Memory at Centre Pompidou, Sacrifice and Harmony, a solo show at the Museum für Moderne Kunst Frankfurt, The Injuries are Here a solo show at the Musée Cantonaldes Beaux Arts de Lausanne, Culture, Another Nature Repaired, a solo show at the Middelheim Museum, Antwerp, Contre Nature, a solo show at the Beirut Art Center, Continuum of Repair: The Lightof Jacob’s Ladder, a solo show at Whitechapel Gallery, London, Repair. 5 Acts, a solo show at KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin, Construire, Déconstruire, Reconstruire: Le Corps Utopique, a solo show at Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, the Biennale of Dakar, dOCUMENTA(13) in Kassel, Performing Histories (1) at MoMA, New York.