© Yeongseo Jee, Union Quoi? International·e
Montparnasse – Bienvenüe metro station, Exit 2, Lines 4, 6, 12 and 13
Villa Vassilieff is accessible to visitors using wheeled devices or who have mobility difficulties thanks to special facilities (access ramp, adapted toilets, and a lift).
In addition, several reserved parking spaces are available close to the Villa Vassilieff:
• in front of 4 rue d’Alençon, 75015 Paris
• in front of 7 rue Antoine Bourdelle, 75015 Paris
• in front of 23 rue de l’Arrivée, 75015 Paris
Consult the map of adapted parking spaces in Paris here.
Join us from 11am to 6pm on both Saturday 16 and Sunday 17 September at the Villa Vassilieff to discover the AWARE organization at its headquarters, full of cultural history. As part of the European Heritage Days, the Union Quoi? International·e collective will be on site to offer a range of activities and workshops on the theme of matrilineal transmission.
The AWARE team will be there from 11am to 6pm to introduce you to the organization’s activities and explain the history of the site.
This emblematic location in the Montparnasse district was chosen by artist Marie Vassilieff to set up her studio and found her academy at the turn of the 1910s. This highly symbolic space, renovated by the designer Matali Crasset, and is now home to a centre for research, documentation and mediation dedicated to women artists and feminist art.
“Murmures de diseuses” – Carte blanche to Union Quoi? International·e
Union Quoi? International·e’s contributions will revolve around matrilineal transmission, drawing on Trinh T. Minh Ha‘s work on grandmothers’ stories:
« Diseuse, Thought-Woman, SpiderWoman, griotte, storytalker, fortune-teller, witch. If you have the patience to listen, she will take delight in relating it to you. An entire history, an entire vision of the world, a lifetime story. Mother always has a mother. And Great Mothers are recalled as the goddesses of all waters, the sources of diseases and of healing, the protectresses of women and of childbearing. To listen carefully is to preserve. But to preserve is to burn, for understanding means creating.
Let the one who is diseuse, Diseuse de bonne aventure. Let her call forth. Let her break open the spell cast upon time upon time again and again.1
The world’s earliest archives or libraries were the memories of women. Patiently transmitted from mouth to ear, body to body, hand to hand. In the process of storytelling, speaking and listening refer to realities that do not involve just the imagination. The speech is seen, heard, smelled, tasted, and touched. It destroys, brings into life, nurtures. Every woman partakes in the chain of guardianship and of transmission. »
« May my story be beautiful and unwind like a long thread… »2
Saturday September 16
Continuously: memory game, screening cycle, “Letter to our elders” (creative and epistolary workshop)
11:30 am, 2:15 pm and 4:45 pm | Story exchange “Braid a lock of my hair with yours” (1h duration)
3:30-4:30 pm | Writing workshop “In my mother’s house” after Assia Djebar’s novel Nowhere in my father’s house
Sunday September 17
Continuously: memory game, screening cycle, “Letter to our elders” (creative and epistolary workshop)
11:30 am and 2:30 pm | Story exchange “Braid a lock of my hair with yours” (1h duration)
3:30 to 4:30 pm | Writing workshop “In my mother’s house” after Assia Djebar’s novel Nowhere in my father’s house
5.00 to 6.00 pm | Readings-workshop reports
Screening programme
• Yu-wen Wang, Une fois que les mémoires se mêlent, les frontières s’effondrent : un recueil anonyme et des chuchotements, 2023, 24min
For borders that wander, for cracks that allow a ray of sunlight to break through.
• Chaelin Jeon, Dear Kimsisters in 1959, 2020, 17min
A film addressed to the Kim Sisters, a trio of Korean singers whose history in the USA 60 years ago echoes the author’s own present.
• Camille Simon Baudry, So Many Love Stories, 2023, 7min·
A letter to Theresa Hak Kyung Cha. An act of remembrance and love.
• Hiiona Choi, Language, 2022, 10min
A heterosexual couple wearing white, and a mysterious couple dressed in black. Intentional girly puns about the desire to procreate.
September 16 and 17, from 11.00 am to 6.00 pm
Free entry.
Union Quoi? International·e is formed by students and alumni of art schools: “We take this term “International·e” and use it more sensitively, and reflect together: ‘We found ourselves here, in France, what is it like to live the consequence of internationality today?’ We help and learn together to undo these categorizations violently rooted in our different histories. The convergence of our questions, our thoughts and our plural perspectives has enabled us to create a place open to consideration and imagination.”