Samuel Perea-Díaz: Curating Queer Exhibits & Curating Artistic Responses to HIV/AIDS from Berlin

Talks on Curatorial Practice
24 OCTOBER 2025 / 17:00
This presentation maps specific forms of local curating in Berlin, focusing on artistic responses that bridge queer archives and project spaces. It explores three co-curated projects—Ocaña, An AIDS Walkthrough, and Viral Intimacies—to demonstrate how the synergy between collaboration and integrated artistic-curatorial research expands the political and ethical scope of exhibition-making.
The work highlights a self-initiated curatorial model that strategically engages project spaces, established institutions, and public funding, particularly in relation to visual art addressing queer history and HIV/AIDS. These projects are situated within Berlin’s lineage of pioneering exhibition-making, drawing on precedents from the Schwules Museum, Instinct at Village, and nGbK.
By embracing the dual role of curator and participating artist, this approach cultivates an insider sensibility rooted in the urgency of social issues, reinforcing practices of sharing and care. Through collaboration, the projects transform exhibition spaces into active sites of social exchange and intergenerational dialogue—between institutions, exhibitions, public programs, and archives.
Samuel Perea-Díaz is an artist, researcher, and spatial designer whose work spans architecture, curation, and sound art. With a background in Architecture and an MA in Sound Studies, he has dedicated over a decade to museum scenography and exhibition design. His artistic practice explores sound and archival processes, focusing on listening to archives and architecture. Samuel’s academic research investigates the counter-mapping of the sonic city and the impact of HIV/AIDS on sound-based art. He has lectured at Humboldt University of Berlin (2019–2025) and the Berlin University of the Arts (2023–2024). He is currently a research fellow and Ph.D. candidate in Fine Arts at the Complutense University of Madrid, funded by the “La Caixa” Foundation, where he conducts practice-based research through the practice of listening to HIV/AIDS archives.
Free admission.
All talks in English.
All times CET/CEST.
On-site participation without registration. Application for online participation: curating.org