Pinguin Bar @ Haus der Berliner Festspiele

The Pinguin Bar – African Resilience and Presence

Act 1: Black Jazz, post crises!
Re-enactement by Alibeta

@ Performing Exiles Festival at Haus der Berliner Festspiele, Berlin

This was a project very close to the heart - joining the Berlin history with my friends of the collective Kenu Lab from Dakar to reenact a Bar that excisted 70 years ago in Berlin , run by Africans .

Together with the designer and sculptor Doulsy Jahgal we transformed the Bar space of Haus der Berliner Festpiele and created the costumes for the re-enactments, stage musicians. 10 nights of amazing performances, jazz  and fun 

From the program:

After more than 70 years, the Senegalese artist Alibeta re-enacts the “Pinguin Bar”, which was the place for jazz, resistance and activism of the Black community in Berlin around 1949.

In 1949, the “Pinguin Bar” opened its doors at Bülowstraße 6 in Berlin-Schöneberg. Conceptualised and run exclusively by people from African countries, it plays a conflicted role in the city’s history of Black lives. On the one hand, it was a meeting point by and for African artists and activists, for jazz and performance as well as a meeting point for performative Arts, resistance and memories for the Black community who had survived the war and the Shoah. On the other hand, the Pinguin Bar, an idea from Kala Kinger from Cameroon, was financed and advertised by a white married couple called Gruß and Hans von Hellfeld. It was also a space where racist continuities and exoticising fantasies of the white mainstream society could be upheld and which was based on the de-humanising colonial heritage of the Africa-shows and “Völkerschauen”, folkloristic ethnological displays. In 1951 the authorities closed the very successful bar, pretexting tax reasons.

For “Performing Exiles”, the Senegalese curator and multidisciplinary artist, Alibeta, will re-enact the “Pinguin Bar” with a programme featuring concerts, film screenings and performances to open a bigger conversation and to address the issue of African traces and presence in Germany today. This first act of an upcoming series is connecting the origin of the bar to the current situation of the Black community in Berlin – as a story of jazz, as a music of traces and healing of the African community.

 



ca. 2 h, 30 min

In English

Closing Party

Free admission

22:30 – 02:00

ca. 2 h, 30 min

In English

Free admission

21:30–23:00

ca. 2 h, 30 min

In English

Free admission

21:30 – 00:00

ca. 2 h, 30 min

In English

Free admission

20:30–22:30

ca. 2 h, 30 min

In English

Free admission

22:30 – 00:00

ca. 2 h, 30 min

In English

Free admission

23:30 – 02:00

ca. 2 h, 30 min

In English

Opening Party

Free admission

70 years, the Senegalese artist Alibeta re-enacts the “Pinguin Bar”, which was the place for jazz, resistance and activism of the Black community in Berlin around 1949.

In 1949, the “Pinguin Bar” opened its doors at Bülowstraße 6 in Berlin-Schöneberg. Conceptualised and run exclusively by people from African countries, it plays a conflicted role in the city’s history of Black lives. On the one hand, it was a meeting point by and for African artists and activists, for jazz and performance as well as a meeting point for performative Arts, resistance and memories for the Black community who had survived the war and the Shoah. On the other hand, the Pinguin Bar, an idea from Kala Kinger from Cameroon, was financed and advertised by a white married couple called Gruß and Hans von Hellfeld. It was also a space where racist continuities and exoticising fantasies of the white mainstream society could be upheld and which was based on the de-humanising colonial heritage of the Africa-shows and “Völkerschauen”, folkloristic ethnological displays. In 1951 the authorities closed the very successful bar, pretexting tax reasons.

For “Performing Exiles”, the Senegalese curator and multidisciplinary artist, Alibeta, will re-enact the “Pinguin Bar” with a programme featuring concerts, film screenings and performances to open a bigger conversation and to address the issue of African traces and presence in Germany today. This first act of an upcoming series is connecting the origin of the bar to the current situation of the Black community in Berlin – as a story of jazz, as a music of traces and healing of the African community.

 https://www.berlinerfestspiele.de/programm/2023/performing-exiles-start/spielplan-performing-exiles/the-pinguin-bar--african-resilience-and-presence