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      March 19 – 30, 2025

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          Festival Center at Kunsthal Charlottenborg

          Kunsthal Charlottenborg will once again serve as the heart of the festival. Here, you can stop by daily to visit the cinemas, our VR exhibition INTER:ACTIVE, as well as the Banu Cennetoğlu exhibition 'Being Safe is Scary'.

          Welcome to CPH:DOX’s festival center at Kunsthal Charlottenborg. On the first day of the festival, March 19, we open to the public at 16:00. Otherwise, throughout the festival, our festival center opens its doors daily from 10:00. Here, you will find our two cinemas, Social Cinema and Mezzaninen, our INTER:ACTIVE exhibition, events, parties, and a major exhibition by the Istanbul-based visual artist Banu Cennetoğlu, opening on March 19.

          Cennetoğlu is interested in how the production and distribution of text- and image-based information help shape our world. The exhibition unfolds through a series of works that weave personal and collective histories into a shared political space, moving from societal issues to more intimate spheres. Critical investigations of the press, European migration flows, and the UN’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights are brought into dialogue with an extensive private image archive, connecting everyday events—both small and large—to urgent global issues.

          Kunsthal Charlottenborg is the festival center for both the audience and the many filmmakers coming to Copenhagen for CPH:DOX. Here, you can eat and drink at Apollo Bar, which is open daily from 09:00. You can also visit DOX:BAR, which is open every day from the first to the last event. Our festival center is designed and curated by architects Sarah Fredelund and Mikkel Møller Roesdahl. Furniture is provided by Noah Living.

          Read more about the exhibition

          BEING SAFE IS SCARY

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          Banu Cennetoğlu (b. 1970, Ankara) lived in Paris, New York, and Amsterdam before settling in Istanbul in 2005. In her artistic practice, she explores the political dimensions of various social and cultural hierarchies. Cennetoğlu has exhibited at prestigious international exhibitions, including documenta 14, the Liverpool Biennial, the Istanbul Biennial, the Berlin Biennial, and represented Turkey alongside Ahmet Öğüt at the 53rd Venice Biennale in 2009.

          BEING SAFE IS SCARY at Kunsthal Charlottenborg presents a series of works that weave personal and official histories together in a shared political space. The exhibition’s title comes from one of Cennetoğlu’s works—a photograph of the phrase as graffiti on a wall in Athens. The ambiguous statement raises questions such as who can be safe and at what cost?

          Cennetoğlu often works with extensive material collection, cataloging, and archiving, which manifests in meticulously composed works with far-reaching perspectives. For the exhibition, she has produced the work 29.01.2025, presenting all print editions of daily newspapers and weekly publications released in Denmark on January 29, 2025. By collecting, cataloging, and displaying all newspapers published in a country on a specific day, Cennetoğlu examines how news media prioritize and convey information—what is included, what is left out, and how stories are told and for whom. The work is not just about major headlines—special supplements, non-news content, typography, layout, and color choices all demonstrate how the world is sorted, organized, and represented in newspaper communication. 29.01.2025 is presented alongside a selection of previous editions of the work from other countries, forming a slowly growing archive of the printed newspaper’s role in constructing reality.

          The visually striking work right? addresses the relationship between ideals and realpolitik and consists of bouquets of gold letter balloons. Each bouquet spells out an article from the UN’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Every time the work is exhibited, a new article is added until none remain. At Kunsthal Charlottenborg, the balloon bouquets will spell out articles 21, 22, 23, and 24, which concern democratic participation, social security, labor rights, and leisure. At the exhibition’s opening, right? resembles a grand celebration, but as helium slowly escapes from the balloons, it transforms into a more deflated tribute. In a time marked by war, climate disasters, and political uncertainty, the work invites reflection on who can celebrate the UN’s Declaration of Human Rights and who has yet to achieve the status of a person covered by its ideals.

          The exhibition also features Cennetoğlu’s film work spanning a total of 127 hours. Comprising thirteen titles—1 January 1970 – 21 March 2018 · H O W B E I T · Guilty feet have got no rhythm · Keçiboynuzu · AS IS · MurMur · I measure every grief I meet · Taq u Raq · A piercing Comfort it affords · Stitch · Made in Fall · Yes. But. We had a golden heart. · One day soon I’m gonna tell the moon about the crying game—the work is a visual tour de force through the artist’s digitized archive, showing in chronological order all photos and videos from her mobile phones, computers, cameras, and external hard drives. Cennetoğlu describes the work as “introspective,” as it documents a period of her life. We see her as an artist, as a mother, and as a daughter, following the production of artworks, exhibition openings, hospital visits, demonstrations, children’s birthdays, and how everyday activities intertwine with political events. The work serves as a self-reflective investigation into the implications of contemporary image production.

          Curated by Henriette Bretton-Meyer and Katarina Stenbeck, the exhibition at Kunsthal Charlottenborg moves from broader societal issues to the more intimate and personal sphere. Critical examinations of the press, European migration flows, and the UN’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights are brought into dialogue with an extensive private image archive and monochrome drawings, linking everyday life’s small and large events to urgent global concerns.

          BEING SAFE IS SCARY is part of HUMAN:RIGHTS—a new collaboration between Kunsthal Charlottenborg, CPH:DOX, and Human Rights Watch Denmark, supported by the Frececo Foundation. Over the coming years, the initiative will highlight human rights through exhibitions, thematic film programs, a wide range of talks and debates, and educational programs for school classes.

          Frececo

          Read more about the INTER:ACTIVE exhibition

          INTER:ACTIVE EXHIBITION

          The Inter:Active exhibition probes the intersection of creativity and technology, each year exploring how emerging technologies are reshaping art and society.

          11:30

          Experience this year's eye-opening INTER:ACTIVE exhibition titled "Untamed: Humanity Rewilded" at Kunsthal Charlottenborg.

          13:30

          Experience this year's eye-opening INTER:ACTIVE exhibition titled "Untamed: Humanity Rewilded" at Kunsthal Charlottenborg.

          16:00

          Experience this year's eye-opening INTER:ACTIVE exhibition titled "Untamed: Humanity Rewilded" at Kunsthal Charlottenborg.

          17:00

          The Ban + The Diary of a Sky

          Roisin Agnew & Lawrence Abu Hamdan / Ireland, United Kingdom & Lebanon / 71 min

          Q&A in presence of director Roisin Agnew

          18:00

          Experience this year's eye-opening INTER:ACTIVE exhibition titled "Untamed: Humanity Rewilded" at Kunsthal Charlottenborg.

          19:00

          The Shipwrecked Triptych

          Deniz Eroglu / Germany / 2025 / 90 min

          Three short stories, imagining the human experience with visionary power and dark humour. Danish-Turkish artist Deniz Eroglu's debut film is work of a deeply inventive and original spirit.

          20:00

          We pay tribute to slacker heroes Pavement in Pavement with a screening of the creative and kaleidoscopic film about the band with as many layers as there are grooves in a record. Afterwards, we've put together a Pavement tribute band with musicians ...

          21:00

          When The Phone Rang

          Iva Radivojević / Serbia & United States / 2024 / 73 min

          Memories of ex-Yugoslavia meet autofiction in a critically acclaimed film about an 11-year-old girl who receives a series of mysterious phone calls that change her life.