All Memory Is Theft
June 7, 2025–February 8, 2026
Karlsruhe 76135
Germany
Hours: Wednesday–Friday 10am–6pm
Saturday–Sunday 11am–6pm
T +49 721 81001200
info@zkm.de
With All Memory Is Theft, the ZKM presents a major retrospective of Belgian media artist Johan Grimonprez (b. 1962), whose work dances on the boundaries of theory and practice, art and cinema, beyond the dualisms of documentary and fiction, other and self, mind and brain, emphasizing a multiplicity of realities.
Informed by an archaeology of present-day media, Grimonprez’ work depicts intimate stories that brush up against the bigger picture of a global technocracy, calling into question our collective imagination deeply haunted by the omnipresence of Big Tech. His work has been presented at major museums worldwide, including the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York, the Tate Modern in London and the Centre Pompidou in Paris, while it received accolades at a host of film festivals from Sundance to Berlin.
“There is a mourning for a lost future,” writes the author and activist Max Haiven, “not for what was but for what could be.” In Grimonprez’ works, history and memory not merely function as a means to recall the past, but rather as a tool to negotiate the present in order to reshape a shared future. Memory, after all, is a form of collective storytelling; the contested site of ideological struggle, where we redeem our forgotten dreams. As writer James Baldwin once remarked, “history is not the past, it is the present. We carry our history with us, we are our history.” In Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland (1865), the Queen confronts Alice with a similar idea: “it’s a poor sort of memory that only works backwards.”
All Memory Is Theft at ZKM presents works by Johan Grimonprez from the past 35 years in a multi-layered journey that question the way we perceive reality in our media-driven time. The exhibition reaches from earlier works such as Kobarweng or Where is your Helicopter (1992), which reclaims the memory of a colonial past framed by a global vulture economy, to his 1997 documenta X contribution dial H-I-S-T-O-R-Y, his investigation into doppelgängers in Double Take (2009), his examination of the relationship between war, media, and the international arms trade in every day words disappear (2016) and Blue Orchids (2017), to his latest film Soundtrack to a Coup d‘État (2024). Co-produced by the ZKM and Oscar® nominated for best documentary, it tells the story of Congolese independence from Belgian colonial rule in 1960 and the subsequent assassination of the first democratically elected premier Patrice Lumumba, tracing the connection between jazz, geopolitics, and colonial power dynamics during the Cold War.
The newly conceived in-situ installation Maybe the sky is really green, and we’re just colorblind (2011–today) revisits the history of channel surfing in relation to the commercial break. Reworked as a vlog, it reveals how science fiction and the concept of zapping stages close encounters with imaginary and not-so imaginary Others in the wake of an exponential rise of Artificial Intelligence.
“Who owns our imagination in a world of existential vertigo where truth has become a shipwrecked refugee?” is one of Johan Grimonprez underlaying inquiries: ”Is it not the storyteller who can contain contradictions, and slip between the languages that entangle our worlds, to become a time-traveler of the imagination?”
Paraphrasing French philosopher and media theorist Paul Virilio, Grimonprez once detailed that every technology provokes its own accident: “When you invent the ship, you invent the shipwreck; when you invent the plane you also invent the plane crash.” One could add, with the advent of Artificial Intelligence, reality and with it our consciousness has been accidented itself. Today, media don’t need to catch up with reality, it is rather reality that has to catch up with media.
Curators: Daniel Pies, Philipp Ziegler
Project producer and editor for zap-o-matik: Pedro Gossler
Project assistance: Yuliana Mosheeva
Vlogs made possible by the Arts Research Fund of the University College Ghent, KASK/ HoGent
Website of the artist: johangrimonprez.be
Press contact: Lilli Roser, lilli.roser@zkm.de / T +49(0)721-8100-1220