Can We Stop Killing Each Other?

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21st century art history
21st century global crises
A01=Tafadzwa Nomphanelo Makwabarara
A01=Tania Moore
Art
art and migration
art and politics
art and refugees
art and social issues
Art and violence
art Egypt
art in Poland
art of the Holocaust
ArtHistory
Author_Tafadzwa Nomphanelo Makwabarara
Author_Tania Moore
Bruce Nauman
BruceNauman
Category=AGA
Category=AGC
Category=NHTX
Claude Monet
ClaudeMonet
contemporary African art
Death
Egyptian artists
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Ethiopia
Film
Genocide
Holocaust
Homicide
Identity
Kara Walker
KaraWalker
Killing
LivingArt
Luca Giordano
Magdelena Abakonowicz
Paul Nash
Polish artists
PopularCulture
Race
RefugeeCrisis
Rwanda
Rwandan genocide
SainsburyCentre
Tesfaya Urgessa
TesfayeUrgessa
Violence
Wael Shawky
WaelShawky

Product details

  • ISBN 9781836360148
  • Weight: 360g
  • Dimensions: 180 x 245mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Jul 2025
  • Publisher: Kulturalis
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Can We Stop Killing Each Other? wrestles with the darkest side of humanity. It explores the fundamental question of why humans are led to kill, examining the artworks, films, video games and television programmes that grapple with and manifest themes of death and destruction.

Using material culture linked to moments of extreme violence, such as the Holocaust and the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda, this publication offers a challenging but eye-opening consideration of some of the most horrifying events in human history as explored through art.

Using historical and contemporary art as a lens to explore these themes, the book will include a new interview with Ethiopian artist Tesfaye Urgessa (b.1983), who creates emotive paintings reflecting on the refugee crisis. It will also explore the role of art as sanctuary from violence, through new approaches to the work of Claude Monet (1840–1926)

Tafadzwa Nomphanelo Makwabarara is a Zimbabwean-born curator currently based at the Sainsbury Centre. She is the newly appointed Curator of Cultural Empowerment, focusing on encouraging critical thinking, cooperation and collaboration on universal contemporary issues through the inclusion and re-engagement of minority and marginalised groups in society. At the Sainsbury Centre, Tafadzwa has curated Heroin Falls as part of the Why Do We Take Drugs? season and been project curator on The Camera Never Lies: Challenging Images from The Incite Project for What Is Truth?Tafadzwa previously worked for the National Museums and Monuments of Zimbabwe as Curator of Monuments where she oversaw 53 cultural heritage sites across four provinces, with responsibility for the management, conservation, preservation and restoration of monuments throughout Zimbabwe’s northern region for nine years. During that time, she also collaborated with several African artists and cultural groups during exhibitions and festivals. One such collaboration was with the Magamba Network to partner in hosting the Shoko Festiva, Zimbabwe’s biggest festival of urban culture combining arts, new media and civic activism. Tania Moore is Head of Exhibitions at the Sainsbury Centre where she has implemented a programme that tackles the most urgent questions facing society. She has curated Darwin in Paradise Camp: Yuki Kihara for Can the Seas Survive Us?; Lindsey Mendick: Hot Mess for Why Do We Take Drugs?; and In Event of Moon Disaster, Liquid Gender, and Jeffrey Gibson: no simple word for time for What is Truth? Publications include Can the Seas Survive Us? (2024), What Is Truth? (2024); Rhythm and Geometry: Constructivist Art in Britain Since 1951 (2021); and Henry Moore: Friendships and Legacies (2020). In 2019, she received the New Collecting Award from the Art Fund to acquire sculptors’ drawings by contemporary women and non-binary artists for the Sainsbury Centre collection.

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