Unfolds in a variety of works including a printed libretto in the form of a newspaper, a 34-minute video projection, sculptures, costumes, a stage curtain, photographs and collages. Based on the artist’s own family history and their background as Jews in the Soviet Union, AGIT MEM series charts the complex story of war, Anti-Semitism, persecution and exile – but likewise flexibility, adaptability, transformation and mobility. The art works in the AGIT MEM series take shape as a form of staged memory spaces, gradually moving from the factually historical to the performatively therapeutic – from the documentary account of personal materials like photographs, archival documents and memoirs to sculptural works inspired by the aesthetics of Agitprop. As aesthetic objects linked to performative actions, they function both as images of and potential means to achieve the release the reconstruction of traumatic events can provide.